Kayla Pedersen had 17 points and 11 rebounds, and No. 2 Stanford cruised in its first game at UC Davis since 1977, winning 76-51 on Sunday.

Carondelet High product Jayne Appel added 18 points and nine rebounds for the Cardinal (4-0), which won its fourth straight in the series. Nnemkadi Ogwumike scored 10 of her 11 points in the second half, and JJ Hones had 11.

Haylee Donaghe scored 11 points to lead the Aggies (2-2), who were coming off an 18-point win over USF. Stanford is the highest ranked team ever to play in Davis.

No. 6 Tennessee 77, No. 12 Virginia 63: Angie Bjorklund's 3-pointer early in the second half halted a rally and proved to be the game's biggest shot, and the Lady Vols (3-0) prevailed in front of the Cavaliers' record home crowd of 11,895.

Men

No. 2 Michigan State 90, Valparaiso 60: Coach Tom Izzo's 340th victory as Spartans coach tied him with longtime mentor Jud Heathcoate atop Michigan State's all-time list. The host Spartans (4-0) also won their 43rd straight home game against a nonconference opponent.

Pacific 84, Santa Clara 57: The visiting Broncos (2-2) got 22 points from Kevin Foster but shot only 33.3 percent from the field against the Tigers (2-1).

UC Riverside 70, San Jose State 66: The host Spartans (1-2) rallied from a 10-point second-half deficit to take a 54-53 lead with six minutes left, but the Highlanders (2-2) followed


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with a 10-3 run to take charge and never trailed again. Mac Peterson had a career-high 17 points for San Jose State.

UCLA: Coach Ben Howland said the suspension of starting forward Nikola Dragovic was extended at least one more game after his arrest Friday and subsequent charge of felony assault.

Etc.: Larry Bird and Magic Johnson were inducted into the National Collegiate Hall of Fame in Kansas City, Mo., 30 years after Johnson's Michigan State team beat Bird and Indiana State in the 1979 NCAA title game, a contest that forever linked them and reshaped college basketball. Late Oklahoma star Wayman Tisdale, career college scoring leader Travis Grant, longtime coach Gene Bartos, former NCAA executive director Walter Byers and USA Basketball executive director Bill Wall also were inducted.