If Taurasi wasnt on the team Maria would not have played at the level she did. If Nicole Wolf didnt have her injuries Maria would have never been a starter. Nicole started as a freshman.Maria Conlon.
Maria had 9 assists to 0 turnovers in the 2004 Final Four and forced a key turnover at the end of the championship game. She also nailed a couple key threes in the final against Tennessee which caused a Lady Vol fan to declare he was glad Maria was graduating. Diana had nothing to do with any of that.If Taurasi wasnt on the team Maria would not have played at the level she did. If Nicole Wolf didnt have her injuries Maria would have never been a starter. Nicole started as a freshman.
How soon we all forget. Go back and take a look at Mo Jeff's stats from the 1st 9 games of her freshman year.
If that is what you think than so be it. but with Diana just being on the court with her and being the type of player she is made all her teammates better than they really were. Instead of going by what LVF said ask the players who played with Dee.Maria had 9 assists to 0 turnovers in the 2004 Final Four and forced a key turnover at the end of the championship game. She also nailed a couple key threes in the final against Tennessee which caused a Lady Vol fan to declare he was glad Maria was graduating. Diana had nothing to do with any of that.
Athleticism for sure, but early on during her freshmen year, Mo could be out of control on the court, forcing the play which lead to lots of missed shots and turnovers. Mo had 0 pts in the national semifinal vs ND and 3 pts in the final vs Louisville as a freshman.I have a better idea. Go back and watch Mo Jeff play as a freshman. The talent and athleticism were evident from the first time she stepped on the floor. Apples and oranges.
Sometimes it's not all about the physical ability. In HS all these kids play loose and free because they're confident about how they match up with the opposition. But at a top 25 program there are mental adjustments that have to be made before the kids can play loose and confidentally. Until those adjustments are made to the pace and physicality they will look and feel lost in practice and that is where they have to earn that PT. And when you see them in practice it is very obvious whether they are ready or not.I don't know. I've been looking but have yet to find any of the numerous articles where Geno talks about these two young women. He sure seemed to think that the sky was the limit for them then and hard to imagine that he, and the rest of the coaching staff could have been terribly wrong about them to the point that they'll both have to leave in order to play.
I re-watched the Notre Dame earlier tonight, after two or three passes over the K-State game. It is remarkable to me how many times the pass to Nat seems to be juuusssstt a little bit beyond her grasp, that she is always trying to, or having to try to, catch the ball with her fingertips. Don't know what's going on there (speed of the game, balance residual hesitancy from thumb, etc.), but I'm sure it's frustrating for all concerned.Because of her size, ability to hit the three pointer, and rebounding, UCONN NEEDS Irwin to develop enough to be a factor by March. She could give the front line players needed rest and not hurt team production. The bench should get enough playing time during the conference games. I'm REALLY pulling for Bent, Irwin, and Butler. Speaking of Butler, it does not seem as if her teammates are getting her the ball in a spot close enough to the basketball where it would be easy to score without dribbling. I watch other teams like Utah, that has a very good center no one has heard of (Potter) and K. State who get the ball to their bigs close to the basket. I suppose CD will have Butler playing at a high level before her career is over at UCONN.
I have a slightly different question. Could a few more minutes of rest each game for the starters add up to a better rested team at the end of the year? Yes, I have watched Geno for many years and know this is typically not in the plans but I don't remember such a small team with so few subs that is getting pounded so hard each game.
How soon we all forget. Go back and take a look at Mo Jeff's stats from the 1st 9 games of her freshman year. She played limited minutes, with lots of turnovers and her shooting was abysmal. In a big game vs MD, she played 3 minutes, 0 points, 0 assists, 0 steals, 0 rebounds. At the time, I remember thinking there was no way that she could possibly be the #2 recruit in the country. Thankfully, I was about as wrong about Mo as I could possibly be.
Give Kyla & Molly some time. Geno will play them at the right time, in the right situation, and they will both get better.
