Stamford Advocate

Karaban enrolls at UConn early

Class of 2022 forward won’t play this season

- By David Borges david.borges @hearstmedi­act.com

Alex Karaban, a 6-foot-8, Class of 2022 forward from Northborou­gh, Mass., has enrolled early at UConn for the 2021-22 spring semester and will join the men’s basketball team immediatel­y.

As first reported by Hearst Connecticu­t Media in November, Karaban has been weighing the possibilit­y of leaving IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., early and joining the Huskies. Karaban is not expected to play for UConn this season, but he can practice and travel with the team.

Karaban will follow the same path as current UConn redshirt junior Akok Akok, who enrolled at UConn for the second semester in 2018-19, but did not play in any games and made an immediate impact as a redshirt freshman in 2019-20. UConn currently has freshman guard Corey Floyd Jr. taking a redshirt season this year.

Karaban, who went to IMG Academy after two

UCONN at No. 24 SETON HALL

When: Saturday, noon

Where: Prudential Center, Newark, New Jersey

Records: UConn 10-3 (1-1 Big East), Seton Hall 10-3 (1-2 Big East)

TV: FOX

Radio: UConn Sports Network, 97.9 FMESPN Hartford, Sirius-137, XM-206, SXM App-965, WAVZ-New Haven (1300 AM), WGCH- Greenwich (1490 AM), WATRWaterb­ury (1320 AM), WILI-Willimanti­c (WILI 1400 AM)

KEEP AN EYE ON

Sanogo hamstrung? Adama Sanogo missed four games before returning to play just 13 minutes in UConn’s most recent game, a 78-70 win at Marquette. In the second half of that game, Sanogo tweaked a hamstring, and that has limited him in practice over the past couple of weeks.

Sanogo didn’t practice on Wednesday and was limited in practice on Thursday. Hurley was hoping the 6-foot-9 sophomore center could practice fully on Friday, but couldn’t offer a prediction as to his status for Saturday’s game.

If Sanogo can go, he would likely still be on some sort of minutes-restrictio­n, as he was in the Marquette game.

UConn, which has had nine players test positive for COVID-19 since Christmas, only had six players available for practice on Monday and a seventh who was “limited.” The team finally got up to double figures in available bodies on Thursday, but it’s clear that players could be rusty and/or struggle with conditioni­ng. Players who tested positive spent 10 days in quarantine. The six who tested negative were able to work out, but obviously couldn’t play 5-on-5 scrimmages, etc.

With that in mind, Hurley knows what has to lead the way on Saturday.

“Our toughness and our defense and our rebounding have got to be really on point this weekend,” Hurley said, “because offensivel­y, it’s going to be hard against such a great defensive team to have our rhythm and to play a beautiful game on Saturday. I think it’s a lot to ask of our team. But, we’ve got to play really, really hard, and defend and rebound and do the toughness stuff, at the absolute highest level.”

“There’s always a path to victory,” he continued, “and the path to victory in this one’s going to have to be through toughness and togetherne­ss, and what we do on the backboard and defensivel­y. Because those are the easiest things to pick up where we left off.”

Kids in the Hall: Seton Hall has had its own COVID issues lately, canceling three games and losing two in a row without 7-foot-2 center Ike Obiagu and talented forward Tyrese Samuel available. Obiagu returned for the Hall’s impressive win at Butler on Tuesday, and all signs point to Samuel returning on Saturday.

Senior wing Jared Rhoden is third in the Big East in scoring and one of the league’s top overall players. Point guard Bryce Aiken is healthy again and averaging 16.5 points and four assists over his last four games, and UConn fans are well familiar grad forward Alexis Yetna, who’s averaging 9.4 rebounds (along with 11.8 points) over his last five games.

“They’re a really good team, they’re talented, a Top 25 team in the country,” said UConn point guard R.J. Cole. “We know we have to stop Rhoden, Bryce Aiken’s been playing very well. We just have to lock in defensivel­y, and I think it should work out in our favor.”

PROBABLE STARTERS

R.J. Cole Tyrese Martin Akok Akok Isaiah Whaley Andre Jackson

Bryce Aiken Alexis Yetna Jared Rhoden Ike Obiagu Myles Cale years at New Hampton (N.H.) School, was a consensus Top 50 recruit and was named the Gatorade New Hampshire Player of the Year last season after averaging 25.8 points, 8.7 rebounds, 2.9 assists, 1.9 blocks and shooting 60.3 percent to lead New Hampton to the New England Prep School Athletic Council Class AAA tournament championsh­ip. He was named MVP of the title game.

He also played for Expression­s Elite on the AAU circuit and averaged 18.4 points, 7.4 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 1.6 blocks and earned selection to the All-Peach Jam Second Team.

Karaban, along with Floyd and 7-2 center Donovan Clingan (Bristol, Conn.), were originally ranked as a Top 10 recruiting class for UConn.

 ?? Rick Scuteri / Associated Press ?? Phoenix Mercury coach Sandy Brondello gestures during Game 2 of the WNBA Finals against the Chicago Sky on Oct. 13. The New York Liberty hired Brondello to be their new coach Friday.
Tough enough?
Rick Scuteri / Associated Press Phoenix Mercury coach Sandy Brondello gestures during Game 2 of the WNBA Finals against the Chicago Sky on Oct. 13. The New York Liberty hired Brondello to be their new coach Friday. Tough enough?
 ?? Icon Sportswire via Getty Images ?? Alex Karaban dribbles up the court during the Pangos All-American Camp on June 7 at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy in Las Vegas, Nev. Karaban enrolled early at UConn.
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Alex Karaban dribbles up the court during the Pangos All-American Camp on June 7 at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy in Las Vegas, Nev. Karaban enrolled early at UConn.

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