I would say there are #1 ranked players and then there are iconic players - and Geno has had a very good record with iconic players (and not bad with #1s either.) The distinction I am making is between a player like KML who is very good and Stewart who is 'iconic' - The Uconn list is DT, Maya, Breanna since 2000 - the others Parker, BG, EDD - not sure anyone else would qualify. They are distinctly different from the mere mortal #1s from other years who really are not that different from others at the top of the rankings in their year.
So ... yes I would agree - but it isn't just those players but the way in which they are developed at Uconn that makes the biggest difference and is one reason for the continued success in recruiting the following iconic players. Add in the team building that the coaches achieve in getting the right 'other' players, and the success in developing the 'other' players whether ranked #1 or #40 and you have the formula for success. And then run them hard and never allow them to settle for less than total effort and you have the amazing consistency that is Uconn WCBB.
Perfectly expressed. I can't say with any degree of certainty, but from what I have seen, read and heard of his practices, it's difficult to imagine
any other coach who pushes harder, is so relentlessly demanding and
gets all over his star (iconic) players to the extent Geno does. He motivates and develops greatness
his way (like Frank crooned). There surely were many times I'd bet Stewie, and definitely Diana, must have wanted to stop the yelling and the putdowns and punch coach. But they knew Geno could do for them something no other coach could. When Geno coached his son Michael in AAU, he told how desperately he wanted to succeed just to shut his father up and make him stop. Or as Sue Bird said (paraphrased) about his methods and non-stop pursuit of perfection (on the GA Project): 'Can he be a jerk? Sure! But he always knows what he's doing.' Geno is one helluva rough and tough coach, and when asked how his players managed his hard-edge manner, he dismissively replied that he "doesn't need any 19 year old friends."
Geno screams, criticizes and pushes impossibly hard to make his kids the very best they can be,
even better than
they imagine is possible. Every player. Especially the iconic players. Coach said on one GA Project that he won't allow a kid to go only as far as
she thinks she is able to go, but rather
he will tell her how far she can go, and she'll see how great she can become when she does. Coach loves his players and they know it, otherwise he could never get away with his very difficult style. He recognizes the potential for greatness, and history has shown that he knows better than anybody exactly how to develop it.