The first half was tight with only four points separating the teams. For Telangana, it was starter Divya P (21 points) who was scoring the bulk of her team's points. On the other hand, Railways had contributions from multiple players.
Telangana relied too much on their starters with little contribution from their bench, leading to rising fatigue levels of their main players in the second half. The Railways rotated their players nicely, and their bench stepped up to the occasion scoring 23 points in the contest.
The first men's semifinal was a clash between last year's finalists, Tamil Nadu, and defending champions Uttarakhand.
There was little to separate the two teams in the first half with Tamil Nadu holding a slender lead over Uttarakhand. Vishesh Bhrighuvanshi (21 points) led the charge for Uttarakhand with his ability to drive to the rim. India forward Yadwinder (21 points) also contributed with nifty moves in the post. For Tamil Nadu, it was Rikin Pethani (20 points) who provided the major scoring contribution with Pratham Singh (15 points) and Prasanna Venkatesh (11 points) putting in timely buckets.
Down by 18 with five minutes left in the game, veteran Uttarakhand point guard Riyazuddin banked in back-to-back 3 pointers. This was followed by two 3 pointers by veteran shooting guard Trideep Rai to bring the lead down to 2. Tamil Nadu were plagued by critical turnovers and missed freethrows in the final minutes as they failed to put up any points during Uttarakhand's comeback.