- Joined
- Dec 20, 2021
- Messages
- 447
- Reaction Score
- 4,526
The saddest thing over the last few years was watching Azzi (and many others) on the bench. Full of talent, potential and promise but meddled by nagging injuries. You could see her in eyes on the bench a glossiness of trying to get through rehab and a hunger for the sport.
Fast forward to now and she is the top superstar in women's basketball from multiple fronts. Fresh from the National Championship game and being named Most Outstanding Player, she's having a career season in points, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks. Averaging 50/53/100 shooting and has transformed herself into a defensive stopper. She is having a NPOY year and if not for Sarah Strong, it would be undisputed.
Off the court: She has a thriving podcast "Fudd Around and Find Out," she leads the national in NIL across the NCAA, she's signing autographs after games, she goes to WNBA games and has a line waiting on her, she's covering magazines left and right and while the WNBA figures out the CBA, her decision to stay at UConn will make her the immediate beneficiary of whichever deal is decided.
Azzi has had her high and lows, mostly lows during her college career, but she's reached the pinnacle of the sport and is heading into 2026 as one of the top players on the top team at the top of the sport. If you don't believe me or the data, ask Sue Bird's niece, Rebecca Lobo, or Geno himself. This is well deserved after a rough few years and super happy for this young lady.
Fast forward to now and she is the top superstar in women's basketball from multiple fronts. Fresh from the National Championship game and being named Most Outstanding Player, she's having a career season in points, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks. Averaging 50/53/100 shooting and has transformed herself into a defensive stopper. She is having a NPOY year and if not for Sarah Strong, it would be undisputed.
Off the court: She has a thriving podcast "Fudd Around and Find Out," she leads the national in NIL across the NCAA, she's signing autographs after games, she goes to WNBA games and has a line waiting on her, she's covering magazines left and right and while the WNBA figures out the CBA, her decision to stay at UConn will make her the immediate beneficiary of whichever deal is decided.
Azzi has had her high and lows, mostly lows during her college career, but she's reached the pinnacle of the sport and is heading into 2026 as one of the top players on the top team at the top of the sport. If you don't believe me or the data, ask Sue Bird's niece, Rebecca Lobo, or Geno himself. This is well deserved after a rough few years and super happy for this young lady.