Brigham Young University
Dec 05 | 05:00 PM
72 - 64
Texas A&M University, College Station
Alexa Anderson | Posted: 5 Dec 2015 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Alexa Anderson

Rydalch, Cougar defense knock off No. 11 Texas A&M

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Final Box Score

LAIE, Hawai’i — The stalwart BYU defense and 28 points from tournament MVP Lexi Eaton Rydalch proved to be enough for the Cougars to upset No. 11 Texas A&M 72-64 in the third and final game of the Tom Weston Classic held on the campus of BYU-Hawai’i, Saturday.

“This was a great defensive effort and a huge win for our program,” BYU head coach Jeff Judkins said. “Everyone came in and did what they were supposed to do. Lexi had probably one of her best all-around games. Makenzi did a great job defending their top player. Kylie had another tremendous game and she handled their pressure. She did a great job.”

The Cougars (6-3) put on a defensive show as they held the Aggies (7-2) to their lowest number of points scored this season, limiting their leading scorers, Courtney Williams and Courtney Walker, to just 9 of 25 shooting.

Rydalch finished the contest with a game-high 28 points, seven rebounds, three assists and one steal. Her 28 points was her fifth 20-point outing of the year, and she now has a 22.6-point season scoring average. Makenzi Morrison Pulsipher added 16 points, going 2 for 6 from behind the arc, and Kalani Purcell chipped in 12 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists to record her fourth double-double of the season.

The Cougars struck first on a 3-pointer by Purcell to go up 3-0, giving her a made 3-point field goal in each of the last three games. Teams traded baskets on the next few possessions with a long jumper and a fast break layup coming from Pulsipher and a jumper on the other side of the floor by Aggie Khaalia Hillsman to make the score 7-4 in BYU’s favor. Pulsipher put the Cougars up 11-6 on an 18-foot jumper from the top of the key at the 5:41 mark. Pulsipher had six of the Cougars first 11 points.

Purcell kept the Cougars five-point lead alive as she grabbed her own rebound and put it back in the basket to give BYU the 15-10 advantage. Purcell finished the period with five points and a game-high six rebounds.

BYU kept their lead throughout the final minutes of the first period, going into the second 10 minutes of action up five, 17-12. The Cougars shot 50.0 percent from the field, going 8 for 16 in the first 10 minutes of play, while the Aggies shot a field goal percentage of 42.9.

The Aggies started off the second period with a layup by Chelsea Jennings to cut the Cougars lead to three, 17-14, but BYU responded with four straight points by sophomore forward Amanda Wayment to go up 21-16. Texas A&M then brought on the full-court press to try to slow the Cougar tempo, forcing a BYU turnover and then consequently a Cougar timeout as the Aggies came within two, 21-19.

At the 5:17 mark, Oahu native Kylie Maeda hit a 3-pointer from the top of the arc to push BYU’s lead back up to three, 26-23. Texas A&M regained the lead with a 3-point field goal of its own to put the Aggies up 28-27 with 2:27 to go in the half. Rydalch tied the game up, 31-31, with a minute and a half to go in the second period on a pull-up jumper off the glass. On the next play, the Cougars recaptured their lead off a Pulsipher three, her first of the game. Rydalch led all scorers going into halftime with 11 points while Pulsipher added nine.

Texas A&M outscored BYU 19–17 in the second period of play, but the Cougars were able to hold on to their lead going into the break, 34-31. BYU shot 7 for 8 from the free throw line through 20 minutes of play, while Texas A&M went 2 for 4 from the charity stripe.

Teams traded baskets at the start of the third period, but BYU then went on a 9-0 run as Rydalch finished an acrobatic layup followed up by a deep 3-point field goal to give the Cougars their largest lead in the game so far, 43-33. After an Aggie layup, Purcell tallied her fourth assist finding Jasmine Moody cutting through the lane at the 5:42 mark to keep BYU up 10, 45-35.

The Aggies pulled within six, 45-39, as they put on their full-court pressure again, forcing key BYU turnovers. Rydalch, who scored 12 points in the third period alone, extended the Cougars lead to eight with 2:36 to go, giving her 23 points through three periods of play.

Rydalch started off the last 10 minutes of action converting a 3-point play to give the Cougars a nine-point advantage over the Aggies, 55-46. On the next BYU possession, Purcell slipped past two Texas A&M defenders for the easy lay in, to give her nine points for the game. The Aggies then cut the lead down to five at the 5:31 mark on a layup by Courtney Williams and then kept the pressure on by forcing two straight Cougar turnovers to cut the lead to one, 62-61 with 3:51 to go.

