Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

UConn marches on

Bueckers finishes with double-double as Huskies advance

- By Maggie Vanoni

STORRS — UConn women’s basketball’s largest obstacle this season has been its lack of depth.

A look down its bench will shows six players, the majority once high school AllAmerica­ns, dressed in street clothes and unavailabl­e to play due to various injuries. That leaves the No. 3 seeded Huskies with just eight available players for the entire NCAA Tournament.

So of course it was almost ironic that their first round opponent had a roster of nearly double that available.

But the Huskies are a different team come March. And on Saturday they proved just as such — using only seven to easily beat No. 14 Jackson State 86-64 and advance to the NCAA Tournament second round for a record 30th-straight year.

The win gives the Huskies (30-5, 18-0 Big East) their 27th 30-win season and marks the 96th straight time UConn has beat an opponent in a first-time meeting.

UConn will play the winner of No. 6 Syracuse-No. 11 Arizona in Monday’s second round for the chance to advance to the Sweet 16 in Portland, Ore.

Paige Bueckers, playing in her first March Madness game since 2022, led with her fourth career double-double of 28 points, 11 rebounds, seven assists and three steals. She was followed by freshman Ashlynn Shade with 26 points (the most by any UConn player in her NCAA Tournament debut). Aaliyah Edwards also finished with a double-double of 20 points and 10 rebounds.

Nika Muhl finished with seven points and seven assists. She’s now just one assist behind Moriah Jefferson for the UConn program all-time career assist record of 659.

Unlike games past where foul trouble would shorten UConn’s already limited bench early on, the Huskies remained calm on Saturday when things got tense and calls didn’t go their way.

Muhl, KK Arnold and Qadence Samuels all had two fouls each at halftime. But UConn kept its poise thanks to Bueckers and Edwards.

While the Tigers attacked first by outsprinti­ng the Huskies to steal a loose ball following the opening tip, Bueckers and Edwards quickly killed their momentum.

Bueckers scored UConn’s first bucket and less than 10 seconds later Edwards (playing in her first game in over two weeks after breaking her nose) leaped up for a

kies escaped with a 49-48 win at the New Haven Coliseum as Ed Petersen’s lastsecond shot just missed.

The series dates back to the 1914-15 season, with UConn holding a 44-23 edge. The two teams played every year from the 1946-47 season through 1997-98. They have played just three times since.

There was a time the two teams played home-andhome matchups. Yale greeted first-year UConn coach Jim Calhoun with 77-75 overtime loss at Payne Whitney. Yale was coached by Dick Kuchen and led by future NBA center Chris Dudley, but still struggled to a 14-12 record, 7-7 in Ivy League play.

Yale, which won 12 of the first 14 meetings from 1914-50, has won just three times since 1971.

 ?? Joe Buglewicz/Getty Images ?? UConn’s Paige Bueckers reacts against Jackson State during the first half on Saturday in Storrs.
Joe Buglewicz/Getty Images UConn’s Paige Bueckers reacts against Jackson State during the first half on Saturday in Storrs.

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