Stanford WBB blows out Clemson to bolster NCAA Tournament hopes Today Us News


STANFORD – In its final regular-season game, Stanford delivered its best performance of the season Sunday, providing hope that a March Madness return is still possible.

Preseason all-ACC forward Nunu Agara had 24 points and 10 rebounds, freshman Hailee Swain had a career-high 20 points and five rebounds, and freshman Lara Somfai had 11 points, nine rebounds and six assists as the Cardinal (19-12, 8-10 ACC) dominated NCAA Tournament-bound Clemson 85-50 at Maples Pavilion.

“Our team focused and worked really hard to prepare for this game and came out with a tremendous sense of urgency,” Stanford coach Kate Paye said. “We’ve talked a lot about, if our team could get healthy and start firing on all cylinders, watch out. And I think you saw that today.”

The Tigers (20-10, 11-7) were allowing a conference-low 58 points per game, but Stanford had 51 points at the half on 69 percent shooting, with 13 assists to just two turnovers.

“I thought you saw Stanford basketball out there,” Paye said. “Playing great defense, rebounding, moving the basketball, running in transition. A lot of different people contributing, getting the ball inside, making extra passes. Our team worked really hard for it, and we’re going to build on it.”

Stanford Cardinal's Hailee Swain (2) takes a shot against the Clemson Tigers in the third quarter at Maples Pavilion in Stanford, Calif., on Sunday, March 1, 2026. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
Stanford Cardinal’s Hailee Swain (2) takes a shot against the Clemson Tigers in the third quarter at Maples Pavilion in Stanford, Calif., on Sunday, March 1, 2026. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

The win showed the heights Stanford can reach, with Agara leading a balanced offense. Four players scored in double figures – Swain was the first freshman since Cameron Brink to reach 20 points — and all five starters had at least two assists as Stanford matched a season high with 21. Defensively, the Cardinal held Clemson to 31 percent shooting and outrebounded the Tigers by 12.

They now must try to continue their run at the ACC Tournament, which starts Wednesday in suburban Atlanta. They’ll open their tournament as the No. 11 seed and face No. 14 seed Florida State on Wednesday in the first round.

That pressure is unfamiliar territory for a program that once treated Selection Sunday as a formality rather than suspense. From 1988 through 2024, Stanford made 36 consecutive NCAA Tournaments, a run that ended last season following the retirement of Hall of Fame coach Tara VanDerveer.

That one-year absence seemed like an anomaly when Stanford started this season with three wins over tournament locks (North Carolina, Oregon, and Washington) and only one damaging loss (to Florida Gulf Coast).


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