Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Top seeds Connecticu­t, Baylor may meet again

- Pat Eaton-Robb

UConn and Baylor didn't get to play their scheduled game in January because Lady Bear's coach Kim Mulkey came down with COVID-19.

They have a chance to meet again if both top seeds advance in the NCAA Tournament's River Walk regional. But UConn must first win at least a of couple games without coach Geno Auriemma, who begins the tournament isolating at home after he too became infected with the coronaviru­s.

The Hall of Famer said having no control over what happens on the court 1,950 miles away will make it hard for him to watch.

“I might need to hide down in the basement and have somebody come down and give me the update,” he said.

Associate head coach Chris Dailey, who is 10-0 filling in for Auriemma, will lead the Huskies. Connecticu­t is seeking a record 12th NCAA title and the Huskies first hurdle will be getting past High Point (22-6) in the first round on Sunday. Dailey, who was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2018, said she doesn't expect Auriemma's absence will have much impact on how the Huskies play.

“This preparatio­n didn't start Monday or Tuesday,” she said. “This preparatio­n started in September. So what we've done well and what we've gotten better at all year will be part of what we do against High Point. And what we've not been good at all year will probably be evident, or hopefully less evident against High Point.”

Their opponents are not coming in scared.

“It's kind of cool,” High Point coach Chelsea Banbury said. “We get to play against some of the best players in the country. Let's go out, let's have some fun.”

Baylor, which opens with Jackson State, is working toward a fourth title and is technicall­y the defending champion, having won the 2019 tournament.

Mulkey said her team is playing in part for the four seniors she had last year who were not able to defend their title after COVID-19 shut everything down.

“It was pulled out from under 'em,” she said. “They never got a chance to get back to a Final Four. So play the game as if tomorrow's not promised.”

The River Walk region is loaded with some of the top individual talent in women's college basketball.

UConn freshman sensation Paige Bueckers (19.7 points, 6.1 assists per game), Baylor's NaLyssa Smith (18.1 points, 9.1 rebounds) and Kentucky's Rhyne Howard (20.7 points, 7.3 rebounds) are all legitimate national player of the year candidates.

They are joined by the nation's leading scorer in Iowa freshman Caitlin Clark (26.7 points per game), the No. 2 scorer in MTSU's Anastasia Hayes (26.5), Big Ten player of the year Naz Hillmon (25.1) from Michigan, Florida Gulf Coast's Kierstan Bell (24.3) and Central Michigan's Micaela Kelly (23.9).

Iowa's Clark takes on Central Michigan's Kelly and Michigan's Hillmon faces FGCU's Bell in the first round.

Potential second-round NCAA matchups include Clark and Kentucky's Howard.

“It's a very humbling experience to me, because I know so many people who are also on that list, a lot of them who I played USA basketball with,” said Hillmon.

“To be mentioned with all of those people is something that you don't necessaril­y always put yourself in that place. You think about it, but you don't always think that it will come true.”

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