During their First Four game in the NCAA Tournament on Wednesday night, Columbia and Vanderbilt players dove on the floor fighting for the opening jump ball. That resulted in another tie-up, prompting the officials to redo the jump ball.
After the game ended, Columbia wished it could redo some of its shots, too. The Lions fell to the Commodores 72โ68 in Blacksburg, Virginia, in their first NCAA Tournament game as a Division I team.
It wasnโt Columbiaโs best showing, in part due to Vanderbiltโs defense. The Lions shot 43.4% from the field but only 23.8% from 3-point range, about nine percentage points below their average.
The second quarter was especially brutal, as Columbia hit just four of 13 shots and was outscored by 10. It โsticks out like a sore thumb in my mind right now,โ head coach Megan Griffith told reporters postgame.
Senior guard Abbey Hsu, who was named an AP All-America Honorable Mention on Wednesday, particularly struggled offensively, missing nine straight 3-pointers after making her first two. She ends her career with 375 made 3-pointers, nearly 100 more than any other player in Ivy League womenโs basketball history, and as the third-highest scorer in Ivy history with 2,126 career points.
Columbia also had 12 assists against 18 turnovers, with eight of those turnovers coming in the second quarter. Vanderbilt pressed the Lions, which led to some poor decisions. โTheir defense is different to what we’ve seen before,โ junior point guard Kitty Henderson told reporters afterward. โI think they make you second-guess yourself.โ
Defensively, the Lions shut down the Commodores for stretches but struggled to contain them when the ball entered the post. 6โ2 Commodores forward Sacha Washington had 16 points on 8-for-9 shooting and 15 rebounds. Hsu told reporters postgame that she and her teammates were locked into their individual matchups but not fully connected as a group, which led to a lack of help in the post against Washington and others.
Your business can reach over 3 million women’s sports fans every single month!
Here at The IX Basketball and The IX Sports, our audience is a collection of the smartest, most passionate women’s sports fans in the world. If your business has a mission to serve these fans, reach out to our team at BAlarie@theixsports.com to discuss ways to work together.
Despite all of that, though, the Lions battled and almost gutted out the win. They fought back from a 10-point deficit to get within two points on two separate occasions. The first instance came with 3:46 left in the third quarter, when freshman guard Fliss Henderson (Kittyโs sister) converted two free throws. The Lions then got a defensive stop, but they couldnโt tie the game on a play that seemed to sum up their night.
Sophomore guard Perri Page grabbed the defensive rebound and took the ball coast to coast, but she missed her layup. Fliss got the offensive rebound and missed the putback, and then Kitty pulled down the offensive rebound in traffic. But she crashed to the floor with the ball and was called for traveling.
โYou’re always going to get a fight from this team,โ Hsu said. โI think we have some of the toughest players in the country, and especially from our young kids, the maturity that they have to not only just play hard all the time but also think the game.โ
The Lions again cut the lead to two with three seconds left in the game on an unconventional 3-point play by junior guard Cecelia Collins. She missed her second of two free throws, but the Lions kept possession and Collins eventually converted a jumper in the paint. But after Columbia used its final timeout to set up its press, it couldnโt get a game-changing turnover, and Vanderbilt guard/forward Justine Pissott sealed the win with two free throws.
The Lions just needed one more stop or a few more shots to fall, but thatโs how it often goes in March. So Columbia ran up the tunnel back to its locker room in defeat, inches away from Vanderbilt players using the same tunnel for the early stages of their celebration.
Kitty Henderson led the way for the Lions with 20 points โ nine in the fourth quarter alone โ and nine rebounds. She also had two assists and drew six Vanderbilt fouls.
