CHICAGO, Ill. — The Chicago State women's basketball team (1-12) fell to Clemson (10-4, 1-1 ACC), 97-44, at the Emil and Patricia Jones Convocation Center. Clemson showed their high caliber offense with 21 made threes on the afternoon. With the Cougars being led by
Keona McGee with 16 points on the afternoon.
The first quarter began with Clemson quickly took control, opening the scoring with a two three-pointers in the first two minutes of the game.
Tania Allen put the Cougars on the board with a jumper at 6:36. Clemson capitalized on fast breaks which resulted in building a 25-7 advantage.
Natalia Williams closed the quarter with a jumper at 0:23, but the Tigers capped the quarter with a three-pointer, leaving the Cougars trailing 28-9.
The Cougars fought hard with
Keona McGee netting a layup early and later adding a free throw. McGee's efforts were noteworthy as she surpassed her season average of 8.11 points, eventually totaling 16 points for the game. Mia Moore was instrumental for Clemson, recording multiple assists and ending the quarter with a layup at the 9-second mark, sealing the quarter with a commanding lead.
Keona McGee of the Cougars contributed significantly, scoring a layup at 9:34 and later hitting a three-pointer at 8:29, assisted by Williams. Despite these efforts, Clemson maintained control in the quarter with the Tigers added a three-point play at 2:46, further widening the gap. The quarter concluded with Chicago State trailing 75-31.
In the fourth quarter, the Cougars' efforts were highlighted by layups from
Natalia Williams and
Elani Randall who made excellent plays down the stretch. The deficit was too much for Chicago State as they fell to Clemson by a score of 97-44.
Chicago State was led by
Keona McGee with 16 points,
Natalia Williams with eight points and two assists and
Kace Urlacher with six points and two assists of her own.
UP NEXT
Chicago State will travel to face Wagner College on Friday, January 2 with their NEC conference opener. The game is set for a 5 p.m. (CT) tip at Spiro Sports Center in Staten Island, New York.