JoePgh
Cranky pants and wise acre
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2011
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Here is some non-fake news that you would not have seen unless you were physically at the game. I thought it was very significant.
When Memphis called their regrouping timeout early in the 3rd quarter, after UConn had gone on a run (I think it was 10-2) to start the quarter, Olivia had just scored the last basket by running the full court in transition to take a beautiful pass from someone for a layup. When she came to the bench, Jamelle Eliot gave her a very aggressive shoulder bump, and repeated it two or three times. If she had done that in game action, Jamelle would have been called for a flagrant foul. You could tell that Olivia was not accustomed to this demonstrative expression of support and affirmation -- she seemed almost to duck away from Jamelle's physical compliment to her aggressive play.
Jamelle was famous as a player for her aggressiveness, which allowed her to function effectively and get a lot of rebounds as a 5-10 forward. I remember that when Kelly Schumacher was in her rookie year in Indiana in the WNBA, a reporter asked her a question about what she had taken from her UConn experience, and Kelly devoted her entire response to praise for Jamelle (then a UConn assistant coach) for teaching her the finer points of playing in the paint. (She was deafeningly silent about Geno in that interview, which I thought was also significant.)
I think Jamelle's sudden re-appearance on the coaching staff will be a big boost to Olivia's aggressive instincts (and perhaps this has already happened). This may turn out to be a very timely change in the coaching roster, at least from the perspective of Olivia's development.
When Memphis called their regrouping timeout early in the 3rd quarter, after UConn had gone on a run (I think it was 10-2) to start the quarter, Olivia had just scored the last basket by running the full court in transition to take a beautiful pass from someone for a layup. When she came to the bench, Jamelle Eliot gave her a very aggressive shoulder bump, and repeated it two or three times. If she had done that in game action, Jamelle would have been called for a flagrant foul. You could tell that Olivia was not accustomed to this demonstrative expression of support and affirmation -- she seemed almost to duck away from Jamelle's physical compliment to her aggressive play.
Jamelle was famous as a player for her aggressiveness, which allowed her to function effectively and get a lot of rebounds as a 5-10 forward. I remember that when Kelly Schumacher was in her rookie year in Indiana in the WNBA, a reporter asked her a question about what she had taken from her UConn experience, and Kelly devoted her entire response to praise for Jamelle (then a UConn assistant coach) for teaching her the finer points of playing in the paint. (She was deafeningly silent about Geno in that interview, which I thought was also significant.)
I think Jamelle's sudden re-appearance on the coaching staff will be a big boost to Olivia's aggressive instincts (and perhaps this has already happened). This may turn out to be a very timely change in the coaching roster, at least from the perspective of Olivia's development.