Cal women end Stanford's streak of conference titles 63-53

The Golden Bears beat No. 18 Stanford 63-53 Sunday to deny the Cardinal a chance at winning their 15th consecutive regular-season conference title.|

STANFORD - Mercedes Jefflo traded texts with California associate head coach Charmin Smith after a rough loss to Stanford last week and made one thing clear about bouncing back in the next meeting.

“I said, ‘That’s the only option we have. We have to get the next one, that’s our job,’” Jefflo said.

On Sunday afternoon, she had a big hand in making that happen. A hot hand.

Jefflo scored a key basket with 1:59 to play, and the Golden Bears beat No. 18 Stanford 63-53 to deny the Cardinal a chance at winning their 15th consecutive regular-season conference title.

“Well, that was a good 15 years,” said Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer. “That was fun.”

Jefflo finished with 15 points, knocking down two 3-pointers during a decisive second-half run, and Cal (20-7, 12-4 Pac-12) earned a split with its rival in the second meeting over a five-day span and spoiled the Cardinal’s senior day.

No. 7 Oregon State clinched at least a share of the Pac-12 regular-season title earlier Sunday at Utah. The Bay Area teams face the Oregon schools for the first and only time this coming week to close out the regular season.

“It just puts out a statement that it’s not only Stanford anymore,” said Jefflo, who added four assists and two steals. “It’s multiple teams, and it’s always going to be a battle.”

Amber Orrange kept her team close late on the way to 11 points in her final conference game at Maples Pavilion, and freshman Brittany McPhee scored a season-best 24 points and played her most minutes yet for the Cardinal (20-8, 12-4).

After dominating at Maples Pavilion for decades, Stanford had three home losses for the first time since 2006-07.

Cal used a 9-0 run and Jefflo’s hot hand to build a 45-38 lead, then Stanford answered right back on consecutive baskets by McPhee and a tying hoop from Orrange. But the Cardinal couldn’t overcome 17 turnovers.

Reshanda Gray scored two quick baskets after intermission but picked up her third foul and went to the bench at the 18:53 mark before returning and making an impact down the stretch. She converted two free throws with 1:20 left and finished with 17 points. Playing again in front of WNBA coaches, Brittany Boyd had 12 points, 13 rebounds and four assists.

This back-to-back schedule was similar to two years ago, when the teams played twice in a week. Cal lost at home before a 67-55 win at Maples that snapped Stanford’s 81-game conference winning streak, and the Bears went on to the program’s first Final Four.

This time, Cal bounced back from a 59-47 home defeat Wednesday night at Haas Pavilion, in which the Golden Bears went the final 12:55 without a field goal and were held to their lowest scoring total in a conference game in more than four years.

“This is a big one for us, because Stanford is so good and our conference is so good,” said fourth-year Bears coach Lindsay Gottlieb, who won her 99th game at Cal.

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