The Norwalk Hour

UConn begins their February stretch drive against St. John’s

- By Carl Adamec STAFF WRITER

STORRS — Geno Auriemma walked into the interview room at Providence’s Alumni Hall looking more like he had played 40 minutes for the UConn women’s basketball team rather than coaching.

His Huskies had defeated the Friars by 10 for their 14th straight win on this Feb. 1, 2023 night, but the Hall of Fame coach knew something wasn’t right. February’s the stretch drive of the regular season and with all the injuries and adversity he wasn’t sure his team could get to the level it needed to be at to get through March and into April.

“You can always improve and get better at certain things,” Auriemma said. “I don’t know that we can get significan­tly better . ... You hope there are one or two players that have it that night and kind of ride that wave they have. Other than that, we can’t practice enough to get better. We can’t spend enough time at practice to get better.”

He was right. After a spirited effort in a loss to unbeaten South Carolina four days later, UConn lost at Marquette. That marked the first time it had lost back-toback games in 30 years spanning 1,083 games. Two weeks later, the Huskies lost to St. John’s at home giving them three February losses for the first time in 30 years. UConn did get two of its injured players back and found the resolve to win its 10th consecutiv­e conference tournament title and reach the NCAA Sweet 16 for the 29th straight year but a loss to Ohio State ended its streak of Final Four appearance­s at 14.

The calendar has turned to February again and again the Huskies have dealt with injuries.

They have lost five players for the season — the most in Auriemma's 39 seasons here — and have played with a nine-player roster for almost a month. This time, though, no one is coming back so the Huskies will have to play the hand that they have.

But somehow something is different. As No. 11 UConn gets ready to take on St. John's Sunday in its annual Play4Kay Pink Game at Gampel Pavilion, there doesn't seem to be the mental and physical drain that there was a year ago and there's something left in the tank to make things interestin­g the next several weeks.

“Even though we've had the one game against Notre Dame that we weren't at our best and didn't play to our best, we're still riding the wave of keeping the momentum going and keeping the energy high,” UConn forward Aaliyah Edwards said on Saturday. “During this time of the year you do rely on being more mentally tough. Physically, everyone is in the same boat. You're tired, we've played 22 and fatigue will kick in. But as long as we stay focused and play with effort it will take us far.”

The Huskies (18-4, 10-0 Big East) lead second-place Creighton by two games in the regular-season race

with eight games to go with third-place St. John's (14-9, 8-3) another half-game back. UConn defeated St. John's 92-49 at UBS Arena in Elmont, N.Y., on Jan. 13.

February is usually the time that UConn starts playing its best. Since 1994, the Huskies are 231-19 (.924) in February games and that includes the 6-3 mark from a year ago.

Auriemma knows his team has to get better from February until the postseason begins and he believes it will.

“Games are going to present themselves where we don't have an answer for what's going on,” Auriemma said. “I said this 30 years ago, (former Kansas City Chiefs coach) Hank Stram's great line: ‘To win it all, you have to have it all.' I've coached teams that had it all. So there will be games this year, and there already have been, that we will not be able to change how the game is being played.

“The only thing we can do is work really, really hard at the things we're already good at and we have to be able to do those things every game.”

Even with five players out with season-ending injuries and having played with a nine-player roster for a month, Auriemma has been able to keep the minutes for his starters — particular­ly for guards Paige Bueckers and Nika Mühl — within reason. Bueckers set a school record for most minutes per

game her freshman year with Mühl beating that mark a year ago.

One key has been the minutes from freshmen KK Arnold and Ashlynn Shade along with what redshirt freshman Ice Brady gives them off the bench.

“Can we get better? I'm not sure,” Auriemma said. “But I do know that having KK, Ice, and Ash, you look at them and ask, ‘Have they played to their max?' No. There's a lot of room for them to get better and that's where we as a team can get better if we continue to play the way we've been playing. I don't see the tired factor there yet. I think we've been through the hard stretch. The schedule from a travel point of view helps us.”

Arnold and Shade may hit that freshman wall at some point but it hasn't happened yet. All they've done for the Huskies is step up and become the leading candidates for Big East Freshman of the Year.

“You just try to take it one game at a time,” Arnold said. “You don't look ahead and just stay in the moment. My teammates help me, the veterans and Paige ... They help all of us freshmen and remind us that it is a long season and we need to take it day-byday and keep getting better.”

The schedule has also been kind to UConn as it has balanced with travel and days between games. A year ago, the Huskies

had to play five games in 12 days in late January and it took a toll.

UConn has nine regularsea­son games left: five at home and four on the road. The only game outside the Eastern time zone is at DePaul.

“We had a lot of scheduling issues last year that have gotten take care of this year,” Auriemma said. “The conference did a much better job of balancing things out. And that we've played so much better in so many ways in our league, it's given us a chance to rest some guys. We'll see how long this can last.”

A year ago, St. John's beat UConn at the XL Center after losing to the Huskies by 30 at UBS Arena so they know they can't take the Red Storm for granted.

A win could move UConn back into the Associated Press Top 10. A victory would give Auriemma 1,199 wins and allow him to go for the 1,200-plateau Wednesday against Seton Hall at the XL Center in Hartford.

But it's one game at a time.

“Everyone is stepping up and playing to their strengths and going at 150 percent,” Edwards said. “That's all Coach asks us to do. Things aren't what they were if we had a full roster. But people are putting in the effort so when it comes to games we can execute and do the things we need to do.”

 ?? Karl B. DeBlaker/Associated Press ?? Coach Geno Auriemma and the UConn women’s basketball team will host St. John’s on Sunday at Gampel Pavilion.
Karl B. DeBlaker/Associated Press Coach Geno Auriemma and the UConn women’s basketball team will host St. John’s on Sunday at Gampel Pavilion.

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