The Hamilton Spectator

DOMINANT

Dominance won’t last forever, so fans should appreciate it

- MIKE ANTHONY

HARTFORD, CONN. — Before UConn’s final game of the season in Hartford Feb. 18, coach Geno Auriemma spoke to hundreds of gathered fans — season ticket holders and donors, mostly — inside the XL Center’s exhibition hall.

“This isn’t going to last forever,” he said of his program’s remarkable success over 33 years. “But while it is going on, let’s keep coming out and enjoying it.”

Fans applauded and the crowd dispersed, Auriemma off to coach the Huskies to a 51-point victory over Temple. No, this is not going to last forever, a point Auriemma has hammered home often lately. There are no signs of a slowdown or that Auriemma is ready to walk away any time soon, but certainly we’ve reached the seventh-inning stretch of a run that includes 11 national championsh­ips and a list of accomplish­ments that are outlandish­ly ahead of most anything else seen recently in this or any sport.

The Huskies (32-0) won their fifth consecutiv­e AAC championsh­ip Tuesday with a 70-54 victory over South Florida at Mohegan Sun Arena. They will head into the NCAA Tournament with a perfect record for the ninth time, with championsh­ips in six of those previous eight seasons (and a Final Four loss to Mississipp­i State last season, and an Elite Eight loss to Tennessee in 1997).

The NCAA selection show is Monday and UConn will undoubtedl­y be the top overall seed and play first- and second-round games at Gampel Pavilion, looking to advance to Albany for regional play and, finally, Columbus,

Ohio, for what would be an 11th consecutiv­e Final Four.

The Huskies are 101-0 all-time in AAC play and, overall, have won 143 of their past 144 games and 192 of their past 194. Their championsh­ip game victory over USF was a grind by their lofty standards, but the game that preceded it was a clobbering, 75-21 over Cincinnati. UConn went on a 38-0 run and led 43-5 at halftime.

This draws attention. Darren Rovell, ESPN’s sports business reporter, tweeted to his two million-plus followers, with a screenshot of the halftime score, “Does a UConn fan even find this enjoyable?”

Later, Rovell tweeted, “Love when people send me screengrab­s as evidence that I said that

some dynasties in sport were good and some dynasties in sport were bad. Know it’s hard to grasp, but it’s not absolute. Bulls good, Spurs bad. UConn women and Jimmie Johnson bad. Federer and Serena? Good.”

It’s not the first time, and won’t be the last, that Auriemma has heard the bad-for-the-sport argument.

UConn, of course, has grown increasing­ly dominant, coming so close to perfection that the product is sometimes dismissed as uninterest­ing or even damaging.

Outsiders see only the final score and are probably missing the point, and the most impressive parts, of the UConn operation. There are storylines, hurdles, goals and expectatio­ns that

go beyond, say, a 43-5 halftime lead or the record 43-0 run UConn put together recently against SMU.

“That is part of playing here at Connecticu­t,” Auriemma said after the Cincinnati victory. “You don’t necessaril­y base how you’re going to play on what the score is or who the opponent is . ... Obviously we want to win, but we want to improve.”

The Huskies have done that and done things no other program has since the late 1980s, starting from a place their current opponents find themselves, really. UConn, which has won 30-plus games 13 years in a row, is tied with Tennessee for the most Final Four appearance­s (18).

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 ?? JESSICA HILL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Connecticu­t head coach Geno Auriemma, centre, and player Katie Lou Samuelson, left, smile as seniors Gabby Williams, centre, and Hamilton’s Kia Nurse leave play for the final time in regular season play during the second half an NCAA college basketball...
JESSICA HILL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Connecticu­t head coach Geno Auriemma, centre, and player Katie Lou Samuelson, left, smile as seniors Gabby Williams, centre, and Hamilton’s Kia Nurse leave play for the final time in regular season play during the second half an NCAA college basketball...

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