USA TODAY US Edition

UConn’s Samuelson wants to return to top

Senior reminds teammates just how special a national championsh­ip is

- Paul Myerberg

TAMPA, Fla. – Before Connecticu­t traveled south for the Final Four and again once the Huskies arrived to begin preparatio­ns for Friday’s national semifinal against Notre Dame, senior guard Katie Lou Samuelson spoke to her teammates about how it feels to win a national championsh­ip.

Samuelson was a freshman for the program’s last championsh­ip, the 39-0 juggernaut paced by forward Breanna Stewart that won its six NCAA tournament games by a combined 239 points. She finished fourth on the team in scoring, a secondary option on an unfairly talented roster, rarely asked to shoulder the load. Three seasons later,

Samuelson and fellow senior Napheesa Collier are the only players left aware of both what it takes to win a title and, in a literal sense, how it feels — what it’s like

to be showered in confetti on the first Sunday night in April.

“No one really does understand how great it feels,” said Samuelson. “We wanted to let them know that we can do this.”

The rest of the roster knows only heartbreak.

Two years ago, the Huskies’ season ended in an overtime loss to Mississipp­i State in the semifinals.

Last season ended in an overtime loss to Notre Dame in the semifinals.

Another loss in this Final Four would spell the program’s longest stretch without a championsh­ip since missing four in a row from 2005-08.

On an individual level, Samuelson’s place in program history is secure. She’s a three-time All-American selection, twice earning first-team honors. She’s one of UConn’s top career scorers. Her teams have lost a combined four games, two coming this season to leave the Huskies a surprising No. 2 seed in the Albany Region. Even still, the pressure is on Samuelson to help deliver another national championsh­ip, the program’s 12th.

It’s been her most trying season. In the Huskies’ home finale on March 2, Samuelson collided with a Houston defender in a chase of a loose ball and suffered bruising and back spasms. While UConn cruised to another American Athletic Conference tournament championsh­ip, Samuelson was rehabbing; her absence forced the Huskies to rally around Collier, an All-American forward, and it took the team a “little bit of time to kind of get our bearings,” coach Geno Auriemma said.

“It’s definitely all mental,” Samuelson said of her injury. “It’s all believing in yourself and understand­ing that at this point of the season everyone is dealing with stuff that you don’t know about it.”

The pain lingered into the tournament. Samuelson scored 11 points in 22 minutes of play in the first round against Towson, a 110-61 win. She played all 40 minutes in ensuing games against Buffalo and UCLA but shot a combined 6 of 23 from the field, scoring just six points on 1 of 6 shooting in the Sweet Sixteen win against the Bruins.

Then came her return to form: Samuelson scored 29 points in the Elite Eight victory against Louisville, which topped UConn during the regular season, to carry the Huskies to a seven-point win and back into the Final Four for the 12th year in a row.

“That shows me that she has heart,” said freshman guard Christyn Williams. “She doesn’t want to let us down. So for her to fight through her injury and persevere through that, it’s something we really needed. That just how great of a teammate she is.”

When healthy — and Samuelson says she’s at full strength heading into Friday night — few players create a more dishearten­ing matchup nightmare. At 6-3, Samuelson has the length to see the entire floor, Williams said. She has the height to simply shoot over defenders, the athleticis­m to blow past forwards on the perimeter and the size to bully smaller guards on the post.

“That is, like, almost unstoppabl­e,” Williams said.

Samuelson is “special in that sense,” said junior guard Crystal Dangerfiel­d, in how the wide majority of players her size in the women’s game play close to the basket. In comparison, Samuelson ranks second in program history in made 3-pointers and last season led the NCAA in 3-point field goal percentage.

“I don’t necessaril­y believe that we’ve seen another player like Katie,” Notre Dame guard Abby Prohaska said, then backtracke­d slightly. “I mean, there’s players everywhere that are just as good as her, so … I don’t know, I feel like we’re ready and prepared for this.”

So is Samuelson. The championsh­ip as a freshman “was so easy with that team,” said Collier. Losing to Mississipp­i State two seasons ago was heartbreak­ing. Last April’s loss to Notre Dame was devastatin­g. This year’s team lost twice during the regular season for the first time since 2013. The back injury was yet another hurdle. Now feeling healthy, with her shooting stroke recovered, Samuelson is two wins away from ending her college career in the same way it began: with bookend national championsh­ips.

“There’s no guarantee that you’re going to be playing in that second game,” she said, “and our team, more than any other team in the country, knows that. So we’ve got to put everything on the line. No matter what, we’re not saving anything else for another game.”

 ?? RICH BARNES/USA TODAY SPORTS ??
RICH BARNES/USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? RICH BARNES/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? UConn coach Geno Auriemma and Katie Lou Samuelson are back in the Final Four.
RICH BARNES/USA TODAY SPORTS UConn coach Geno Auriemma and Katie Lou Samuelson are back in the Final Four.

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