On the next possession, Maeda went 1 of 2 from the foul line pushing the Cougar lead back up to two, 63-61. The Aggies then pushed the ball up the court, missing a layup and fouling Purcell on the rebound, sending her to the line, where she went 1 for 2.

The Cougars proceeded to work deep into the shot clock on each of their final possessions. Rydalch pulled down a key offensive rebound giving the Cougars another vital possession in which Purcell was fouled and sent to the free throw line. Purcell made both free throws to put BYU up 66-62 with 2:12 to go in the game. Purcell then stole the ball with 53 seconds left and pushed the ball up to Pulsipher for the easy left hand lay in to give the Cougars the six point lead that proved large enough to knock off the No. 11 Aggies.

BYU committed just 14 turnovers in the game to Texas A&M’s 19, with BYU scoring 22 points off of Aggie turnovers. The Aggie bench outscored the Cougar bench 30 to 8, but the Cougars dished out 20 assists to Texas A&M’s 17.

The BYU women’s basketball team will return to Utah to take on in-state opponent Weber State in Ogden, Thursday, Dec. 10. Team introductions and tip-off begins at 7 p.m. MST. Links to live stats and streamed audio for the game can be found on the BYU women’s basketball schedule page.

Postgame Notes

Team

The 72-64 win over No. 11 Texas A&M marks the first time that the BYU women’s basketball team has beat a ranked team since the 2013-14 season when they beat No. 11 North Carolina and No. 13 Nebraska during their run to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA tournament.

With the win over the Aggies, BYU improved its record in the Tom Weston Classic to 14-1.

In the upset win, BYU capitalized on TAMU turnovers, getting 22 points from the Aggies mistakes. The Cougars also took advantage of second chance opportunities, picking up 14 points. Texas A&M finished with 11 second chance points.

The Aggies of Texas A&M had the advantage in the rebounds category in the first half with 19 boards to BYU’s 14. For the game, they finished with 32 to the Cougars 31.

After 20 minutes of action, both teams had dished out the same number of assists with nine each. At the conclusion of the game, the Cougars had dished out 20 assists while the Aggies totaled 17 in the loss.

From the free throw line, the Cougars shot 87.5 percent in the first half. They finished shooting 73.9 percent from the charity stripe. The Aggies shot 66.7 percent from the free throw line for the game.

For the fifth time on the season and the third straight, three Cougar players recorded double figures in points. Rydalch (28), Pulsipher (16), Purcell (12).

Lexi Eaton Rydalch and Kalani Purcell were named to the All-Tournament team in this year’s Tom Weston Classic. Rydalch was also named the tournament's MVP.

Player

Lexi Eaton Rydalch

Lexi Eaton Rydalch led all scorers in the first half of action with 11 points. She also had three rebounds, two assists and one steal. Rydalch finished the game with her ninth double-digit outing in points and fifth with 20-plus points with a game-high 28. She pulled down seven boards, had three assists and two steals.

Kalani Purcell

Kalani Purcell pulled down the most rebounds with six through the first two periods of play. For the game, she pulled down a game-high 10 boards. Purcell also contributed 12 points recording her second straight and fourth career double-double at BYU. The rebounds were also game highs as were her seven assists.

Makenzi Morrison Pulsipher

Makenzi Morrison Pulsipher recorded her seventh game with double figures in points with 16. She also had two assists, two steals and one rebound in the win.

Amanda Wayment

Amanda Wayment tied her season and career highs in first-half points with six in the first two periods. She finished the game with a career-high eight points along with six rebounds.

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Norma Bertoch | Posted: 30 Nov 2015 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Norma Bertoch

BYU hoops playing in the Tom Weston Classic at BYU-Hawaii

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BYU Game Notes vs. BYU-H

PROVO, Utah— With a 3-3 record, the Cougar women’s basketball team continues its nonconference portion of the 2015-16 schedule, taking its third road trip to date. BYU will compete in the Tom Weston Classic in Laie, Hawaii, on the BYU-Hawaii Campus, Dec. 2-5.

On Wednesday, Dec. 2, they will take on BYU-Hawaii (3-2) at 7 p.m. HT. On Thursday, Dec. 3, they will battle the University of Hawaii at 6 p.m. HT and on Saturday, Dec. 5, they will take on No. 9 Texas A&M (5-1) at 2 p.m. HT. All games will be played in the Cannon Activities Center.

