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I imagine that is why they are 4 of the five starters and the Sixth player of the year in the BE...Except Paige, Sarah, Ash, and Kaitlyn.
Go Huskies!!!
I imagine that is why they are 4 of the five starters and the Sixth player of the year in the BE...Except Paige, Sarah, Ash, and Kaitlyn.
In the good old days we use to have several quirks here that some of us felt enriched the Yard. One of them is what I call thread drift. Indeed some of us called out drift in a celebratory way. Now if drift takes hold more often than not Nan will lock the thread. She does not appreciate thread evolution apparently.How did this thread which is supposed to be about Serah Williams now turn into things that Allie Ziebell need to work in on the offseason?
Serah Williams, is by far more a post player than anyone on our roster to offer both scoring prowess (Jana is a work in progress, Ayanna in her freshman year 2 years ago was void of any offense) and defensive ability. Yes, Sarah S did rebound and defend well against the smaller teams but look at SoCal game and if she has to defend the true bigs of UCLA and Texas. Aneesah Morrow was/is an awesome rebounder but defending against the taller teams in the SEC caused her to struggle. Ayanna has not played in 2 years and at 6'2" is not a "post" player. Her freshman year also saw her foul at an unfathomable rate (49 fouls in 301 min or .162 fouls per min) Morgan Cheli by contrast, 41 fouls in 318 min or .128 which was still a high percent and has many of us concerned. None of what you stated about Ayanna is supported in actual facts based on her past play, it based on your wishful thinking, similar to your past statements that Jana reminded you of Stewie (she doesn't).This is sort of true and sort of false. Sarah is a post player in much the same way Paige is a PG. She rebounds and blocks shots like a demon and is a brilliant scorer on the low post and is especially good at receiving passes into the post. But she doesn’t look like a post player because she’s not 6’5”. More importantly, she does so much else a post player doesn’t typically do.
As for Ayanna, she looks very much like a typical post player to me. She rebounds and defends well and knows how to muscle taller players off the block. She may not be the scoring talent Sarah is and doesn’t have a midrange or perimeter shot like Sarah. Also, she’s not 6’5”. But that’s not really necessary. She plays big. If we can get that Ayanna back, the one who is strong and quick in the low post, she’d be a real asset.
Consider our main rival, SC. They don’t start a post player larger than 6’3”. And yet no one thinks they don’t have a post presence.
I know!!!!!!!!In the good old days we use to have several quirks here that some of us felt enriched the Yard. One of them is what I call thread drift. Indeed some of us called out drift in a celebratory way. Now if drift takes hold more often than not Nan will lock the thread. She does not appreciate thread evolution apparently.![]()
Oh, yay, another attempted refutation on a fan forum. How interesting.Serah Williams, is by far more a post player than anyone on our roster to offer both scoring prowess (Jana is a work in progress, Ayanna in her freshman year 2 years ago was void of any offense) and defensive ability. Yes, Sarah S did rebound and defend well against the smaller teams but look at SoCal game and if she has to defend the true bigs of UCLA and Texas. Aneesah Morrow was/is an awesome rebounder but defending against the taller teams in the SEC caused her to struggle. Ayanna has not played in 2 years and at 6'2" is not a "post" player. Her freshman year also saw her foul at an unfathomable rate (49 fouls in 301 min or .162 fouls per min) Morgan Cheli by contrast, 41 fouls in 318 min or .128 which was still a high percent and has many of us concerned. None of what you stated about Ayanna is supported in actual facts based on her past play, it based on your wishful thinking, similar to your past statements that Jana reminded you of Stewie (she doesn't).
Qualifying "start" for opponents is completely disingenuous to state (Ayanna is not a starter) and why do we have to have a small lineup when we could have a bigger, more skilled lineup?
My recap is: I like the optimism from BY posters but please have some actual facts and precedent to base this. Serah is one of the few quality bigs in all of D1, not just in the portal. Getting her helps this team immensely. Not getting her won't cripple us but leaves us less room for injury or lack of development.
Doesn't UConn have a quality nursing program?
Needs more defensive capabilitiesThe next great shooter at UConn is already on campus and she will show everyone next season just how good she really is! I give you….Allie Ziebell!
Her family moved to Canada from Brooklyn when Serah was 14. She played HS basketball at Niagara Prep in Niagara Falls, Canada.Question. Since she is from NYC, what was her high school recruiting like? Was she ranked? Did she fly under the radar and Marisa found a diamond in the rough? I don't really remember her being talked about.
