Texas
No. 6 Louisville beats No. 3 Texas at Battle 4 Atlantis
PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas (AP) — Chrislyn Carr scored 19 factors to assist No. 6 Louisville beat No. 3 Texas 71-63 in Sunday night time’s comfort bracket on the Battle 4 Atlantis, sending the Longhorns to their second straight loss within the event.
Morgan Jones and Hailey Van Lith every added 18 factors for the Cardinals (4-1), who pulled away within the fourth quarter to bounce again from their first lack of the season.
Aaliyah Moore had 19 factors and eight rebounds whereas drawing a number of expenses to guide Texas (1-3), which misplaced for the third time this week and is off to this system’s worst begin in practically a quarter-century.
This was a projected matchup when the brackets have been launched for the second event on the Atlantis resort, although it got here in an sudden place: the comfort spherical after every misplaced its first-round recreation.
First it was Texas, which fell to Marquette 68-61. It was a efficiency that had coach Vic Schaefer saying his staff had been “out-toughed,” had proven an “unwillingness” to play collectively and that he was having bother getting his gamers to run the performs he referred to as.
Louisville coach Jeff Walz was additionally in a blunt temper about after dropping to Gonzaga in time beyond regulation, saying his staff “simply didn’t have all 5 competing on the identical time.”
One night time later, Walz’s staff discovered a response, whereas Schaefer’s staff fell to 0-2 within the Bahamas.
BIG PICTURE
Louisville: The rebounding, or lack thereof, was a selected irritation for Walz within the Gonzaga loss. After being overwhelmed 50-31 on the glass, the Cardinals battled to a draw (32-all, 11-all offensive) with an enormous Longhorns staff — and that included when the Cardinals obtained three offensive boards to arrange Carr’s 3-pointer to beat the shot clock as Louisville made its transfer halfway by the fourth quarter..
Texas: The Longhorns are nonetheless taking part in with out star guard Rori Harmon because of damage, which had her watching from the bench with a grey protecting boot on her proper foot. The Longhorns are off to their first 1-3 begin because the 1998-99 season with out her.
UP NEXT
Louisville: The Cardinals will face South Dakota State in Monday’s fifth-place recreation.
Texas: The Longhorns will face Rutgers in Monday’s seventh-place recreation.
Texas
Dense fog expected overnight; sunshine to return to North Texas
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Texas
8-year-old girl missing, father dead after car crash in Texas flood
Teacher killed, students hospitalized in crash at Texas school
A car accident at Excelled Montessori Plus left 5 children hospitalized and one teacher dead, according to Bexar County Sheriff Javier Salazar.
OKLAHOMA CITY — The search for an 8-year-old Oklahoma girl entered its third day on Thursday after her family’s vehicle got caught in a drainage ditch in Texas and was swept away by floodwaters on Christmas Eve.
Emergency personnel responded to a crash scene around 9:30 a.m. local time on Tuesday near U.S. Route 75 in Sherman, a city about 17 miles south of the Texas-Oklahoma border, according to the Sherman Police Department. Police said an SUV veered off the highway, got trapped in a drainage ditch and traveled down a nearby creek.
Six people were inside the vehicle at the time of the crash, according to police. Four family members were later rescued as authorities continued recovery efforts.
One body was recovered several hours later, police said. CBS News identified the person as the missing girl’s father, Will Robinson, who was a coach for the Durant High School Lady Lions basketball team in southern Oklahoma.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott approved the dispatch of state search-and-rescue teams to assist with search efforts, according to police. Local and state personnel searched throughout most of the night on Tuesday to locate the missing girl, police said.
Search efforts resumed early Christmas Day as personnel expanded the search area outside of Sherman and into the “lower branches of Post Oak and Choctaw creeks,” according to police. By the afternoon, searchers had covered about seven miles of the creek in the area without success and police said they were shifting their “focus into the county, targeting some possible locations where we have not looked to as yet.”
Authorities resumed their search at 7 a.m. Thursday, but police noted that inclement weather may force them to pause the search.
“We will maintain observation posts at key areas throughout the inclement weather,” the Sherman Police Department said in a statement Thursday morning. “The active search will resume again the moment we are able to safely.”
Police also thanked the local community for their support but said no additional equipment, volunteers or other resources were needed in the search.
“We appreciate all the offers for assistance and are thankful for your concern and willingness to help,” the Sherman Police Department said. “There are dozens of search teams already deployed, who possess vast experience in these types of operations.”
Severe weather threatens parts of Texas
Tuesday’s accident comes amid a severe weather threat in parts of the state. The National Weather Service issued flash flood warnings for the Dallas-Fort Worth metro as thunderstorms move through the area.
“Thunderstorms continue pushing east and are now east of the US 75/I-45 corridor,” the weather service in Fort Worth warned Thursday afternoon. “Main threats with these storms continues to be small hail and heavy rain, but a tornado can’t be ruled out in the Tornado Watch area.”
The weather service also issued a tornado watch for the Houston metro area, which will until at least 7 p.m. Forecasters said in a Thursday morning forecast that the environment for tornadoes would be the most favorable around noon.
Abbott activated state emergency response resources on Thursday in anticipation of an increased severe weather threat across the eastern half of Texas. Citing the weather service, the governor’s office said in a statement that severe thunderstorms are expected to develop across portions of north, central, east, and southeast Texas beginning Thursday.
“Risks through the weekend include large hail, damaging winds, possible tornadoes, and heavy rainfall resulting in flash flooding,” the governor’s office said. “Minor river flooding is possible over the next several days, with the threat subsiding early next week.”
Contributing: Fernando Cervantes Jr., USA TODAY
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