I was curious about the offensive rebounding so decided to check DePaul's stats for the year - they are actually an outstanding offensive rebounding team and truly commit to it sending three or four players, while surprisingly not being too bad on transition defense.
Year to date for a 5-20 (2-12) bad team, they lead their opponents in very few categories in box score: TO - they have commit 407 while forcing 449 basically 1 fewer per game; Steals - they have 235 and have given up 212 again close to a margin of 1 per game; and Offensive Rebounds - 342 vs 264 a margin of over 3 per game.
DePaul for the year gets 33% of the rebounds when they take a shot - impressive for a shorter team with a .200 winning percentage - they get out-rebounded on the year by 4+ per game, and defense rebounds by 7+. And with Uconn playing a trapping defense, when they did not get a TO or Steal, the defense was then scrambling to cover wide open shooters, leading to bad positioning for rebounds - how often did you see a Uconn interior defender running out to contest an open three, leaving the lane open for a DePaul rebounder to cut in. Jana (and others) swatting at rebounds was largely because a DePaul player was in better rebounding position and she was trying not to get called for another over-the-back foul.
A trapping defense is a lot of fun to watch when it results in steals and TOs, it is frustrating when a team escapes the trap and attacks, and really frustrating when they make their open shots, and/or rebound their misses. The trap worked to perfection in Q1, and didn't when DePaul settled down and greatly reduced both TO and Steal numbers.