The 1999 final against Duke will always be my favorite game ever, but to show where everything started, I'll mention a game I've mentioned here before.
My senior year, 1986-87, was Jim Calhoun's first. Cliff Robinson and Phil Gamble were lost to academics at the start of the second semester, leaving the team extremely thin. The last game of the regular season was at the Civic Center against a Seton Hall team featuring many of the players who went to the NCAA final two years later.
After Greg Economou and Steve Pikiell cracked heads, they both had to leave, leaving the Huskies with a lineup of Gerry Besselink, Jeff King, Tate George, Spider Ursery and James Spradling. At one point, Spradling had to go to the bench to have a cut bandaged, and Brian Hall, the soccer goalie, had to come in until Spradling could re-enter.
And despite all that, with Calhoun working the team and the rerfs, the team fought and clawed and pulled out a 60-58 win. I don't know how many of us were at the Civic Center that day, maybe 9,000, but I left that game knowing that good things were going to happen under Jim Calhoun. To me, THAT'S when UConn basketball was born.