Some quick thoughts and takeaways from Purdue’s 92-49 defeat at the hands on UCLA tonight.
(Game Recap)
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Too fast, too tall, too talented:
There were very few people who expected Purdue to march into Pauley Pavilion and beat the No. 4 team in the country… and the Bruins showed why. Purdue struggled to deal with the size and athleticism of UCLA, particularly the 6’7” Lauren Betts.
Purdue was out-rebounded by nearly 20 and had a hard time finishing around the rim. Caitlyn Harper briefly showed how they can neutralize that with a pair of threes in the second quarter.
There’s not a 6’7” big walking through those doors this season, so Purdue will have to scrap against teams with bigger post players for the remainder of the year. Although, not very many will be as skilled as Betts.
Mary Ashley Stevenson:
The freshman forward had an encouraging debut for the Boilermakers, with eight points and two rebounds. As I mentioned above, UCLA’s size caused mismatches but Stevenson held her own for the most part.
She is exactly what Purdue needs off the bench, although could play herself into a starting role by the time Big Ten play ramps up in January.
Shooting woes tell the story:
Purdue’s perimeter shooting is what is going to take this team to another NCAA Tournament or turn out to be a detriment this season.
The Boilers finished just 4-21 from behind the arc and two of those connections were in garbage time by Emily Monson and McKenna Layden.
Purdue is going to need Abbey Ellis, Jayla Smith and/or Madison Layden to be consistent from the outside moving forward.
(Game Recap)
BoilerUpload - Women's basketball - Purdue drops season opener 92-49 to No. 4 UCLA
Purdue women's basketball falls to No. 4 UCLA 92-49 to open the season.

Too fast, too tall, too talented:
There were very few people who expected Purdue to march into Pauley Pavilion and beat the No. 4 team in the country… and the Bruins showed why. Purdue struggled to deal with the size and athleticism of UCLA, particularly the 6’7” Lauren Betts.
Purdue was out-rebounded by nearly 20 and had a hard time finishing around the rim. Caitlyn Harper briefly showed how they can neutralize that with a pair of threes in the second quarter.
There’s not a 6’7” big walking through those doors this season, so Purdue will have to scrap against teams with bigger post players for the remainder of the year. Although, not very many will be as skilled as Betts.
Mary Ashley Stevenson:
The freshman forward had an encouraging debut for the Boilermakers, with eight points and two rebounds. As I mentioned above, UCLA’s size caused mismatches but Stevenson held her own for the most part.
She is exactly what Purdue needs off the bench, although could play herself into a starting role by the time Big Ten play ramps up in January.
Shooting woes tell the story:
Purdue’s perimeter shooting is what is going to take this team to another NCAA Tournament or turn out to be a detriment this season.
The Boilers finished just 4-21 from behind the arc and two of those connections were in garbage time by Emily Monson and McKenna Layden.
Purdue is going to need Abbey Ellis, Jayla Smith and/or Madison Layden to be consistent from the outside moving forward.