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Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated
Sport
Michael Rosenberg

Hannah Hidalgo, the Ultimate Disrupter, Is Stealing Dreams This March Madness

FORT WORTH, Texas — Hannah Hidalgo is so quick that she has already finished reading this story. Multiply quick hands by quick feet and quick thinking and you have H-squared, the Notre Dame guard who just ended Vanderbilt’s season.

Hidalgo scored a game-high 31 points in the Fighting Irish’s 67–64 win, and that was her third most impressive stat of the day. Hidalgo had 11 rebounds, even though she is only 5-foot-6. She also had 10 steals, even though she only has three hands.

Um, she has two hands.

Obviously, you don’t play for Vanderbilt.

Hidalgo grabbed hold of the Commodores from the opening tip and spent the rest of the afternoon shaking them until their pockets were empty and they couldn’t see straight. The Commodores came into the game averaging 13 turnovers per game. They had 10 in the first quarter alone. Hidalgo said she realized early that, “I can get in their head and make them continue to turn the ball over.”

Hidalgo played 39 minutes, and she made every second count. She stole passes and swiped balls from dribblers. Vandy coach Shea Ralph said her team was “giving them layups, throwing the ball all over the place,” but there was a reason for that. The Commodores were completely discombobulated, and Hidalgo is far and away the nation’s best discombobulater.

“I’m a point guard,” Hidalgo said afterward. “So I know how difficult it is to run a team and set the plays while also being pressured.”

Fair enough. But Hidalgo has no clue what it is like to face Hannah Hidalgo. There is nobody in the sport like her. Vanderbilt’s Mikayla Blakes beat Hidalgo out for first-team All-American honors this year, and while Blakes was certainly deserving, Hidalgo just stole her name off the plaque.

It is one thing to be fast and quite another to play fast. Basketball is an endless series of simultaneous independent movements; a lot of great athletes can’t keep up with it. What makes Hidalgo so special is not just that she is always the quickest, speediest player on the floor; it’s that she does everything at exactly the right speed for the moment. She changes pace on the break. She waits patiently for the right moment to intercept the ball.

“She’s a great player,” said Vanderbilt point guard Aubrey Galvan, who got Hidalgo-ed into six turnovers. “All credit to her. She digs in on defense, which you don’t see a lot.”

When the shot clock was winding down on Notre Dame, Hidalgo recognized it and fired up a shot. When Blakes contorted for a layup and missed, Hidalgo grabbed the rebound, drove downcourt quickly but deliberately, and scored. Twice, she got drilled by larger players, including once by Vandy’s Aiyana Mitchell on a moving screen. Hidalgo just kept going.

The end of the game was vintage Hidalgo, and it didn’t involve any one of those 31 points, 11 rebounds or 10 steals. With 26 seconds left and the game tied, Notre Dame’s KK Bransford was trying to inbound the ball, but Vanderbilt’s defense was tight. The Fighting Irish were out of timeouts. They could not afford a five-second violation. Bransford tossed the ball up to the shortest player on the floor.

Hidalgo leapt between two Vanderbilt defenders, grabbed the ball, and took one dribble. Two more Commodores tried to trap her. Hidalgo wrapped a bounce pass around the back of 6'4" Justine Pissott to Cassandre Prosper for a layup. 

“She’s just a special player,” Ralph said. “You have to respect how hard she plays all the time. She gave the effort that was needed to win the game for her team, on both sides of the ball. Kudos to her.”

In her three tournament games, Hidalgo has averaged 26.7 points, 11 rebounds, five assists and 8.7 steals. She just outplayed Blakes and Ohio State’s Jaloni Cambridge in consecutive NCAA tournament games. Hidalgo has been the best player in the whole tournament, and easily the most valuable.

“I was telling the girls: ‘This is not our last game playing together. We’re going to figure it out, and we’re going to win,’ ” Hidalgo said.

When Hidalgo speaks, the Irish believe. When she competes, they try to match her energy. When they need someone to make a play, she makes three. At some point in this tournament, the Fighting Irish will run into a better team. They will not run into a better player.


More March Madness from Sports Illustrated


This article was originally published on www.si.com as Hannah Hidalgo, the Ultimate Disrupter, Is Stealing Dreams This March Madness.

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