I'm not sure that there is a recipe. Geno has for many years invited other coaches into see his practices, and he certainly places a heavy emphasis on performance in practice. If I had to isolate one quality that is an important keystone to his continues success, it is his continuedSo, pretty much, he has just able to recruit better talent? Why do you think that is?
improvement as a coach. Watch the 1995 team, then move through the years and watch the games. The teams just continue to get better.
They execute crisper on offense; they rotate better; the blockouts are better; the passes are more precise. The current players are perhaps more polished when they arrive; that makes their ceilings higher. However, Geno still develops them as individuals and teammates. Somehow throughout all these years; Geno retains his joy and love for the game.
He took limited talented boys into the upper ranks of AAU basketball. He will retire from UConn owning every meaningful record in women's college basketball. He has built overwhelmingly powerful national teams. Geno is a coaching savant, but he has continued to
learn the game, and he has become better at passing on that knowledge. I see no signs that the game has begun to pass him by; still there
will come a day when he retires. I think that his love for the game, his search to better understand it, and finally his need to impart that
knowledge will keep him active and coaching for more than a few years.