โKitty will just lay everything out for our team,โ Griffith said. โAnd she plays so dang hard all the time.โ

Hsu and Collins each had 13 points, and Collins added six rebounds and five assists. Fliss Henderson had eight points and seven rebounds and was a team-high plus-8 in 23 minutes. Flissโ performance prompted Kitty to describe herself postgame as โa proud big sister.โ
โEverybody who was watching this game saw how good Fliss Henderson is,โ Griffith said. โโฆ She’s a force to be reckoned with. She’s smart. She can score. She’s tough. She can defend. โฆ She’s gonna have a bright โ a very bright โ future here at Columbia.โ
In their postgame press conference, Hsu, Kitty Henderson and Griffith were disappointed with the result, but they werenโt distraught like they had been after losing the Ivy League Tournament final. At the time, they thought their NCAA Tournament hopes had slipped away, but they were surprised with an at-large berth on Selection Sunday.
Related reading at The IX: The agony and the ecstasy of Megan Griffith
On Wednesday, the Lions knew theyโd moved the program forward. They played on the sportโs biggest stage for the first time, and they showed they belonged, even in defeat.
The program has come a long way from 2016, when Griffith took over and an alum quipped that the Lions were ranked 400th out of 362 Division I teams.
โWe often joke about that now, but it was true. We really came all the way from the bottom to be here in this moment,โ Griffith told reporters on Tuesday, ahead of the game. โSo I hope everybody can see โฆ through our play [on Wednesday] what this program is about and how much we love each other and care about each other.โ
Griffith is confident that the Lions will be back in the tournament soon โ that Wednesday was only an appetizer for whatโs to come, despite the Lionsโ lack of history in the event. She believes sheโs built a program strong enough to withstand the graduation of Hsu, arguably the best player in Columbia history.
Part of the reason for Griffithโs confidence is the Lionsโ shift from a coach-led program to a player-led one. Two seasons ago, she freely admitted that her team often looked to her for guidance and as its emotional pendulum. This season, the players can get a lot of that from each other.
โThat’s when you know [the] cultureโs in a good place is when they are breeding that within themselves and modeling it for each other,โ Griffith said on Wednesday.
She also has a blueprint from this past season for how to move forward in the face of heavy personnel losses. The Lions graduated seven seniors in 2023, including three starters, but still managed to win a second straight Ivy League regular-season title and make the NCAA Tournament.
โThis is the cycle and this is the mortality of college sports is you graduate,โ Griffith said. โYou graduate great players and you coach great players. โฆ I have a phenomenal staff. We recruit with the best of them, and we make sure that we develop our players. And I can tell you that we’re going to develop every single one of those players that’s sitting in that locker room right now. And we’re gonna go out and get some great players as well to play alongside them.โ

The Lions will return six of their top seven scorers next season, led by Second Team All-Ivy selections Kitty Henderson and Collins. Four starters will be back, so the starting lineup will likely be more experienced overall. Earlier this season, Griffith anointed current freshman guard Riley Weiss as the next great Columbia shooter after Hsu, and on Wednesday, Griffith passed the leadership torch from Hsu to Henderson.
โAs Kitty’s gonna learn a lot from this [game], I think she’s going to take the space that Abbey left โฆ in this program,โ Griffith said, โand become the player that we need her to be and the leader we need her to be next year.โ
And if Columbia needed any more reason to be proud of what it had done on Wednesday, it could just look into the stands. Building a fanbase had been a goal of Griffithโs when she took the Columbia job, and Columbia has now led the Ivy League in home attendance for three straight seasons.
Many Lions fans made the trip to Blacksburg, and over 1,000 more RSVPed to attend a watch party in Columbiaโs gym in New York. By her own admission, Griffith rarely notices whatโs happening in the stands, but on Wednesday, she did.
โI just wanted to say thank you to our fan base,โ she said to begin her postgame remarks. โโฆ There’s so much blue in this gym. That really made my heart full battling today for you all.โ
โI don’t think we played our complete game,โ Hsu said, โbut I think something to be proud of is the community that we brought with us.โ
With a community behind them and a culture established, the Lions will celebrate this season as one for the history books โ and then try to rewrite history, as soon and often as possible.
