STARKVILLE, Miss. — Mississippi State coach Nikki McCray-Penson told her players all week leading up to the game against New Orleans that their size would be the difference.
The No. 6 Bulldogs used the 3-pointer to roll past Jackson State in their opener, but they were clear and concise that they were going to control the paint on Wednesday night. The final product was a 104-51 victory in which Mississippi State dominated every bit of the paint.
The size advantage led the Bulldogs (2-0) to a 51-16 win in the rebounding column and they outscored the Privateers (1-1) 72-12 in the paint. Jessika Carter led the way with 23 points on 9-of-12 shooting and added 10 rebounds.
"Obviously, our size played a big factor," McCray-Penson said. "I thought we really dominated the paint which we needed to. Hopefully, it gave (Carter and Yemiyah Morris) some confidence as we continue to play games."
JaMya Mingo-Young added 18 points on 8-of-9 shooting and had eight rebounds and five assists. Rickea Jackson scored 16 points, and Morris had 14.
It was the second-straight impressive performance from the sophomore Mingo-Young who had 13 points, nine rebounds and five assists against Jackson State. The 18 points were her career high but the rebounding margin continued to show the Bulldogs' willingness to get the guards to the glass as fellow guard Madison Hayes had eight rebounds a game after debuting with the Bulldogs and pulling down nine.
"Our post players have their own problems with bigs around the country so we're challenging our guards to go get the rebounds," McCray-Penson said. "Whoever gets the rebounds is the one who pushes the ball and they're the ones that usually score. I think they've kind of bought into that and I like that."
Mississippi State led 25-9 in the first quarter and 57-28 at the half. The Bulldogs shot 63% and held the Privateers to 32%.