The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Geno Auriemma keeps on keeping on

But coach is almost 70, and questions are cropping up about how much longer he’ll continue.

- By Dan Gelston Associated Press

VILLANOVA, PA. — The frame reserved for Geno Auriemma’s photo is empty — it rests atop two display cases of autographe­d UConn basketball­s to the right of a collection of Joel Embiid memorabili­a — inside a suburban Philadelph­ia sandwich shop.

Auriemma’s late mother, Marsiella — an Italian immigrant once praised by President Barack Obama at a White House visit — had lobbied the store owner to stick her son’s picture on the Bar of Fame. And why not?

Auriemma was raised in Norristown, Pennsylvan­ia, about 10 miles from the Collegevil­le Italian Bakery that was the family’s cheesestea­k stop of choice. Auriemma places an order for his team so substantiv­e when UConn plays each season at Villanova that owner Steve Carcarey is forced to decline the offer of free tickets to the game so he can assist his staff with the time-consuming task of prepping the cheesestea­ks, pastas, breads and the rest of the takeout order headed for the Huskies.

Auriemma likes his cheesestea­k with fried onions, and UConn standout Paige Bueckers cradled a loaf of crusty Italian bread like a football before she boarded the team bus back to Connecticu­t.

Thanks for the business, Geno. But as for that photo, no dice.

“We have a spot for him,” Carcarey said, laughing. “It says, ‘Coming soon, Geno Auriemma.’”

The reason for the blank space: Auriemma has yet to visit the store — the No. 1 rule to earn a spot on the Bar of Fame, a seemingly tougher requiremen­t than any stipulatio­n the Huskies’ coach faced for his spot in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

Maybe in retirement Auriemma can pop in for a leisurely lunch.

“You think it’s going to be his last time” coaching UConn at Villanova? Carcarey asked.

It’s the question asked every day in Storrs, Connecticu­t. If Auriemma, who turns 70 next month, knows the answer, he has kept his decision quiet. But until that moment, Auriemma’s basketball odometer keeps ticking, headed toward the top spot as the winningest coach of alltime. Should No. 11 UConn beat Seton Hall today, Auriemma will earn his 1,200th career victory — to go along with 11 national championsh­ips — all at the school that hired him in 1985.

Former Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski is next with 1,203 wins. Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer set the mark last month and currently has 1,206 wins.

Krzyzewski and VanDerveer combined for eight national titles. Impressive, sure. Consider, though, that Auriemma won his eighth in 2013 and has churned out three more.

“It’s like LeBron ( James),” Bueckers said. “It’s so hard to stay that great for that long.”

Auriemma is among the last of his breed of valued, empowered championsh­ip coaches still recruiting, still grinding out the work in hope of that next championsh­ip run. Krzyzewski retired in 2022; the same for Villanova’s Jay Wright. Former North Carolina coach Roy Williams retired in 2021.

And take a look at football, where Bill Belichick, Pete Carroll and Nick Saban recently left their vice-like grip on jobs that came with championsh­ip expectatio­ns shrouded in the type of mystique not yet extinct in Storrs, where Auriemma is revered and leading a team undefeated in the Big East and worthy of that 12th national title.

UConn isn’t exactly laying in the weeds — Bueckers put a torn ACL behind her and returned to All-American form — but the program hasn’t sparked the type of buzz it did when Breanna Stewart, Sue Bird, Diana Taurasi and others dominated the game. Iowa’s Caitlin Clark ignites a frenzy wherever she plays. LSU’s Kim Mulkey is perhaps the most divisive coach in college basketball, and Tigers star Angel Reese has taunted her way to the top. On the backs of those stars, the NCAA and ESPN announced last month an eightyear, $920 million agreement that includes the rights to the women’s tournament.

So it goes in Storrs, where women’s hoops entered a popularity spike — even as transfer portal and NIL rules complicate­d the sport — all while the Huskies are spinning toward eight years since their last national championsh­ip.

DePaul coach Doug Bruno, who served under Auriemma as an assistant on the women’s national basketball team, said not even the title drought can dampen the indelible impact Auriemma and the Huskies have made on college basketball.

