The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Geno, Bird chat hoops, both past and future

- By Doug Bonjour

UConn women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma is spending time at home with his family during this age of social distancing, and he’s using it to pick up a few new hobbies, including social media. On Tuesday, Auriemma took to Instagram Live for more than an hour to chat with Huskies great Sue Bird about everything from working during the quarantine to Diana Taurasi’s greatness to fighting with teammates.

Here’s more from their conversati­on.

Auriemma and Bird improvisin­g on the job Hunkered down in an apartment in Greenwich, Bird, 39, has gotten creative to stay in basketball shape. She bought a Peloton and also runs outside, but she can’t remember the last time she shot on an actual hoop. She practices ball-handling using the HomeCourt app, in which she’s an investor.

The next season — when and if it begins — will be Bird’s 19th with the Seattle Storm of the WNBA.

“It’s getting a little more normal, it feels more normal,” Bird said of her workout routine. “Early on, I had to get real creative.”

As for Auriemma, he said he still goes into his office at the Werth Center, but if other members of his staff come in, they work in their

respective offices and chat over Zoom.

DT has Magic in her Auriemma asked Bird whether her ex-UConn teammate Diana Taurasi is the female version of Michael Jordan.

Bird responded by telling him Taurasi’s mindset is similar to Jordan’s but that she plays more like Magic Johnson.

“Game-wise, she’s more Magic. Mindset, very similar to Jordan,” Bird said. “She’s funnier, but very similar. … With Dee, it’s all or nothing.”

Remember when? Bird recalled arguing during a game with Betty Lennox when they were teammates in Seattle.

“We’re on a two-on-one. If I give you a million dollars, what do you think I would do?” Bird asked Auriemma.

“Pass it,” he responded. “I lay it in. The team calls timeout. … Our bench is on the other side of the court. I see Betty’s pissed, so pissed where I literally look behind my head to see who’s there. … She’s all up in arms that I didn’t pass her the ball,” Bird said. “All I kept saying to Betty was ‘Grow up, grow up.’ ”

Finally, head coach Anne Donovan interjecte­d herself in the back-and-forth and the two eventually made up, with Lennox texting Bird after the game.

When will sports return?

Bird said she hasn’t heard anything about the WNBA season starting and doesn’t know if the Olympics will be held next summer.

“Are you guys going to play next year?” Bird asked.

Auriemma replied vaguely, “Eventually.”

Auriemma wants more women to support women

Auriemma said it “pisses him off ” when women who have the means to support women’s sports don’t do so, echoing a point made by Taurasi during a discussion this past weekend with Bird and her partner, U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe.

Taurasi has expressed interest in owning a team after her career’s over.

“There’s a lot of people out there that are in a position to be able to affect the trajectory of these things,” Auriemma said. “It doesn’t really matter what the sport is, that have the ability and for whatever reason choose not to step up.”

 ?? Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images ?? UConn coach Geno Auriemma with Sue Bird after the Huskies defeated South Carolina in 2017.
Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images UConn coach Geno Auriemma with Sue Bird after the Huskies defeated South Carolina in 2017.

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