New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Want pandemic to end? Time to get in line

Auriemma, Huskies celebrate Big East title

- By Mike Anthony

What are you willing to wait in line for? Everyone is taught to line up for school assemblies, but we keep drifting back into them long after graduation day.

Anyone anxious to snag hot tickets to concerts (remember them?) knows all too well the anxiety that builds until the virtual box office opens, followed by a “Your wait is 5 ... 10 ... 15 ... minutes” message. While tailgating in stadium parking lots, previous generation­s share shaggy dog tales of wrist bracelets and sleeping on sidewalks to buy tickets.

A The people who sit in in the rear wind up first in line to greet a newly married couple after a wedding.

A Apartment dwellers know the tormented wait to snag a washing machine.

A There’s the line to get NFL seats ...

A Followed by the halftime queue to the bathroom. A For the hungry, no line is too long to wait for food.

A There are those who seem to like the experience of the wait so much that they’ll do it just to get a cronut.

And those who would do anything not to face another line at the Department of Motor Vehicles.

A The most resolute citizens are willing to wait for their voice to be heard at public hearings.

A And, of course, we patiently wait at funeral homes to pay last respects to the dead.

These waits are all, more or less, optional. The line to get a coronaviru­s vaccine represents the rare instance of a line everyone has an interest in, even those who are resisting getting the shots.

The line created by Gov. Ned Lamont has the advantage of being a straight one. While we championed giving considerat­ion to residents, for example, with comorbidit­ies, there is logic to the reasoning that any line moves more quickly that is not serpentine.

For some people, this has posed something of a moral quandary. Those who are in good health have expressed trepidatio­n at getting access to vaccines before the more vulnerable.

The last group in the state’s rollout plan — ages 16-34 — won’t be eligible until May 3, which still seems so far away. But some people in that group are already suggesting they want to make sure they aren’t cutting in front of more vulnerable neighbors. It’s an admirable impulse, but we’ll reach the end of the line faster if there isn’t quibbling in the middle (there are a few exceptions; cases in which doctors might advise against it).

“It’s really your civic duty so we can get herd immunity,” said Karen Jubanyik, Yale Medicine Emergency Medicine physician and co-author of “Beat the Coronaviru­s: Strategies for Staying Safe and Coping With the New Normal During the COVID-19.”

Young people may feel safe, but they need to embrace the reality that they can still transmit the disease. And if a vaccine is formulated for even younger residents, they need to set a good example.

We wait in line for so many things. Everyone should be willing to do it to save lives.

While we championed giving considerat­ion to residents, for example, with comorbidit­ies, there is logic to the reasoning that any line moves more quickly that is not serpentine

Somewhere along the line in this strange season, Geno Auriemma gave up or gave in and embraced a new perspectiv­e for how to view his players.

It set him free.

“They’re going to be what they’re going to be and I have to look at all the positives,” Auriemma said Monday night after UConn rolled past Marquette 73-39 in the Big East championsh­ip and then rolled around in confetti on the court at Mohegan Sun Arena. “It’s made me change the way I coach. And for the better, I think.”

That is backwards or beautiful or both, a youthful roster without a senior twisting up a coach’s mind, pulling him through early frustratio­n and reliance on old habits, triggering the joy Auriemma felt after the latest conference championsh­ip.

“These young kids have come in and really, they’ve reinvigora­ted everyone associated with our program,” he said. “They are just really unique kids and I’m really happy for them. My life doesn’t change that much, winning another championsh­ip. But my life was changed (Monday) because I got a chance to see the way they celebrated. That was worth waiting six months for.”

Auriemma stopped fighting, stopped agonizing over what would once upon a time send him ranting up the sideline. Wouldn’t you know it, UConn, despite its imperfecti­ons, rounded into form and stomped its way through the program’s first Big East Tournament since 2013 with power and personalit­y.

The top-ranked Huskies would have been expected to win this event regardless of how their developmen­t was trending. But the way they did it, by jumping their opponents early and playing suffocatin­g defense throughout, was a reminder that youthful quirkiness and emerging maturity are a wonderful combinatio­n.

Freshman Paige Bueckers was named the tournament’s most outstandin­g player and she is, in Auriemma’s eyes, the best player in the nation. Junior Christyn Williams, a consistent answer on defense

 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? UConn coach Geno Auriemma, center, dances with his team in celebratio­n after beating Marquette to win the Big East championsh­ip on Monday.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press UConn coach Geno Auriemma, center, dances with his team in celebratio­n after beating Marquette to win the Big East championsh­ip on Monday.

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