Finishing school for women? Do they also teach them how to make dinner and do laundry too?THIS is an example of the "finished" product Geno and CD turn out every year from their finishing school for women. Stewie has seamlessly joined the many other UConn graduates that are spread out across the country serving as ambassadors for UConn, the WNBA and the communities in which they live. Well done Stewie, well done. Carnac predicts that the Storm will be Breanna's team the second Sue retires.
Inquiring minds want to know! Is Carnac actually morphing into Captain Obvious?THIS is an example of the "finished" product Geno and CD turn out every year from their finishing school for women. Stewie has seamlessly joined the many other UConn graduates that are spread out across the country serving as ambassadors for UConn, the WNBA and the communities in which they live. Well done Stewie, well done. Carnac predicts that the Storm will be Breanna's team the second Sue retires.
I'd like to think parents are responsible for raising their kids. When you're in college, you're an adult. I believe Geno and staff pick kids that have been raised right by their parents and not so much that they are made that way by the coaches.The Huskies raise players and young women right.....As evident by 11 NC Trophies and young ladies like Stewie.
GO HUSKIES!!
I think that's right....but Geno and crew take those core values learned from parents and prepare the student athletes to comport themselves ( thank you Doris) with professionalism and social grace in the public arena. There are other programs that do a very good job of preparing their players for a great future, on and off the court, but no one, and i repeat, no one does it better than Geno and crew.I'd like to think parents are responsible for raising their kids. When you're in college, you're an adult. I believe Geno and staff pick kids that have been raised right by their parents and not so much that they are made that way by the coaches.
I'd like to think parents are responsible for raising their kids. When you're in college, you're an adult. I believe Geno and staff pick kids that have been raised right by their parents and not so much that they are made that way by the coaches.
I said raise 'players' , not kids. UConn raise's a players skill level.I'd like to think parents are responsible for raising their kids. When you're in college, you're an adult. I believe Geno and staff pick kids that have been raised right by their parents and not so much that they are made that way by the coaches.
I think that's right....but Geno and crew take those core values learned from parents and prepare the student athletes to comport themselves ( thank you Doris) with professionalism and social grace in the public arena. There are other programs that do a very good job of preparing their players for a great future, on and off the court, but no one, and i repeat, no one does it better than Geno and crew.
Exactly. Most of these UConn kids had manners, class and dignity installed by good parents long before they got to UConn.I'd like to think parents are responsible for raising their kids. When you're in college, you're an adult. I believe Geno and staff pick kids that have been raised right by their parents and not so much that they are made that way by the coaches.
I'm a bit disappointed---I thought UConn had the best FANs!!
Rugbymate, you just briefly defined the basic overall curriculum of Geno & CD's finishing school. They pick up where the parents leave off (when the young lady leaves home at 18 for 4 years), and adds some polish and refinement to the values, habits and manners the parents have all ready set in place. Agree with her reasoning/methods or not, but the players that have come through the program since 1985 have for the most part have given CD credit for helping them prepare for life outside of and after basketball. They learn and incorporate values and concepts at UConn that they embrace and use in the real world the rest of their lives.
Well, a fair number of UConn greats refer to Geno as a second father and most admit to loving him; then there is the hanging around and showing up thing. And the scientists tell us brains take 'til about 22 YOA to settle in. So I'm going with coaches have a big influence in the young lives of college athletes.
Yep when i WAS 16 my father was the dumbest thing alive--at 22 I was amazed how much he learned in 6 years. ( I think Dr Phil says the brain isn't fully developed until the late 20's others have written that age too)
Is there a resemblance?Inquiring minds want to know! Is Carnac actually morphing into Captain Obvious?
Finishing school for women? Do they also teach them how to make dinner and do laundry too?
My best laugh of the morning. My 3 daughters wrote me off as teenagers, but now I'm the cat's pajamas.
My wife and I were raised in different states but we had the same formative education---and tht shaped our lives. I learned to speak Connecticut Yankee at home . Parents that have the time to spend with their kids (My big bucks daughter does) may form them. But most parents are involved with making a living and surviving to the next day--So I was lucky that my REAL education was in school and I suspect that is true of some of the kids passing thru the Christine Dailey's finishing school. . Adult --there are , at least , 2 definitions ---Legal 18, Actual 29 mentally..I'd like to think parents are responsible for raising their kids. When you're in college, you're an adult. I believe Geno and staff pick kids that have been raised right by their parents and not so much that they are made that way by the coaches.