ABOUT BYU
This will be the seventh time that BYU has participated in the Tom Weston Classic, formerly the Hukilau Invitational. The first tournament was held in 2008. It was not held during the 2012-13 and the 2013-14 season. It became the Tom Weston Invitational last year. The Cougars enter the tournament with an 11-1 invitational record. Their only loss was last year on Nov. 29 when BYU lost to Oregon State 71-61. 

BYU has two players that are scoring in double figures. All-American senior guard Lexi Eaton Rydalch (21.8) and junior Makenzi Morrison Pulsipher (11.2). All-American Kalani Purcell, a junior college transfer from Hutchinson Community College and Hamilton, New Zealand, leads the way in the rebound category (12.8). She also contributes 9.7 points a game.

The Cougars are scoring 63.7 points per game, shooting 38 percent from the field, 70 percent from the free throw line and 38 percent from 3-point range.

• Head coach: Jeff Judkins (Utah, ‘78) 15th season
• Team’s leading scorer: #21 L. Eaton Rydalch, 21.8 ppg
• Team’s leading rebounder: #32 K. Purcell, 12.8 rpg
• Team’s assists leader: #3 K. Maeda, 3.8 apg
• Team’s steals leader: #23 M. Morrison Pulsipher, 2.0 spg
• Team’s blocks leader: #32, K. Purcell, .50 bpg

ABOUT BYU-HAWAII
BYU-Hawaii has compiled a 3-2 record with wins over Alaska Fairbanks and Arizona Christian, twice.

The Seasiders return two starters and several key bench players from the 2014-15 squad that finished with the second best record in the program’s history, 15-11.

Valarie Nawahine is one of four players for the Seasiders scoring in double digits with 13.6 points and 5.6 rebounds per game. Jiashan Cui follows with 12.4 points while Celeste Claw contributes 11.6 points. Rounding out the scoring is Kjirsten Nelson who tallies 10.8 points. The team’s leading rebounder is Emily Nelson who pulls down 8.8 rebounds per game.

As a team, BYU-Hawaii is scoring 66.8 points per game while shooting 40 percent from the field, 75 percent from the free throw line and 30 percent from behind the arc.

• Head coach: Craig Stanger, third season
• Team’s leading scorer: #23 V. Nawahine, 13.6 ppg
• Team’s leading rebounder: #25 E. Nelson, 8.8 rpg
• Team’s assists leader: #03 C. Claw, 7.8 apg
• Team’s steals leader: #03 C. Claw, 1.8 spg
• Team’s blocks leader: #25 E. Nelson, .80 bpg

Series History
BYU Provo leads the series 3-0. All games with the Seasiders have been in the Tom Weston Classic. BYU Provo defeated BYU-Hawaii last 73-52 on Nov. 27, 2014.

ABOUT HAWAII
The University of Hawaii enters the Tom Weston Classic with a 4-3 record. They were picked to finish first in the Big West.

Sarah Toeaina leads the Rainbow Wahine with 10.5 points per game. Teammate Megan Huff is their leading rebounder, pulling down 6.7 boards a game. She also contributes 9.5 points.

Hawaii is scoring 62.5 points per game while shooting 39 percent from the field, 21 percent behind the arc and 70 percent from the free throw line.

In the series history with the Rainbow Wahine, Hawaii has a 7-4 edge over the Cougars.  The two last met on Dec. 5, 2009 in this same tournament with BYU picking up the 81-44 win.

ABOUT TEXAS A&M
The Aggies have a 5-1 mark to date and are ninth in the USA Today/ESPN Top 25 Coaches Poll.

Texas A&M returns eight letterwinners including four starters from a team that last year went 23-10, finished tied for fourth place in the Southeastern Conference and competed in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

The Aggies have three players scoring in double digits with 18.3 points each from Courtney Walker and Courtney Williams. Teammate Jordan Jones is chipping in 10.8 points a game. Khaalia Hillsman is the team’s leading rebounder as she grabs 6.7 boards per contest.

Texas A&M is averaging 80.7 points a game, shooting 47 percent from the field, 40 percent from behind the arc and 66 percent at the charity stripe.

Saturday’s meeting between Texas A&M and BYU is the first ever for the two teams.

Up Next
After the three games the Cougar women play in Laie, the team returns to action in the state of Utah. BYU takes a quick trip to Ogden to battle in-state foe Weber State on Thursday, Dec. 10, in a 7 p.m. tip. Then on Saturday, Dec. 12, BYU plays its final nonconference game hosting in-state rival Utah at 2 p.m.

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