The Norwalk Hour

Spencer’s March dream comes true

- By Mike Anthony

NEW YORK — In the far corner of the UConn men’s basketball locker room Friday evening, Cam Spencer sat on a folding chair and cut athletic tape from his ankles. Think of how many hundreds of times he’s done this over the past five years following practices, shootaroun­ds and games.

Spencer had just played his 127th college game. It was his NCAA Tournament debut. He scored 15 points in the Huskies’ 91-52 victory over Stetson at the Barclays Center, the first step of a journey familiar to a program and entirely new to a player.

“Unbelievab­le,” Spencer said. “I’ve dreamed of playing in March Madness my whole life and to get that first game was pretty special. I’m just happy to get the win, honestly, and that’s all I’m focused on.”

Spencer at this moment, literally and essentiall­y, was alone. The rest of the room was lined with teammates at locker stalls who had either, A) been through this tournament and won it so convincing­ly a year ago or, B) were still in high school.

“And then Cam,” coach Dan Hurley said.

Hurley was standing outside the locker room minutes later. He gritted his teeth. He pumped his fist. He had pulled Spencer out of the transfer portal as a fifth-year graduate, a transactio­n that gave UConn a scorer and a more advanced heartbeat, and gave Spencer an elusive opportunit­y.

“You recruit these guys and lay out a vision, what you hope it will look like,” Hurley said. “We had a lot of confidence in what would happen for us this year, and he was the missing ingredient. We all want this for other people, and that’s what makes it special.”

Hurley mentioned Tristen Newton, Donovan Clingan and Alex Karaban, all key players during last season’s national championsh­ip run. Others, freshmen like Steph Castle and

Jaylin Stewart, were planning for proms. One faction of players made winning this complicate­d event look exceedingl­y easy last year, and the other knows nothing of the college experience without participat­ing in the opening weekend as the No. 1 seed and blowing out a first-round opponent that is more of a golf or baseball school.

And then Cam … Spencer had just finished up his one season at Rutgers after three at Loyola when UConn went on its 2023 run. He didn't watch a second of March Madness, so irked not to be part of it.

“Some of these guys played a huge role last year so they're going for history, or what have you,” Hurley said of the attempt to repeat. “Then there are guys who either didn't have a big role or weren't even in it. These are rare opportunit­ies. This doesn't happen, the run this program is on. Just where this program is at, where we've elevated it to, Cam gets a lot credit for that. Because he's infused this team with ...”

Hurley gritted his teeth again. He pumped his fist again.

“With that [bleepin'] competitiv­e fire,” Hurley continued. “He just drives people, and it's helped me root out a lot of complacenc­y.”

Another pause, a grimace.

“Because he's such an ahole.”

That's praise of the highest bleepin' order in the UConn basketball solar system. Maybe Spencer is the blonde version of Hurley or Hurley is the bald version of Spencer, as was discussed Thursday. Either way, their like-mindedness has been so apparent throughout a magical season that is part run-itback and part start-it-up.

Spencer's presence alone is a reminder that UConn is doing things that so many players don't get to. That is healthy.

“I think perspectiv­e kicks in towards the end of every year, because you know it's win or go home,” Spencer said. “You're not promised any more days or any more games with each other, and I think we all don't want that to happen. We want to keep going until April. As an older guy, I

can tell the young guys how fast time flies. But I don't think it really hits them until a couple years down the road.”

The NCAA Tournament sits there at the end of the rainbow, sits there, sits there, sits there as the destinatio­n … and then it can be over before it feels like it started. Look at what happened to Florida Atlantic, a Final Four team at year ago that returned its entire lineup this season, Friday in Brooklyn. The Owls (25-9) had a nice season but were bounced by Northweste­rn in the early firstround game. Poof. Gone.

There is great urgency on this stage. There has to be. That means cherishing and maximizing every single second of this tournament, which, of course, becomes increasing­ly difficult.

UConn crushed Stetson from the get-go, leading 2710 and 50-15. There were a lot of dunks and assists and 3-pointers and easy baskets, and a defensive ferocity that Stetson could not match with any idea or ability.

But Spencer, for his experience and his understand­ing of the man in charge of the operation,

can understand why Hurley was a little irked that UConn spent a stretch looking a little lackadaisi­cal.

“I wasn't happy with the second half,” Spencer said. “I don't think any of us were. I think our defense let us down a little bit. I think, human nature, just kind of played the score, let them get some momentum. So I don't think any of us were happy with that. But as far as the overall game, we're happy we got the win.”

Next up: Northweste­rn, where Spencer's older brother, Pat Spencer, spent the 2020-21 season as a graduate basketball player — after four seasons of not only playing lacrosse, but playing lacrosse as well as any player in the nation, at Loyola.

Pat Spencer is now on a two-way contract with the Golden State Warriors, splitting time with Steph Curry and Co. and the organizati­on's G-League affiliate, the Santa Cruz Warriors. Cam's parents, Bruce and Donna, and a very close friend who traveled from Utah, were in attendance Friday. Cam said his older brother is hoping to fly in for Sunday's game.

 ?? Sarah Stier/Getty Images ?? UConn's Cam Spencer, right, drives to the basket against Stetson's Stephan Swenson during the first half on Friday.
Sarah Stier/Getty Images UConn's Cam Spencer, right, drives to the basket against Stetson's Stephan Swenson during the first half on Friday.

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