And some of us did NOT feel that thread drift "enriched the Yard". If one follows a thread from the beginning, and surfs every twist and turn, thread drift may be charming. However, if one clicks onto a thread after it has been running for a while, and does so because of interest in the subject framed by the OP, thread drift is teeth grinding at best.In the good old days we use to have several quirks here that some of us felt enriched the Yard. One of them is what I call thread drift. Indeed some of us called out drift in a celebratory way. Now if drift takes hold more often than not Nan will lock the thread. She does not appreciate thread evolution apparently.![]()
I know and at times I would grind my teeth too, but on balance I think it enriched our discourse more than it flustered it.And some of us did NOT feel that thread drift "enriched the Yard". If one follows a thread from the beginning, and surfs every twist and turn, thread drift may be charming. However, if one clicks onto a thread after it has been running for a while, and does so because of interest in the subject framed by the OP, thread drift is teeth grinding at best.
Thanks. Going to high school in Canada would limit her getting seen by the ranking sites.Her family moved to Canada from Brooklyn when Serah was 14. She played HS basketball at Niagara Prep in Niagara Falls, Canada.
Go ahead and watch the Williams videos that have been posted. They should help alleviate any doubts about her abilities that you may have. If she chooses UConn, her skills, discipline, and yes height will qualify her as the best and most experienced big on the roster IMO.From what I have heard (without watching any videos), I think Serah would be a good addition to the UConn roster, and Geno is right to pursue her.
But in several of the comments in this thread (as in many others), I detect an altogether disproportionate emphasis on height. All else equal, more inches of height in the post is helpful, but all else is never equal. A highly skilled and disciplined 6-2 forward (even a center) is to be preferred over a 6-4 or 6-5 player who is "pretty good". Sarah Strong is sufficient evidence of that. If Serah comes to UConn, she will ultimately succeed or fail based on her skills and discipline. Her 6-4 height doesn't guarantee anything, or even make her success probable.
Her family moved to Canada from Brooklyn when Serah was 14. She played HS basketball at Niagara Prep in Niagara Falls, Canada.
Imagine if she went back to Canada (was snagged by Syracuse).Her family moved to Canada from Brooklyn when Serah was 14. She played HS basketball at Niagara Prep in Niagara Falls, Canada.
On the minutes, if she was the clear second best big and started with Sarah, it is interesting to see that she is capable of heavy minutes since she played 32/game last year. Some bigs that are very good can't be effective in that many minutes and/or have their minutes reduced from foul trouble.I wonder how potential transfers view UConn. Is it more demanding than other schools? Beers chose OU over UConn, and the fact that they’d run the offense through her might have had an impact, aside from other more personal considerations. We’ve been speculating about personal considerations (location, connection to her coach, desire to boost her draft stock) but she may also be thinking that Geno may not guarantee her minutes or require her to learn more skills to fit into his style of play. The defense is more regimented, requires precise switches, and the offense requires rigorous screening, positioning and passing, and the conditioning required may be greater. This could be attractive to her, or a deterrent.
My guess is she’ll end up playing 20-25 mins. But there’s no guarantee of that, from her perspective. And there’s pressure to produce that may seem daunting viewed from outside.
1st bolded: None of this would be a problem. Williams has all the skills, athleticism, and experience to handle all of these. She would know it and just as importantly, Auriemma does also. That's why he's recruiting her, her value is pretty obvious. Not to mention what Moseley has told him.I wonder how potential transfers view UConn. Is it more demanding than other schools? Beers chose OU over UConn, and the fact that they’d run the offense through her might have had an impact, aside from other more personal considerations. We’ve been speculating about personal considerations (location, connection to her coach, desire to boost her draft stock) but she may also be thinking that Geno may not guarantee her minutes or require her to learn more skills to fit into his style of play. The defense is more regimented, requires precise switches, and the offense requires rigorous screening, positioning and passing, and the conditioning required may be greater. This could be attractive to her, or a deterrent.
My guess is she’ll end up playing 20-25 mins. But there’s no guarantee of that, from her perspective. And there’s pressure to produce that may seem daunting viewed from outside.
If she intends to play professional ball, there is no better place to prepare for the next level than UConn.........I wonder how potential transfers view UConn. Is it more demanding than other schools? Beers chose OU over UConn, and the fact that they’d run the offense through her might have had an impact, aside from other more personal considerations. We’ve been speculating about personal considerations (location, connection to her coach, desire to boost her draft stock) but she may also be thinking that Geno may not guarantee her minutes or require her to learn more skills to fit into his style of play. The defense is more regimented, requires precise switches, and the offense requires rigorous screening, positioning and passing, and the conditioning required may be greater. This could be attractive to her, or a deterrent.
My guess is she’ll end up playing 20-25 mins. But there’s no guarantee of that, from her perspective. And there’s pressure to produce that may seem daunting viewed from outside.