totally agree.....UCONN team has had consistently a higher talent pool than the other teams though it has not won every championship....It is easier to coach a bunch of talented players. That is why this year, I rather respect OSU, Texas and Washington.....I'm not sure you need to drag Stanford into it. None of these schools have quite the talent level of UConn - whether in depth or individually (i.e. national players of the year) - so when you combine superior coaching with better talent, you get what you get. Although they have stumbled this year, Stanford has had consistent post-season success; Duke not so much.
Duke's overblown academic reputation and self-involved sense of superiority
Nothing. It's a top 10 school. Anyone who says otherwise doesn't know what the hell they are talking about.What is overblown about the academic reputation of Duke?
At least McCallie has the stones to schedule UConn - something missing in a lot of other top coaches.
Has Auriemma ever "thrown his player(s) under the bus" in a post game press conference?
There's not reason for us to play them twice (except for conference obligations) but for them playing us twice is invaluable. They get to see what an elite program is like, in terms of intensity and focus, and see the rewards that investment brings in terms of fan and media support. It is huge for them. Those of us who are old enough remember that the Big East was hot mess as well back in the day, but constant exposure to an elite team allowed programs to recurit better, hire better and develop. The same will happen in AAU, if we are stuck here. SMU may be one of those programs that grow into being a power, just a Rutgers and ND did in the Big East.
McCallie talked about rotating and over-rotating. The truth is she has grown weary of her team looking ordinary against UConn year after year. I also think she doesn't want to help UConn beef up its schedule so she can use the weak conference against UConn in recruiting.
Asked if she would resume the series at some point, McCallie said: "I think so. We were with Stanford for a while and rotated out of that series. We were with Tennessee for a while and rotated out of that series. Since I've been here, Connecticut has been our longest series by far. So without question we would.
"We're still trying to figure out who we're going to rotate in. I think we over-rotated this year. Our schedule is too hard. This team has not responded in a way I would have liked them too. So probably we won't be doing this again, the December thing."

Now she has cancelled future games with UConn, and I don't blame her a bit. Duke's overblown academic reputation and self-involved sense of superiority have attracted one outstanding class of recruits after another,
they start the year highly ranked, they typically win a lot...and then they meet UConn and are eviscerated year after year.
I think it may be as simple as the games being lopsided enough that she doesn't feel like her kids get much out of them, plus the annual butt kicking may not enhance her her overall employability, leaving her as 'also ran' rather than elite coach. Also her current schedule might be leaving too little a margin for the tourney, notwithstanding the RPI boost.Agreed- There are just SO many top HS prospects in Texas, it's ridiculous. For those who want to "stay home" and for whatever reasons may not want to play at Baylor, Texas or A&M (too much competition for spots, playing time, don't like the coaches, whatever), the options of Houston or SMU may be tempting, with UConn's presence on the schedule an added plus. Could make the AAC strong- though years will be required. For UConn, I don't like at all the vast geographical spread of the member schools and all the travel that entails (for players and fans). It's got to be exhausting. Though I'd like to see UConn in a major conference (regularly beating the crap out of the "bigs"), I think as long as we have a very strong OOC schedule our kids may actually benefit from NOT having to play a killer game almost every time out, with enough challenging games to keep the kids sharp and healthy. I thought, in a paranoid moment perhaps, that there was something other than the fear factor motivating McCallie to drop UConn- Duke thinking that perhaps if other top OOC opponents also drop UConn, they could hurt us- in ways they have been unable to do competitively on the basketball court.
Duke showed it's colors when how many- 100-200 professors signed statements/petitions against their own lacrosse team before anyone had any facts or proof. They hung the entire team and program out to dry with zero evidence. Institution of higher learning- unfortunately, most of the "esteemed" universities would have done the same thing. I heard the rugby coach was coach "K's" best friend. I wonder if he even tried to slow down the lynch mob against those young athletes, that never got their chance to play for a National Championship?Pray tell what facts you have to support the statement that Duke's academic reputation is "overblown"? No academic colleague of mine, present or retired, would agree with that assessment. It just sounds like something to say after an athletic contest to prove loyalty to one's home team. It is, IMO, an ill advised comment more suitable for a Giants or Jets Blog. The fact is that Duke's academic reputation is well deserved, just as UConn is becoming more and more reputable as well. What that has to do with who won last night escapes me.
Duke showed it's colors when how many- 100-200 professors signed statements/petitions against their own lacrosse team before anyone had any facts or proof. They hung the entire team and program out to dry with zero evidence. Institution of higher learning- unfortunately, most of the "esteemed" universities would have done the same thing. I heard the rugby coach was coach "K's" best friend. I wonder if he even tried to slow down the lynch mob against those young athletes, that never got their chance to play for a National Championship?
DR- why shouldn't we bring this up. This was also injustice? What those student athletes did was no different than what most or many many kids, and fraternities do every weekend at most every university. Those kids were guilty & criminals once the accusations started. I hope everyone of those kids gets a boat load of money from Duke- they deserve it. That was a travesty of justice- like every other rush to judgement is. Almost every professor I believe was on board with the blacklisting of these students. Most universities are very liberal in nature. But it's interesting whose first amendment rights are important, and what groups don't deserve those same rights. This will end my Duke commentary- before I end up in the dreaded sesspool- again!!!!Probably best not to keep bringing up the Duke lacrosse case, which I'm sure the school would rather it be left to the continuing courtroom actions to sort out. However, you slice it, an event where a team had an alcohol blast with hired strippers is not something that the Duke academia was understandably too thrilled about, and I know if my college coach had heard that his athletes were involved with something like that, we would have been kicked off the team immediately.
No, the criminal proceedings were a nightmarish mess driven by lies and it should have handled by college disciplinary proceedings once the questionable nature of the accuser was ascertained, but the athletes were certainly involved in something that Duke is not proud of.
