New York Daily News

Geno-Muffet feud continues to spill out off the court

- BY SARAH VALENZUELA

Muffet McGraw has had a long, now ongoing, back and forth with Geno Auriemma.

On Monday, Auriemma and the sports world dialed in on comments the former Notre Dame coach made in December about UConn having an “outsized” influence in women’s basketball and ESPN having an “over the top” UConn bias, from the players they discuss to the coverage the team gets in comparison to the rest of the women’s college basketball landscape. Auriemma called McGraw “bored” and “lonely” for talking about UConn. He mocked Notre Dame’s two championsh­ips, sarcastica­lly said ESPN’s bias of UConn helped his team to 111 straight wins and said people watch UConn because they win.

“I think the bias has something to do with — if there is any — the 11 national championsh­ips, which is a lot more than two,” Auriemma told Bob Joyce on ESPN Radio.

The UConn coach chose to focus on that part of McGraw’s interview on an episode of “Off the Looking Glass” podcast hosted by Kate Fagan and Jessica Smetana. The full context of what she said was more powerful than the admittedly misguided claim that ESPN loves UConn.

McGraw, on Dec. 22, spoke to her experience­s as a woman in basketball, saying that she was judged — even by older women’s coaches — for her words in the same spaces while men like Auriemma said worse. She called out the patriarchy for taking the easy way out in saying they cover women’s sports by simply covering one team, UConn. And she talked about how much being a woman in sports is different today than when she was a college player.

“We expect different things from women leaders, also. So I think it’s really hard for women leaders to be (tough and confident),” McGraw said, adding later in response to another question. “For women especially (back in the ’70s and ’80s] we would go in and just be so happy to get what we got ... my generation has just been fighting this battle for so long that we all look to say ‘thank you’ more than ‘yeah, and we deserve more.’ ”

McGraw, much later in the show was then asked directly about her opinion on the UConn bias. Fagan and Smetana prefaced their question with former Stanford star Nneka Ogwumike’s snub from Team USA at last summer’s Olympics.

When Ogwumike, a WNBA MVP and 2016 champion, was left off the list, Candace Parker — who was also left off the roster in 2016 and 2020 — called out the entire selection committee and Auriemma, who had influence selecting those teams: “(Nneka’s) the only MVP not to make an Olympic team, which is b------t.”

The show’s hosts didn’t ask McGraw to talk about Team USA, but of whether such a bias in women’s basketball exists.

So McGraw replied. “Absolutely. And I think if you read anything that Candace Parker said, ‘I didn’t make the USA team because Geno didn’t like me...’ and I think that’s absolutely true,” McGraw said.

“What they’ve done has been amazing. I think people measure their team by them,” she said. “When we joined the Big East, we were like, ‘We want to get to where they are. That’s what we want to be.’ We’re trying to emulate them.”

McGraw then agreed with the hosts that coverage of UConn and its players is “an easy out” for networks and publicatio­ns to say they cover women’s sports as opposed to doing more research on players from other teams.

“I think there are a lot of great coaches out there, but we don’t know about any of them because so much of the attention is on one team,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States