The Day

March brings another side of Bueckers

Guard leads UConn women into their NCAA tourney opener today

- By VICKIE FULKERSON Day Sports Editor

Storrs — Paige Bueckers doesn’t sugar coat things. “Every game sucked last year watching on the side,” said Bueckers, the 2021 national player of the year as a freshman for the UConn women’s basketball team who missed all of last season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee.

“But there’s nothing like not playing in March and that feeling. I just remember last year, it was our second game (in the NCAA tournament), I think, against Baylor. After that game I was super emotional just because of the environmen­t of March Madness and not playing in that situation. It’s what you really work for your entire life.”

By contrast, March 2024 has carried a dizzying array of accolades for Bueckers — she’s finally an All-American again — and acclaim from teammates, coaches and opponents.

In leading UConn to the Big East tournament championsh­ip March 9-11 at Mohegan Sun Arena, Bueckers scored 83 points in three games to earn Most Outstandin­g Player honors and she did so with uninhibite­d joy.

Bueckers, the 6-foot guard and a redshirt junior from Hopkins, Minnesota, took the opening tip in the Big East tournament semifinals against Marquette in place of injured teammate Aaliyah Edwards. In that game, she also splashed an NBA-range 3-point field goal to end the third quarter of the eventual victory before sprinting around the court in celebratio­n, gleefully chest-bumping various teammates.

Bueckers’ next assignment begins at 1 p.m. today at sold-out Gampel Pavilion, with third-seeded UConn (295) meeting No. 14 Jackson State (26-6) in the first round of the NCAA tournament’s Portland (Oregon) Regional 3.

“Before the tournament started, I was telling myself to embrace it, to have fun, to play with joy,” Bueckers said of the Big East tournament success. “Because last year I would have done anything to be able to play in the month of March during tournament time. So really it’s just me getting back to my roots of just having fun playing the game of basketball.”

“I'm sure we all missed that and I'm sure the fans missed that and I'm sure she missed it, first and foremost,” UConn senior Nika Muhl said. “It's been incredible to be a part of her journey off the court, when she was injured and what she has developed in her character and how she's grown so much.”

Bueckers, who will play in her first NCAA tournament game in 720 days, is averaging a career-best 21.3 points per game with 4.8 rebounds.

Bueckers led UConn to Final Four appearance­s in 2021 and 2022 and to the 2022 national championsh­ip game in her home state of Minnesota.

UConn coach Geno Auriemma, often asked about the Who's Who of UConn greats who have led the Huskies to 11 national championsh­ips during his 39-year tenure, likes to mess with Bueckers by telling her she couldn't even make the first team.

He also tells her she can't drive to her left and she can't beat anybody off the dribble, anything that provokes her to prove him wrong.

“You haven't won a national championsh­ip, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I try to say as many things as I can to her because she just loves proving people wrong,” Auriemma said.

“I go by this criteria. How many players have I coached that impact the team in as many ways as Paige does? And how many teams rely so much — how many of my teams — on one player to do so much for them? I would say that that list probably starts with Diana Taurasi and Paige Bueckers. And no disrespect to any of those others.

“So whether she's a legend or a national champion yet, very, very few have impacted UConn basketball the way Paige has.”

And yet Auriemma has a humorous depiction of his superstar, too.

She talks. A lot, he said. Not in a bad way, by any means, just matter of factly: This is what I'm going to do.

“It's just nonstop, (so) that when she does it, it's almost like, ‘I told you I was going to do it,'” Auriemma said. “It's fun to be around that. But at the same time we're all rooting for her not to get it done so we can make fun of her.

“There is nothing, literally nothing, that she thinks that if she sets her mind to it that she can't do.”

Now, Bueckers takes the national stage for the NCAA tournament, something she has daydreamed about since Stefanie Dolson, Bueckers' favorite UConn player growing up, won back-to-back national championsh­ips in 2013 and 2014.

Bueckers carries the burden of a star, Auriemma said, having to be more prepared, more ready to take the hits that come her way without complainin­g.

And yet it's no burden to Bueckers, who sells out Gampel Pavilion in her adopted home town of Storrs and who laughs and cries along with her teammates on a regular basis. She inspires an injury-plagued team, four players competing in the postseason for the first time, to be able to conquer any hurdle.

“Other than everything?” Syracuse coach Felisha Legette-Jack said early Friday afternoon from Gampel Pavilion, asked what makes Bueckers special. “... I don't know why her name isn't being as visible as other names that are being talked about throughout the season.

“I just think that you don't see her greatness as much as you see the others because she plays within an amazing system with a great coach. ... She does a great job of sharing that ball, sharing that light, and then every now and again she gets Big East Player of the Year.”

“She's built for this month,” UConn's Edwards said of Bueckers. “And she's built for this team.”

 ?? NELL REDMOND/AP PHOTO ?? UConn guard Paige Bueckers brings the ball up court during a game on Feb. 11 against South Carolina in Columbia, S.C.
NELL REDMOND/AP PHOTO UConn guard Paige Bueckers brings the ball up court during a game on Feb. 11 against South Carolina in Columbia, S.C.
 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP PHOTO ?? UConn guard Paige Bueckers (5) reacts in the first half of a game against Marquette in the semifinals of the Big East Conference tournament on March 10 at Mohegan Sun.
JESSICA HILL/AP PHOTO UConn guard Paige Bueckers (5) reacts in the first half of a game against Marquette in the semifinals of the Big East Conference tournament on March 10 at Mohegan Sun.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States