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Washington's Kelsey Plum sets D-I women's scoring mark

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Plum becomes NCAA women's all-time leading scorer (0:28)

Washington's Kelsey Plum sinks the lefty floater to surpass Jackie Stiles for the most points in NCAA women's basketball history. The basket also gave Plum 55 points for the game against Utah. (0:28)

SEATTLE -- Kelsey Plum was ready for her chase of the NCAA all-time scoring record to come to an end.

For the final regular-season game of her college career, Washington's star orchestrated the finest performance of her career and one of the best in NCAA history. And with it, Plum scored a career-best 57 points and put an end to her quest of tracking down Jackie Stiles and the number 3,393.

Now, no one has scored more points in NCAA women's basketball history than Plum.

"I'm glad it's over," Plum said. "It was getting to a point where it was almost disheartening in a way, because people expect so much, and I understand. I'm very grateful for the support our team has got and I've got. It's nice to try to break barriers."

Plum carried No. 11 Washington to an 84-77 victory over Utah on Saturday with a dazzling performance. She needed 54 points entering the day to break Stiles' record and did so with a second-half barrage that couldn't be stopped.

"You don't do something like this by yourself, and I hopefully make that very clear," Plum said. "This is an individual record, but it's broken by a village of people. It's broken by every teammate that I've ever played for, every trainer, doctor, my parents, my sisters, my brother, it's this university, it's the support I've been given. I'm very grateful, but it's not something I take on myself, because it's not broken by just me."

Stiles, who held the record for 16 years, congratulated Plum via Twitter.

Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr also took time to acknowledge Plum's record. He ended his Saturday's pregame media session celebrating the new mark and her 57-point game.

"She's a stud," Kerr said.

Plum hit 19 of 28 shots and was 13-for-16 at the free throw line. She had 38 points through three quarters and took over in the fourth after teammate Chantel Osahor fouled out early in the quarter.

Plum tied Stiles' mark with a hesitation drive and scoop over the outstretched arm of Utah center Emily Potter with 4:57 left in the game. After a Utah basket and a timeout, Plum hit a runner from just outside the lane with 4:06 remaining to move past Stiles on the all-time list. Plum scored 19 of Washington's 22 points in the final quarter and now has 3,397 career points.

The fourth quarter was the perfect sequence of shots for Plum to eclipse Stiles. Starting with a 3-pointer and capped by the 10-foot runner to hold the mark alone, they were each examples of how Plum is a multidimensional player who can't be slowed by simply taking away one part of her game.

"She did tonight exactly what she's done for us since she got on campus, what is needed," Washington coach Mike Neighbors said. "We needed her. We needed every one of those shots."

Washington needed all of her points to hold off a challenge from Utah (16-13, 5-13 Pac-12), which hung around just enough to make the Huskies uncomfortable. Neighbors even questioned his decision to pull Plum with 44 seconds remaining and give her the ovation she deserved, but leading by just eight points.

"It was pretty special," Plum said. "It was kind of icing on the cake. Getting the win on Senior Night with my family here. And then that ceremony after just kind of put it into perspective. This was an amazing day."

Perhaps fittingly, Plum's 57 topped Stiles' career-best of 56 points, even as Plum was trying to get over an illness and ate applesauce on the bench during timeouts. Neighbors also expects Plum to complain in the coming days about her three missed free throws, which could have given her 60 points and a share of the NCAA single-game scoring record.

As it stands, she'll have to settle for school and Pac-12 single-game marks.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.