COLLEGE STATION – The No. 12 Texas A&M Aggies surged past the Oklahoma State Cowgirls, beating them by a score of 74-62 at Reed Arena. Junior guard Chennedy Carter led the way with a season-high 31 points as the Aggies were able to win their Big 12/SEC Challenge matchup.
Both teams started out neck and neck, as the game was tied at 18 through the first quarter. While things remained close throughout the second quarter, the Aggies were able to close the period on a 7-0 run to take a four-point lead into halftime, 32-28.
A&M carried the momentum into the second half, as it used a 16-3 run to extend the lead to double figures. Carter sparked the Aggies with an 18-point period, which allowed them to take a 60-41 lead into the final 10 minutes. From then on, it was more of the same as A&M earned its largest lead of the night, going up by 24 points. Never letting Oklahoma State getting back within single-digits, the Aggies cruised to a 12-point victory.
TEAM NOTES
- A&M shot a season-high 50% from three and 90% from the free throw line, while also making a season-high 17 free throws.
- This was the first time this season that two players scored 20+ in a game (Carter-31, Wells-22).
- The Aggies controlled the pace of the game, scoring 17 fast break points.
- Texas A&M is now 2-1 in the Big 12/SEC Challenges.
- Texas A&M used a starting lineup of Chennedy Carter, Shambria Washington, Kayla Wells, N’dea Jones and Ciera Johnson for the eighth time this season.
INDIVIDUAL NOTES
- Junior guard Chennedy Carter led the Aggies with a season-high 31 points, notching her sixth 20+ game this season and the 11th 30-point game of her career.
- Carter extended her double-figure scoring streak to 47 games, and scored in double-figures in 72 of her 73 career games.
- Carter moved into fourth on A&M’s all-time scoring list, upping her career total to 1,671 as she passed Danielle Gant (1,645, 2005-09).
- Carter’s four steals were also a season-high.
- Junior guard Kayla Wells recorded her first 20 point game of the season with 22 points. She made a season-high four three pointers en-route to the seventh 20-point game of her career.
- Junior forward N’dea Jones had a team high in rebounds with 15, reaching double figures in the rebounding for the third time this season.
- Junior forward Anna Dreimane set a season high in blocks with two.
- Head coach Gary Blair earned the 798th victory of his career after topping Oklahoma State.
UP NEXT
The Aggies will host TCU on December 11th at Reed Arena at 7 p.m. Tickets are available here.
Texas A&M Head Coach Gary Blair
Opening Statement …
“I thought the difference in the ballgame was how we finished the second quarter. We were in as much foul trouble as we were at Florida State. This time, between [Cheah Rael-Whitsitt] and Anna [Dreimane], they came in and stopped it and some other kids made some plays. That was the whole point of being able to rest Ciera [Johnson] and not play her into her third foul. It just wasn’t her night tonight. It’s been her night for the majority of the season, so we’ll go back to work. You had two Texas kids come in here, [Vivian] Gray and [Natasha] Mack, and they are two very good ball players. Gray had nine points in the first quarter and didn’t score in the second quarter. I thought that was crucial. She missed some shots and we contested shots. When you’re going against a good team that’s already played Louisville and Oregon, they’ve seen teams that are as good or better than us, but I thought our kids responded.
On Chennedy Carter’s play tonight …
“You look at the stat sheet and say ‘Chennedy took so many shots,’ but look at how many great shots she hit. One of these days, she’s going to go 12-14 and go 9-10 from the line, and that’s how hard she is to guard sometimes. Everybody has a different defense that they try to guard her with, but I thought she played a very good game.”
On how Kayla Wells compliments Chennedy Carter …
“Wells is a pretty good Scottie Pippen, next to Jordan. Sometimes, you have to have two people that work together so long. Remember, those two have been teammates since the fourth or fifth grade. Those kids have known each other that long. They just have a feeling about where the other person is going to be. Wells, when she strokes the ball and hits that three as good as she was, she was just getting open looks and then creating. She’s getting better and better.”
Junior Guard Chennedy Carter
On A&M’s defense…
“I think that Coach Starkey really emphasized that we could get after them today. We could get aggressive, make a couple steals, and really turn them over. They made it really easy on us. I think for me, I got out in the passing lanes a couple of times, Shambria [Washington] got out, even Kayla [Wells] was guarding Vivian [Gray], their best player, and made it hard for her. When you shut out their best player it takes away from the team and everyone else getting into their rhythms. It really started with Kayla’s defense and we all just picked it up behind her.
On the three-point performance and how they were able to stay hot…
“Teams that zone us don’t really understand how hard this one [Kayla Wells] and [] [Aaliyah] Wilson really work on their 3-pointers. I mean I work on mine a lot too, but it really comes and goes for me. Kayla is a really consistent shooter and I don’t think she gets enough credit for hitting threes consistently night in and night out. It starts there, she puts a lot of time in.”
Junior Guard Kayla Wells
On when she felt she would have a good night shooting threes…
“After the first one I didn’t make it in anymore, I was driving and my teammates found me when I was hot. That was important, when your teammates find you when you’re hot, it’s more their assists than anything.
On the team’s energy …
“I just felt like the energy was different. We came out and were ready and excited to play, that was a quality opponent that we played. We were just excited and the energy was there you could just tell, Coach Starkey said he could just tell coming in from warm-ups it was just different. The energy had a big thing to do with it and we were very prepared. We had a really good walk-through, shootaround, and he [Starkey] knew that we were focused.”
Story courtesy of Texas A&M Athletics