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SEATTLE (AP) - When Baylor walked off Washington's court in December, coach Kim Mulkey-Robertson told her players it was possible they'd be back for the NCAA tournament. She was right.
Despite being the highest seed of the seven schools from Texas in the tournament, Baylor didn't get to play in Dallas, 95 miles from its campus in Waco. Instead, the No. 2 seed in the Tempe Regional got shipped to Seattle.
"That was the only disappointing thing," Mulkey-Robertson said. "It wasn't the seeding, it wasn't who you are playing, it was the fact our fans were not rewarded."
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