New York Post

Ollie happy UConn still dominating

- By PETER BOTTE

Kevin Ollie was in the middle of Connecticu­t’s ascension as an NCAA powerhouse, winning a national title as the Huskies’ head coach in 2014.

Though Ollie’s tenure at Storrs didn’t end well, with his firing four years later amid a violations investigat­ion, the Nets’ interim coach was pumped to see successor Dan Hurley and UConn repeat as champions Monday night and secure the program’s sixth championsh­ip since 1999.

“Yes, it’s great. Just to see them and what Dan Hurley’s done, and an amazing coaching staff and the players, just to continue the domination is great,” Ollie said after Nets practice Tuesday in Brooklyn. “Every time we get to the Final Four, we get to the final game and we don’t lose. I’m glad the streak is still alive.”

For a second straight year, UConn won all six of its games in the Big Dance by double digits, finishing with a record plus-140 point differenti­al.

“That’s really difficult,” Ollie said. “That just shows how prepared they are, what they do behind the scenes when nobody’s looking. just them being all locked in and being unselfish. And it’s just great to see.”

Asked if UConn now has establishe­d itself as one of the NCAA’s “blue blood” programs, Ollie replied: “We should not be asking that question anymore. We know what it is. They try to still keep us out of there, but we’re just gonna make sure our work proves it and they can’t keep us out [any] longer.”

UConn was a member of the American Athletic Conference the year Ollie’s team won the title, before returning to the Big East in 2020. Along with Connecticu­t’s repeat, Villanova also has won two recent titles.

“It’s just the toughness that we play with,” said Ollie, who was a player at UConn when the school was previously a member of the Big East. “Just the wars that we go through before we get to the tournament. I think it prepares us to play very well, and it’s hard to play Big East teams when you don’t have a lot of time to prepare with the toughness and physicalit­y that we bring.”

➤ Cam Johnson (toe) and Nic Claxton (ankle) have been upgraded to probable for Wednesday’s home finale against the Raptors, but Dorian Finney-Smith (knee) and Dennis Smith Jr. (hip) remain out.

“If I feel comfortabl­e enough to get out there, I’ll be out there,” Johnson said.

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