No. 3 Louisville beats No. 9 NC State 78-68 in ACC semis

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) — No. 3 Louisville found itself in another tight tournament game against a team it embarrassed not long ago. The Cardinals leaned on seniors Asia Durr and Sam Fuehring to lead the way — and now they're headed to another championship game.

Durr scored 22 points, and Louisville advanced to the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament final by beating No. 9 North Carolina State 78-68 on Saturday in a semifinal.

Fuehring had 14 points and 12 rebounds, and Arica Carter had 16 points to help the second-seeded Cardinals (29-2, 14-2) win a back-and-forth game in which both teams led by double figures. Durr and Fuehring combined to score Louisville's final 12 points over the final 7½ minutes.

"We were just trying to find a way to score," Durr said. "Score, then get a stop."

They earned a rematch with No. 4 Notre Dame (29-3, 14-2) in the title game. Louisville beat the Fighting Irish 74-72 in last year's final, giving Notre Dame its only loss in six years at the ACC Tournament while claiming its first league title since the Cardinals won the Metro in 1993. The Irish won the only regular-season meeting 82-68 on Jan. 10.

"They're really fun to watch when you don't have to play them," Louisville coach Jeff Walz said.

Elissa Cunane scored 20 points, Kai Crutchfield had 17 points and DD Rogers finished with 13 for the third-seeded Wolfpack (26-5, 12-4). They shot 51 percent but had 17 turnovers that the Cardinals turned into 28 points.

Durr scored eight points during a 15-4 run that gave them the lead for good, capping it with a jumper that made it 72-61 with 5½ minutes left. N.C. State chipped away, closing to 74-68 on Rogers' free throw with 56.2 seconds remaining, before Fuehring and Durr each hit two free throws to stretch the margin back to double figures.

BIG PICTURE

N.C. State: The depleted Wolfpack — who have lost three players to season-ending injuries — could have packed it in after blowing an early 10-point lead and allowing Louisville to score the final 19 points of the first half. To their credit, they figured out a way to manufacture a run of their own, scoring on 10 consecutive possessions to retake the lead on a team that beat them by 30 points nine nights earlier before running out of steam while playing their second game in 18 hours.

"We can rotate and manage with one starter out ... but when we have three, it's tough," coach Wes Moore said. "We just don't have the depth to handle that."

Louisville: The final ACC game for the Cardinals' senior class of Durr, Carter and Fuehring will be for a league championship. The winningest class in school history improved to 120-21 over the past four years — the fewest losses by a four-year class and the best winning percentage in school history.

TIGHTENED UP

Louisville's two tournament wins have come by a combined 18 points over Clemson and N.C. State. The Cardinals previously beat both of those teams by at least 30 points. Walz said Louisville's 92-62 romp over the Wolfpack on Feb. 28 "was not going to repeat itself."

FUN WITH NUMBERS

Durr began the day as ACC's second-leading scorer — a tenth of a point behind Notre Dame's Arike Ogunbowale, who averaged 21.6 points per game. But Ogunbowale scored just 12 points in a victory over Syracuse in the first semifinal, and that dropped her to 21.3 points per game while Durr's average held steady at 21.5 points after hers.

UP NEXT

N.C. State: Will spend a couple of weeks waiting for Selection Monday.

Louisville: Faces Notre Dame on Sunday in the title game for the second straight year.