The Day

Sports: No. 1 UConn women face No. 5 UCLA tonight in Los Angeles

Guards Dangerfiel­d, Canada will play key roles in UConn-UCLA matchup tonight

- By JIM FULLER

Los Angeles — Who knows what surprises Hall of Fame UConn women's basketball coach Geno Auriemma might have sprung on sophomore point guard Crystal Dangerfiel­d had the Huskies traveled to the west coast via a team charter, its normal mode of transporta­tion.

However, with the team flying commercial­ly, any motivation Auriemma had planned for Dangerfiel­d had to wait until the team touched down in Los Angeles.

"I have tried to figure out a way that when she turns her little screen on in the plane in front of her, a picture of (UCLA guard) Jordin Canada pops up and it stays there the entire flight," Auriemma said before the team left for its week and a half road trip featuring games in California, Oregon and Nevada. "I am sure Crystal will be up for it, she will be excited about it. They are similar in some ways, so Pauley Pavilion, two great guards going at it, it is going to be pretty exciting."

Canada is second among active women's Division I players with 607 career assists, fourth with 246 steals and 11th with 1,609 points. Even though she was a highly-touted prospect coming out of the Windward School in Los Angeles and drew interest from plenty of elite programs including UConn, Canada had to work on her game to become the elite player she is now. Especially on her outside shooting.

"I worked extremely hard," Canada said. "I knew it was something I needed to focus on especially going into the future with the WNBA. That was something that was my weakness so I worked on it all summer and I am still working on it now."

The 5-foot-6 Canada was just 3 of 23 from 3-point range as a freshman. She made 16 as a sophomore, 29 as a junior and each season her 3-point percentage improved to a career-best mark of 63.6 after the first three games this season.

Dangerfiel­d has also made rapid advancemen­ts, goning from being an uncertain and inconsiste­nt freshman to being a key to the early success for No. 1 UConn both on offense and defense. Dangerfiel­d has similar skills to Canada and knows more than a few eyes will be on the matchup of speedy point guards during today's game at

There are few state rivalries as old (107 years) or as heated as Shelton vs. Derby. The problem this millennium is that the Gaels have turned the series into a laughingst­ock. They’ve beaten Derby 14 years in a row by an average of 29 points. Shoot — the last time the Red Raiders won (2002), Shelton’s Dan Orlovsky was a UConn sophomore. vs. Derby, Thanksgivi­ng, 10 a.m. Go back and read the Windsor intel. Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at Windsor,

The Blue Devils can double their pleasure on Thursday. They can clinch a Class LL home quarterfin­al with a win, and will ruin Prep’s weekend by keeping it out of states. at Fairfield Prep, Thanksgivi­ng, 10 a.m. No. 5 UCLA (10:30 p.m., ESPNU).

"She has a high motor and most of the offense runs through her so she is going to be a focus," Dangerfiel­d said. "She is just a great player. She is going to find ways to push you. She goes 110 percent every play so having that matchup early in the season is going to be good."

Canada played 39 minutes in a loss to UConn in the 2017 NCAA tournament and her 11 assists are the most for a player facing the Huskies in the NCAA tournament. Dangerfiel­d had two points and four assists in 17 minutes in the Huskies' 86-71 win. She certainly should have a much more significan­t role in the rematch.

"She is playing with a lot of confi- dence," Canada said.

"That is something you don't see very often coming from your freshman year to your sophomore year especially from my perspectiv­e being in that position before. She is playing with extreme confidence, shooting the ball well, leading her team well."

UConn forward/center Azurá Stevens was on the same team as Canada during the U.S. U-23 trials and obviously knows how talented Dangerfiel­d is as well.

"They are both outstandin­g guards," Stevens said. "I am a little biased. I think Crystal is better, but Jordin is a real talented guard and really relentless. It was really fun playing with her at trials."

So what does Stevens like the most about playing with Dangerfiel­d?

"The way she plays this year, you have seen her evolve and just her confidence, her eye sight and vision is really fun to play with," Stevens said. "We are pushing the ball and even in the half-court set, she really has a knack for getting other people the ball."

UCLA just defeated Baylor and now UConn comes to town making for an exciting stretch for the UCLA players and their fans.

"You want to play against the best of the best," Canada said. "This is going to help us later on when we get to February in our conference and March with tournament play, so games like this are what are going to help us."

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? UConn’s Gabby Williams (15) and Kia Nurse apply pressure to UCLA point guard Jordin Canada during the 2017 NCAA Bridgeport Regional. No. 5 UCLA hosts the top-ranked Huskies tonight in Los Angeles.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY UConn’s Gabby Williams (15) and Kia Nurse apply pressure to UCLA point guard Jordin Canada during the 2017 NCAA Bridgeport Regional. No. 5 UCLA hosts the top-ranked Huskies tonight in Los Angeles.
 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? UConn head coach Geno Auriemma gives advice to point guard Crystal Dangerfiel­d during Sunday’s 97-72 win over Maryland in Hartford. The No. 1 Huskies begin a west coast road trip tonight against No. 5 UCLA in Los Angeles.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY UConn head coach Geno Auriemma gives advice to point guard Crystal Dangerfiel­d during Sunday’s 97-72 win over Maryland in Hartford. The No. 1 Huskies begin a west coast road trip tonight against No. 5 UCLA in Los Angeles.

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