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Former players from both schools were in the stands: Wiggins, Jayne Appel, Rosalyn Gold-Onwude and JJ Hones of Stanford sitting together on one baseline, and ex-UConn star Tina Charles. Also attending were Alana Beard and Ruthie Bolton, a member of VanDerveer's gold medal winning 1996 Olympic team in Atlanta.
Even former Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice was there, flashing a huge smile and bouncing along to the music when the Cardinal won. VanDerveer's mother, Rita, made the trip to see this one, too.
"Good job guys," Auriemma and a couple of UConn's players said while waving to Stanford after the Huskies' postgame news conference.
UConn was headed home from the Bay Area on what certainly would be an extra-long redeye flight out of San Francisco. The team just beat the big East Coast blizzard to get here, leaving at 6:30 a.m. Sunday. UConn played at Maples for the first time since Dec. 28, 1993, and Stanford has won all three meetings in the rivalry on its home floor.
"I'm just happy for our team," VanDerveer said. "The streak is something that they did. We're about Stanford and what we want to do."
For the Cardinal, this was a long time coming. VanDerveer, who joined the elite 800-win club last week, thought about that championship loss for months and felt her team missed a big opportunity, saying it fueled her to be a better coach and did the same for her players. Stanford hasn't won it all since 1992 despite making the last three Final Fours.
Stanford led at halftime for the third straight time facing UConn, having blown a 20-12 edge at the break in the title game last April. This marked the sixth meeting between the schools since the 2007-08 season.
UConn had trailed all of 134 minutes during the entire winning streak, including only 13 minutes in the second half. The UCLA men's last loss before the 88-game winning streak was to Notre Dame, then it was the Irish who ended the run -- in a similar situation to UConn's domination.
Moore missed her initial four shots and didn't score her first points until knocking down a 3 at with 3:14 left in the opening half. The two-time national player of the year came in averaging 24.8 points and received a rousing ovation from the Stanford crowd when starting lineups were introduced, though Auriemma was booed.
It was Pohlen, not Moore, who was by far the best player on the floor.
"I just had that mentality. I'm not giving up until that buzzer goes off," Pohlen said. "I think our team was really looking for me to get my shot. I'm just happy that we defended Maples. We got the win, and our team played awesome."
Stanford hasn't lost at home since a 68-61 upset by Florida State in the second round of the NCAA tournament in March 2007.
The Cardinal already had played a brutal nonconference schedule this month, traveling to DePaul and Tennessee -- their two losses that dropped them from their earlier No. 3 ranking -- and beating No. 4 Xavier in a surprising 89-52 blowout Tuesday.
Stanford, picked to win its 11th straight Pac-10 crown, made 9 of its first 13 shots and four of five 3s and used an 11-0 run to go ahead 17-4.
UConn started 2 for 12 and missed its first five 3-point tries while also committing three turnovers in the opening 6:31 to fall behind 17-4. Hayes' 3 at 13:10 was UConn's first.
Hartley then scored seven during a 10-2 UConn run that got the Huskies back within 24-19 with 7:33 left in the first half. Stanford led 34-30 at halftime.
Pedersen told her team at the break it was a new game for the final 20 minutes. No letdowns.
"It's a huge win but it is December," Pedersen said. "This instills confidence that we can beat any team. We haven't won anything yet."
[Associated Press;
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