The team didn’t care that they weren’t cheering under the fall of the confetti (but the operators soon moved the confetti cannons closer to the celebration). Eventually, a second round of confetti showered the team in tiny pieces of red and black as head coach Vanessa Blair-Lewis held its ticket to March Madness above her head. The No. 2 seed Patriots defeated No. 4 seed Saint Joseph’s 73-58 on Sunday to earn their first Atlantic 10 Tournament title and the program’s first NCAA Tournament berth. George Mason won three games in three days, all by at least 13 points , and had three players earn All-Championship team honors : graduate student forward Nalani Kaysia ; senior guard Paula Suárez ; and Most Outstanding Player, redshirt sophomore forward Zahirah Walton . Suárez led the team with 23 points Sunday afternoon, making nine of her 16 shot attempts, and added six rebounds, six assists and one steal in front of her parents, who came from Spain to watch their daughter. “I love when they get to come here and see us play, because they always watch through a TV…” she said. “But like, being here, they love the atmosphere. They love that there’s people driving from Mason to [be] here. So I’m just really happy they got the opportunity to see this in person.”
Before Blair-Lewis finally cut down the remainder of the net, she encouraged the crowd of fans and members of the Green Machine to cheer louder, standing barefoot on the ladder, scissors in hand. After removing the net from the hoop, she held it in her hand and yelled, “Let’s go” and “We did it.” To win the championship, George Mason had to defeat Saint Joseph’s for the first time this season after losing the two regular-season matchups. The second regular-season loss was on Feb. 23 and was the team’s second in a row after losing to Davidson on Feb. 20. “I think it was a really good wake-up call for us before we got into the tournament, to have back-to-back losses, which was unprecedented for this team,” Blair-Lewis told reporters after the semifinal win on March 8. “It really woke us up. We really had some conversations, watched some film and then we had a pizza party. And we just took the pressure off of ’em. “We were sitting around here sad because we were 23-5 at the time, and we were looking around like, ‘Oh, woe is me.’ And we’re like, ‘Hey, wait a minute. Stop this. We’re 23-5. Like there are a ton of people that would want to change positions with us right now. We hit a little dead spot, and if we want to, we don’t have to lose again, y’all. Let’s take this moment right here [and] learn from it.’ And then we literally went and had a pizza party.”
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Subscribe now to our sister publication The IX and receive our independent women’s sports newsletter six days a week. Learn more about your favorite athletes and teams around the world competing in soccer, tennis, basketball, golf, hockey and gymnastics from our incredible team of writers. Readers of The Next now save 50% on their subscription to The IX . Three other Patriots scored in double figures: Walton recorded 19 points, eight rebounds, two assists and one block; Kaysia had 11 points, eight rebounds, two assists and one block; and sophomore guard Kennedy Harris had 11 points, two rebounds and two steals. While Saint Joseph’s hit the first basket, George Mason led the game for 36:06 and by as many as 19 in the fourth quarter. The lead was built in part by the team going 10-for-11 from the floor during the third quarter. Though the Patriots did not make a field goal in the last 4:28 of the game, they were able to withstand the Hawks’ run and went 9-for-12 from the free throw line after Saint Joseph’s pulled within 6 points with 1:26 to go. As the celebration continued, the net-cutting process was a smooth one until the final player, Kaysia, broke the scissors with her first cut. After she got a working pair of scissors and made a successful snip, she made sure to keep the piece close to her, tying it around the closure of her championship hat that she wore backwards to the postgame press conference. As her teammates were celebrating in a huddle under cameras, Kaysia ran to the stands to see her loved ones and grab her 10-month-old daughter Xéla so they could celebrate together. Xéla eventually joined her mom at the press conference, wearing a black sweatshirt with the George Mason logo and her mom’s number 42 on it. Though Xéla spent most of the press conference playing with the ceremonial ring box, trying to grab the microphone, or occasionally banging on the table and trying to add her own commentary, Kaysia looks forward to telling her daughter about this moment in the future. “Does she know what’s going on right now? Absolutely not,” Kaysia told reporters after the team’s semifinal win on March 8. “But she’s just happy that everyone around her is happy. And I can’t wait ’til she gets older, and then kind of processes and knows what’s going on. And then, not only just me, but for my teammates too, for her to say, like, ‘Oh, my mommy and all my aunties were able to accomplish this.’”Before Blair-Lewis finally cut down the remainder of the net, she encouraged the crowd of fans and members of the Green Machine to cheer louder, standing barefoot on the ladder, scissors in hand. After removing the net from the hoop, she held it in her hand and yelled, “Let’s go” and “We did it.” To win the championship, George Mason had to defeat Saint Joseph’s for the first time this season after losing the two regular-season matchups. The second regular-season loss was on Feb. 23 and was the team’s second in a row after losing to Davidson on Feb. 20. “I think it was a really good wake-up call for us before we got into the tournament, to have back-to-back losses, which was unprecedented for this team,” Blair-Lewis told reporters after the semifinal win on March 8. “It really woke us up. We really had some conversations, watched some film and then we had a pizza party. And we just took the pressure off of ’em. “We were sitting around here sad because we were 23-5 at the time, and we were looking around like, ‘Oh, woe is me.’ And we’re like, ‘Hey, wait a minute. Stop this. We’re 23-5. Like there are a ton of people that would want to change positions with us right now. We hit a little dead spot, and if we want to, we don’t have to lose again, y’all. Let’s take this moment right here [and] learn from it.’ And then we literally went and had a pizza party.”