Box Score Sophomore Kristin Anda came off the bench to lead four
double-figure scorers with a career-high 19 points in sparking the
No. 10-ranked Washington University women's basketball team
to a 94-55 home win over Emory. The victory boosted the
Bears' overall record to 10-3 overall, 1-1 in the University
Athletic Association while the Eagles slipped to 7-6 in overall
play, 0-2 in the conference.
Wash U. concluded the game shooting 47.8 percent from the floor
(33-of-69) while Emory finished at 30.6 percent (22-of-72).
The Bears, who ran their home winning streak to 35 games, also had
decided advantages in free throw shooting, sinking 21-of-29 to
Emory's five-of-six, and in rebounding where it posted a
60-27 bulge, 22-11 on the offensive end which led to a 23-10
advantage in second-chance points.
Junior Melissa Koike led Emory with 10 points, all of which came
during the second half of play. It marked Koike's third
double-figure scoring effort of the year. Freshman Hannah
Lilly picked up eight points with junior Becca Feldman chipping in
seven. Freshman Savannah Morgan topped the club with six
rebounds.
Emory hit five of its first seven shots from the floor and, with
five different players scoring, held a 12-9 advantage with 14:58
left in the first half. However, the Bears responded with a
13-0 spurt, with Anda picking up nine points in that stretch to
take a 22-12 lead. Emory scored the next five points,
courtesy of a jumper by Feldman and a three-pointer by Lilly to cut
the deficit to five points with 9:34 left in the stanza. Wash
U. then closed out the half on a 25-10 sprint with senior Kathryn
Berger and Claire Schaeperkoetter each knocking down a pair of
triples in the outburst, to assume a 47-27 advantage at
halftime. Emory shot 30.3 percent from the floor (10-of-33)
during the opening 20 minutes of action compared to the
Bears' effort of 44.7 percent (17-of-38). With
frontliners Misha Jackson and Danielle Landry saddled with foul
trouble, Emory saw Wash U. hold a 32-14 edge in rebounding.
Lilly led Emory in scoring with eight first-half points.
The more experienced Bears, with three seniors, a junior and a
sophomore in their starting lineup, in comparison to the
Eagles' one senior, two sophomores and two freshmen, kept the
pressure on in the second half, going on a 17-4 run during the
first nine minutes of the second stanza to take a commanding 64-31
lead. From there, the closest Emory would get would be 25
points with 5:25 left on the clock.
Emory returns to action on Sunday (Jan. 16) when it plays at the
University of Chicago in a 2:00 p.m. (CDT) start.