Ruthy Hebard had 20 points and 15 rebounds, and Oregon earned its first Sweet 16 berth by upsetting Duke, 74-65, on Monday night in the second round of the NCAA women’s basketball tournament.

Maite Cazorla added 17 points and Lexi Bando finished with 14 points to help Oregon (22-13) become the first No. 10 seed in a decade to reach the round of 16.

The Ducks, in their first tournament since 2005, had never advanced past the second round in their 12 previous appearances. Now they’re on to Bridgeport, Conn., to take on third-seeded Maryland (32-2) in a regional semifinal.

Lexie Brown scored 25 points for the second-seeded Blue Devils (28-6), who have been upset at home in the tournament’s second round twice since 2014.

Quinnipiac 85, Miami (Fla.) 78: Morgan Manz scored 22 points and made six 3-pointers, Aryn McClure added 15 and the 12th-seeded Bobcats are headed to the Sweet 16, stunning the fourth-seeded Hurricanes (24-9).

Sarah Shewan and Paula Strautmane each scored 11 for Quinnipiac (29-6), which will head to Stockton, Calif., and play top-seeded South Carolina on Saturday. The Bobcats of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference made 15 of 26 from 3-point range, and won their 12th straight game.

Connecticut 94, Syracuse 64: Kia Nurse scored 29 points and tied an NCAA tournament record with nine 3-pointers to lead the Huskies over the Orange in a rematch of last year’s national championship game.

Nurse hit 10 of her 13 shots, missing three attempts from behind the arc for UConn, which won its 109th straight game and 26th consecutive NCAA tournament game. That streak includes last April’s 82-51 win over Syracuse (22-11) that gave the Huskies their fourth consecutive title.

Gabby Williams and Katie Lou Samuelson each added 23 points and Napheesa Collier chipped in with 17 for UConn (34-0), which led by as many as 36 points.

Louisville 75, Tennessee 64: Asia Durr scored 23 points, Mariya Moore made all five 3-pointers for 19 points and the Cardinals beat the Volunteers (20-12).

Moore’s perimeter shooting provided a lift on a night that fourth-seeded Louisville (29-7) had to work hard late to finish 44 percent from the field. She scored the Cardinals’ first eight points of the fourth quarter with back-to-back 3s for a 54-47 lead before Durr followed with seven of their next eight points to make it 62-51 with 4:07 remaining. Durr also became the 28th Louisville player to reach 1,000 career points.

Washington 108, Oklahoma 82: Kelsey Plum scored 38 points, adding another record to her career resume, and the No. 3 seed Huskies raced past the No. 6 seed Sooners (23-10).

Washington (29-5) is going to the Sweet 16 in consecutive years for the first time in school history.

Plum passed another Jackie Stiles’ record to become the all-time single-season scoring leader, having already topped Stiles’ all-time career scoring mark last month. Plum now has 1,080 points this season.

Baylor 86, California 46: Alexis Prince and Nina Davis each scored 16 points and the Bears are going to the Sweet 16 for the ninth year in a row after a win over the No. 9 seed Golden Bears (20-14).

Davis, one of four Baylor seniors, also had six rebounds and five assists in her last game at the Ferrell Center, where the top-seeded Bears (32-3) have won 12 consecutive NCAA tournament games. Prince added five rebounds and six assists, while Kristy Wallace had 10 points and nine assists.

Stanford 69, Kansas State 48: Brittany McPhee had 21 points, Alanna Smith added 19 and second-seeded Stanford routed the No. 7 seed Wildcats to advance to the Cardinal’s 10th straight Sweet 16.

The Cardinal (30-5) had no problem dealing with the Wildcats (23-11) or their home crowd. Stanford roared to a 39-21 halftime lead and never looked back.