Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

The final challenge

Huskies face Gamecocks with national title on the line

- By Maggie Vanoni maggie.vanoni @hearstmedi­act.com

MINNEAPOLI­S — The week after UConn lost to South Carolina in the Battle 4 Atlantis Championsh­ip, Husky coach Geno Auriemma put his players through the hardest week of practice.

It was physically demanding. Mentally exhausting. Players found themselves in the hot tubs and cooling pools after workouts, desperatel­y needing the rest and recovery.

“Those were definitely the hardest practices I’d ever had here … he kicked our (butt) that entire whole week,” Olivia Nelson-Ododa said. “You didn’t even have time to think about when you were practicing. You were on autopilot just grinding everything out with your teammates.”

While the Huskies’ rollercoas­ter of a year was just beginning — not even two weeks later Paige Bueckers went down with a knee injury in the final minute against Notre Dame — that week of practice set a tone for this year’s team.

The players needed to be tough. They needed to be good every night. They couldn’t rely on just one person to carry them through wins. It would take a whole team effort each game.

UConn has carried that theme throughout the past five months. Players stepped up and contribute­d in new and different roles for the betterment of the team while others were sidelined with injury and/ or illness. “Everybody Eats,” the Huskies’ custom spirit t-shirts say.

And now, 131 days after that loss in the Bahamas to the Gamecocks, the Huskies are facing them again — but this time for a national championsh­ip (Sunday, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN). UConn has won all 11 of its previous trips to the NCAA Tournament title game and a win on Sunday would set the NCAA record (men or woman) with 12 titles. South Carolina has also never lost a NCAA championsh­ip

game, winning it’s only appearance in 2017.

“I would venture to say that all 11 times that we’ve won — maybe there was one time — but I don’t think we surprised anybody by winning because we had the best team. We had the best team all year. We had the best talented players. We played harder than everybody. We were just better than everybody,” Auriemma said Saturday.

“Can that happen again Monday night? I don’t think when we got on the plane to come out here, anybody in America thought we were the best team coming out here. So that’s probably not the case this year, but you don’t have to be the best team for a long time. You just have to be the best team for 40 minutes, or play the best for 40 minutes.”

South Carolina and UConn were the nation’s top ranked teams back in the fall’s first preseason polls. While the Gamecocks stayed at No. 1 the entirety of the season, UConn fell as low as No. 11 before finishing the year at No. 5. UConn had eight of its 12 players sit out at least two games or more with injury and broke two of its historic records: snapping its 240-game win streak over

unranked opponents at Georgia Tech and ending its 169-game win streak over conference opponents at home to Villanova.

“This team needed a lot of growing up to do. Obviously, I think they have or we wouldn’t be playing tomorrow night,” Auriemma said. “If we had stayed the same, if we were the same team mentally and physically that we were back then, I don’t think we would still be playing.”

Sunday’s championsh­ip will feature both Bueckers, last year’s national player of the year, and Aliyah Boston, this year’s national player of the year.

Boston was dominant in the post all season long. She had 27 straight doubledoub­les and became the fastest Gamecock to reach 1,000 career rebounds (92). The 6-foot-5 junior will be UConn’s biggest threat especially without its normal depth in the frontcourt.

“I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that she might be the hardest person in America to guard,” Auriemma said. “She scores if there’s one, two, three, four people on her. It doesn’t matter. She’s able to carve out the space she wants. She gets the ball on the rim whenever she wants. She rebounds

whichever ball she goes after. She just has a knack. … I think she’s the most important person in the country in terms of what she does for her team.”

Dorka Juhasz suffered a season-ending wrist injury in Monday’s Elite Eight and watched Friday’s Final Four on the sideline in a sling. Her absence leaves the burden of taking care of Boston up to Nelson-Ododa and Aaliyah Edwards.

Nelson-Ododa, also 6-5, gave UConn its biggest lead of Friday with a pair of free throws to lead 47-39 in the first two and a half minutes of the fourth quarter. The senior tip-toed around foul trouble and was called for her fourth personal foul about three minutes later.

Edwards, who ended Friday with three fouls and three turnovers, also needs to play clean Sunday. The Huskies need both bigs to rise up and play smart to slow down Boston.

“It’s definitely the double-double threat. She’s aggressive on the boards, aggressive inside. It’s just about limiting her touches inside and also not giving them second-shot opportunit­ies,” Edwards said.

“I think our focus is just limiting second shots, second-chance opportunit­ies. Rebounding is going to be a big factor. Also just playing smart down low in the paint. A lot of their touches, a lot of their offense goes through inside-out game.”

Sunday is the final game of Nelson-Ododa, Christyn Williams and Evina Westbrook’s UConn careers.

Nelson-Ododa and Williams have spent four years in Storrs working toward this moment. Westbrook transferre­d from Tennessee as a sophomore for the chance to win a title with the Huskies. The three will start their profession­al careers next month.

For each, Sunday’s game — no matter how it ends — will be the biggest thing they remember from their Husky careers.

“There are times I think it’s, like, wow, the realizatio­n hits me that it’s my last game,” Nelson-Ooda said. “We still have work to do, and if I had a last game to play in, this would be absolutely the last game, so I’m just very excited and glad that this is going to be my last game and we’re in this position all together.”

 ?? Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press ?? UConn’s Paige Bueckers and Christyn Williams run a drill during a practice session on Saturday during the lead up to the NCAA national championsh­ip game.
Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press UConn’s Paige Bueckers and Christyn Williams run a drill during a practice session on Saturday during the lead up to the NCAA national championsh­ip game.
 ?? Eric Gay / Associated Press ?? UConn’s Aaliyah Edwards stretches during a practice session on Saturday in Minneapoli­s.
Eric Gay / Associated Press UConn’s Aaliyah Edwards stretches during a practice session on Saturday in Minneapoli­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States