South Carolina guard Shelbretta Ball wipes her face after losing to Kansas 75-69 in a second-round game of the women's NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 25, 2013, in Boulder Colo. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
South Carolina guard Shelbretta Ball wipes her face after losing to Kansas 75-69 in a second-round game of the women's NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 25, 2013, in Boulder Colo. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
Kansas players celebrate after defeating South Carolina 75-69 in a second-round game in the women's NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 25, 2013, in Boulder, Colo. (AP Photo/ Brennan Linsley)
Kansas guard Monica Engelman (13) puts up a shot as South Carolina forward Ashley Bruner (21) and South Carolina guard Sancheon White (20) defend during the second half of a second-round game in the women's NCAA college basketball tournament on Monday, March 25, 2013, in Boulder. Colo. (AP Photo/ Ed Andrieski)
South Carolina forward Aleighsa Welch, left, grabs a rebound from Kansas guard CeCe Harper during the second half of a second-round game in the women's NCAA college basketball tournament on Monday, March 25, 2013, in Boulder. Colo. (AP Photo/ Ed Andrieski )
South Carolina guard Shelbretta Ball (2) shoots over Kansas guard Angel Goodrich (3) during the second half of a second-round game in the women's NCAA college basketball tournament on Monday, March 25, 2013, in Boulder. Colo. (AP Photo/ Ed Andrieski )
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) ? The Kansas Jayhawks aren't about to complain about their No. 12 seeding.
After all, they realize they were likely the last at-large team to make the women's NCAA tournament after losing seven of their last 11 games.
They're eager, however, to prove that they're not your average 12th seed.
The Jayhawks (20-13) were the ones chanting "Sweet 16!" for the second straight season Monday night after senior Monica Engelman scored a career-high 27 points in a 75-69 upset of fourth-seeded South Carolina.
Kansas became just the second No. 12 seed to advance to the second weekend of the NCAA tournament, joining San Francisco in 1996 as the only No. 12 seeds to follow up a win in the opening round with another in the second. No. 12 seeds are 2-15 in the second round since the women's field was expanded to 64 teams in 1994.
The Jayhawks moved on to Norfolk, Va., where they will play the winner of Tuesday's game between Notre Dame and Iowa in the regional semifinals Sunday.
Engelman's previous career best was 26 points set last month against TCU.
"For me, Angel made it easy," Engelman said of teammate Angel Goodrich. "I mean, she's a great point guard, she can push the ball so she makes everyone else want to sprint up the floor and get easy buckets in transition."
Goodrich's speed allowed the Jayhawks to push the pace much faster than the Gamecocks found comfortable.
"That's what we wanted to do, we want to control the tempo," Goodrich said. "When we run we have fun. We wanted to catch them off balance, catch them when they're not ready, because when they set up, they're really good."
Goodrich added 20 points to go with her eight assists.
Fourth-seeded South Carolina (25-8) was denied its 26th win, which would have been the program's most since joining the Southeastern Conference in 1991-92.
"It was a hard-fought, physical game," South Carolina forward Aleighsa Welch said. "It was really an up and down tempo."
That's not the Gamecocks' style. They gave up just 49.5 points a game and Kansas nearly had that by halftime.
"I told our team at the half, 'We give up 32 points in entire games,'" South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said. "The pace of the game was not our pace. They made us play a little quicker. I thought we were pretty efficient on the floor offensively, but in order for us to stay in basketball games, we have to control games from a defensive standpoint, and we didn't do that."
Staley said having Sancheon White, her best defender, play just 8 minutes in the first half because of foul trouble was a big part of Engelman's big night.
"It was her defensive assignment. We could have used her speed, but when you're playing two freshmen (Khadijah Sessions and Tiffany Mitchell) in a big game like this, it's pretty difficult to ask them to do things they haven't done," Staley said.
"She was hot. When a player gets going like that, it's hard to stop."
The first meeting between the two schools was an instant classic, a one-possession game in the final 30 seconds even though South Carolina didn't score again after Ashley Bruner's bucket with 2:52 left tied it at 69.
The Gamecocks grabbed 26 offensive boards, a school record for an NCAA game, and they had three players post double-doubles.
Bruner and Welch scored 16 points each and pulled down 12 and 11 rebounds, respectively. Elem Ibiam also had a double-double for South Carolina with 12 points and 10 boards.
Yet it's Kansas, which has won four straight games at the Coors Events Center, that's returning to the round of 16 after getting there last year as an 11th seed.
Kansas got a major scare when center Carolyn Davis limped off the court, favoring her left leg, after picking up her fourth foul with 6:40 left. A trainer took off the brace that protects the knee she injured last year, forcing her to miss the NCAA tournament. Welch sank both free throws to tie it at 65.
"It's always a scare to see someone go down and when I looked at her, she kind of just held her knee and I was just kind of like, 'Dang!' I didn't know what to think, really," Goodrich said. "But for her to get up and stand up, it relieved me a little bit.
"When that happens, you've got to stay composed and think we've still got time on the clock, we've still got a game to finish. But I'm glad she got back up and she got back in the game and she did what she needed to do."
It was 67-all when Davis returned with 3:50 remaining. She quickly denied Bruner's jumper, and her bucket with 2:30 left put Kansas ahead for good at 71-69.
Iseasia Walker missed a 3-pointer for South Carolina that would have tied at 72 it with less than a half-minute remaining and Kansas sealed the win at the free throw line.
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Follow Arnie Melendrez Stapleton on Twitter: http://twitter.com/arniestapleton
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