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Queen of Queens
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So, looking back across the years, which recruit grew into a better player than you expected?
I wonder who Geno or CD would consider to be their biggest positive surprise.
Here is the ESPN 2014 class ranking:Maria Conlon. Tough, unflappable and rising to every challenge - true she had a great running mate, but Maria carried her own water. 2d place Ms. Purple Hair. Kaizen it is nice to meet a Boneyarder who does not now claim he/she knew from the jump that Kia was a star in the waiting/making!
I can't believe that anyone would think of someone other than Dolson. A big girl not highly recruited. A bit over weight and out of (Uconn) shape. Early in her Freshman year she is thrown against a highly mobile 6 fto8 in Center --baptism by the fires of hell.So, looking back across the years, which recruit grew into a better player than you expected?
\Geno would pick CD. CD would select Geno.
No way did either of them expect to be on the same coaching bench when they signed on together 900+ victories and 10 NC's ago.
the Jen Rizzotti-Kara Wolters duo from 1992 and 1993, plus Jamelle- I mean, what a trio! Rebecca was a coveted recruit, and Geno was fortunate that the #1 a high school recruit of 1994 just happened to hail from Bloomfield, CT, but in between the 1991 and 1994 recruiting years, he built his team up into a formidable one. Throw in Pam Webber and Carla Berube, and it's not hard to tell how perfectly Geno evaluated and coached a national championship team. Things would only move on up from there.lanieer said:I'm have to go with Kara Wolters POY. The recruits we get now are mostly elite players and don't surprise me when their names appear on the Huskies of Honor.
I think some players are six-star, program changing recruits, and Maya was perceived as one of them.MilfordHusky said:Just to be different: Maya Moore. Everyone knew she was good, but few knew she was THAT good. 3,036 points good. 90-0 good. 150-4 good. Consensus 4-time All-American good. 3 Wade trophies good. Though Candace Parker and Courtney Paris were already established, Maya Moore was as good as anyone from the first time she hit the floor for UConn. The steal against DePaul. The long-distance barrage against Syracuse. Taking over the national championship game against an excellent Stanford squad. The bar was set very high for Maya, and she soared over it with room to spare.