Because of her size, ability to hit the three pointer, and rebounding, UCONN NEEDS Irwin to develop enough to be a factor by March. She could give the front line players needed rest and not hurt team production. The bench should get enough playing time during the conference games. I'm REALLY pulling for Bent, Irwin, and Butler. Speaking of Butler, it does not seem as if her teammates are getting her the ball in a spot close enough to the basketball where it would be easy to score without dribbling. I watch other teams like Utah, that has a very good center no one has heard of (Potter) and K. State who get the ball to their bigs close to the basket. I suppose CD will have Butler playing at a high level before her career is over at UCONN.
I have a slightly different question. Could a few more minutes of rest each game for the starters add up to a better rested team at the end of the year? Yes, I have watched Geno for many years and know this is typically not in the plans but I don't remember such a small team with so few subs that is getting pounded so hard each game.
Wow, there is a lot of negative sentiment in this thread about Molly and Kyla which I do not share, and I doubt that Geno does.
First of all, where do we get this idea that he "always" plays only 7 or 8 players? That has been true in the last few years at UConn, but I think that was because there has been a significant drop off in the contribution level of the specific players beyond the top 7 or 8. But in 2000 or 2001, and recently on the Olympic teams, he has been quite willing to spread the minutes when he had many players contributing at an approximately equal level. I think next year will be similar, and you will see a much longer bench.
Also, hasn't anyone noticed that Natalie Butler was outside the regular rotation last year, but is in that rotation this year and doing as well as could be expected? Being outside the top 7 or 8 is not a life sentence. For that matter, Gabby didn't play a ton of minutes in her freshman year (zero in the Stanford loss), and look at her now!
So why haven't Kyla and especially Molly gotten more minutes recently, especially since Geno said in a halftime interview on Sunday that he would prefer to substitute more than he has? I can only speculate, but my speculation is this:
I cautiously expect that Molly will get more minutes as the season continues, and hopefully follow a path similar to Natalie or Gabby.
- Kyla, mainly because she is lacking in foot speed and does not seem to be in top physical condition, looks like a long-term project. I do not foresee her getting significant minutes this year unless injuries or foul trouble make that necessary. She seems to be on course for a Heather Buck kind of career if she stays at UConn.
- Molly seems to me to be an entirely different case. I was frankly quite surprised that Geno did not give her about 10 minutes or so on Sunday with Saniya absent. She is in great shape, works hard, plays tenacious defense, and can hit some jump shots. I'm sure she makes mistakes (maybe more than most freshmen because she is trying so hard), but I doubt that she would have given away a double-digit lead if she had played 10 minutes in the KSU game.
- So I can only speculate that Geno is sending some sort of message to Molly -- maybe about calming down and letting the game come to her, and taking in more of what is going on around her so she doesn't miss opportunities? I really don't know.
Thank goodness Geno is running the team and not Boneyarders. How anyone can pass judgement on a two freshmen's impact this year, much less an entire career, based on a combined 114 minutes of play is just beyond me.
Maybe they won't be stars, maybe they'll "just" be role players. I'd like to remind folks that Carla Berube was a role player, so was Kennitra Johnson, Meg Gardler, Kaili McLaren, Maria Conlon, Kiah Stokes, among others, along with the best role player on any roster anywhere - Kelly Faris. While never stars, these young women all contributed key moments. If that's "all" we're going to get from Kyla and Molly, call me satisfied.

(playing a full conference schedule she actually averaged 8 minutes per game that year, but not in competitive games)Thank goodness Geno is running the team and not Boneyarders. How anyone can pass judgement on a two freshmen's impact this year...combined 114 minutes of play is just beyond me.
UConn has played some really tough non-conference schedules in the past, but this year's schedule is the toughest by far IMO. 12 games in 45 days, 7 ranked teams and not a single cupcake among the 12 (Both Dayton/2015 & Chattanooga/2016 were recent NCAA tourney teams). For icing on the cake, add in SC in February.FYI - 6-9 against Massey's and Sagrin's top 25 and LSU is coming in at #45 in Massey and #51 in Sagarin. Only Dayton (135/97) and Chattanooga 97/93) are outside the top 51 in either rating service. Definitely a decent SOS for Uconn!
Houston (223) at the end of January will be the first game against a team in the bottom half of the D1 field according to Massey. Tulsa (158) on 1/17 the first below 135.