“They’ve done the most of any intercolle­giate basketball program in the history of basketball, men or women,” Bruno said.

UConn has the type of cachet where transfers or NIL funds aren’t much of a headache. Bueckers signed a deal with Gatorade in late 2021 that made her the brand’s first college athlete partner. Azzi Fudd has deals with fast food and clothing companies. Auriemma stood by comments from last month that caught him heat — from Reese and Mississipp­i State’s Lauren Park-Lane, among others — for lamenting in the portal era that some players “feel like they owe you nothing and you owe them everything.”

“I think that’s why coaches get into coaching, to have those kind of relationsh­ips with their players,” Auriemma said last week at Villanova. “As that’s disappeari­ng somewhat, maybe, so is the fun of coaching, to be honest.” So is Auriemma having less fun? “Different kind of fun,” Auriemma said. “It’s so different, man. It’s so, so different looking at it from a 40-year perspectiv­e. Right now, the beauty of coaching is trying to make them have a similar experience that those other players had. When you see it actually happening, it’s really, really rewarding. It just doesn’t happen enough.”

Auriemma teared up at last month’s celebratio­n of past great teams during a highlight film of his 2003-04 Huskies that finished 31-4 and won a national title. Taurasi had told Auriemma that it wasn’t until she left the program that she gained the perspectiv­e needed to realize just how fantastic and meaningful those championsh­ip seasons are to her, how tight the connection­s with her teammates, how that will stay with her for life.

The outlook resonated with Auriemma.

“If I had known how good they were, and appreciate­d it then as much as I appreciate it now, I would have had a lot more fun when I was coaching them,” Auriemma said.

Auriemma insisted the fun — and yes, the stress — comes from chasing a championsh­ip and not the personal legacies largely associated with his own hefty win count. Auriemma feigned ignorance after a recent win put him four away from 1,200 — “Am I?” — and hoped VanDerveer has “got a lot more left in her” and bulks up her win total over her final seasons.

“He doesn’t care about 1,202 or 1,203 or 1,204,” Bruno said. “He cares about those 11 banners. He’d probably cut his head open trying to get his 12th.”

Auriemma’s arrival at 31 years old merited no more than a few paragraphs from local newspapers in 1985. His retirement will make global headlines.

Auriemma envisions coaching a final season without the pomp of a farewell tour. All he needed to do last week to reinforce that that idea was the right one was peek to his right at a retired coach watching the game from a baseline seat.

Wright floored Villanova when he retired weeks after leading the Wildcats to a Final Four in 2022. Maybe that’s how Auriemma will call it quits.

“To be honest with you,” Auriemma said, “I like Jay’s way.”

UConn is in no rush for Auriemma to decide, and with a $15 million extension set to end after next season, he doesn’t have to make the call this summer. Auriemma, though, perhaps foreshadow­ed his future when he noted UConn likely would offer him another contract, but “at some point, you’re going to say ‘no.’”

He has grandchild­ren he’d like to spend more time with. He’d also like to enjoy the spoils of retirement. Let his successor worry about keeping the Huskies contenders among the massive demands of recruiting and NIL and the portal.

Auriemma has a visit due at a neighborho­od cheesestea­k joint.

 ?? ?? Geno Auriemma is in his 39th season at UConn and has 1,199 wins, making him the third-winingest coach in NCAA basketball history. He also has 11 national titles and coached some of the best players in women’s basketball history.
Geno Auriemma is in his 39th season at UConn and has 1,199 wins, making him the third-winingest coach in NCAA basketball history. He also has 11 national titles and coached some of the best players in women’s basketball history.
 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP 2022 ?? Geno Auriemma turns 70 next month. If he knows when he might retire, he has kept that news to himself. But he does admit he liked the way Jay Wright retired, with no advance notice.
JESSICA HILL/AP 2022 Geno Auriemma turns 70 next month. If he knows when he might retire, he has kept that news to himself. But he does admit he liked the way Jay Wright retired, with no advance notice.

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