Earl Kelley was long gone by then. His last season was 85-86. Agree with you 100% on Henefeld’s impact.I was in 4th grade and that season was the first one I really watched. I have scattered memories of the NIT title, Greg Economou, Earl Kelley, and getting throttled by Ewing, but 89-90 was the beginning. Not a bad year to start. My 4th grade teacher had a UConn wall where we cut out articles and she adjusted the curriculum to include it.
Nadav was amazing then. What’s crazy is if you rewatch those games, at least for me with more basketball knowledge now, he was even better. He completely dominated and at times without scoring a point. Playing the passing lanes, the cross court pass to set up an easy look, tipping rebounds to players, etc. His emergence, and the attention he brought, put us on the map. He’s in the conversation for the most important player we’ve ever had. And just like that he was gone.
Earl Kelley was long gone by then. His last season was 85-86. Agree with you 100% on Henefeld’s impact.
haven’t heard anything about him in forever!
I was fortunate to be a senior in 1990. I got to see the rise of the program. I watched Gampel being built in the summers I spent on campus. I was at the first game at Gample. And I was in the front row of the student section at MSG for the first Big East championship. The atmosphere on campus and how much it changed is difficult to describe to anyone that wasn't there.
I didn't think you were that old. I know you are one of the originals but I always thought you were the same age as me or younger.Thanks for sharing. As a season ticket holder at that time Hartford CC changed dramatically as well, it was a special time for sure. It slowly began with the NIT that Cliff and Phil Gamble brought us but it was full blown Huskymania when Smitty/Nadav/Scotty arrived. Great memories and some of the most raucous crowds in history of the program.
I was in 4th grade and that season was the first one I really watched. I have scattered memories of the NIT title, Greg Economou, Earl Kelley, and getting throttled by Ewing, but 89-90 was the beginning. Not a bad year to start. My 4th grade teacher had a UConn wall where we cut out articles and she adjusted the curriculum to include it.
Nadav was amazing then. What’s crazy is if you rewatch those games, at least for me with more basketball knowledge now, he was even better. He completely dominated and at times without scoring a point. Playing the passing lanes, the cross court pass to set up an easy look, tipping rebounds to players, etc. His emergence, and the attention he brought, put us on the map. He’s in the conversation for the most important player we’ve ever had. And just like that he was gone.
You will not find a tougher player both physically and mentally than the Dove. I suspect training in the Israeli military had something to do with that. Absolutely loved his game.
I was there too. Hard to describe the level of excitement.I was fortunate to be a senior in 1990. I got to see the rise of the program. I watched Gampel being built in the summers I spent on campus. I was at the first game at Gample. And I was in the front row of the student section at MSG for the first Big East championship. The atmosphere on campus and how much it changed is difficult to describe to anyone that wasn't there.
Remember Mourning trying to intimidate him while lining up for FTs little did he know he was just throwing lighter fluid on a fire that already existed.
In '89-'90? Did you have a subscription to Compuserve?Another thing a lot of people don't know about were the wars we had online with umass fans. They still hate us.
That incident went beyond intimidation. Nadav took the high road and never really talked about it. But people knew. Any respect I had for Mourning was gone after that game.Remember Mourning trying to intimidate him while lining up for FTs little did he know he was just throwing lighter fluid on a fire that already existed.
I was a season ticket holder as well. The Civic Center was nuts. I miss the Husky mascot diving on the floor to drive the fans even crazier.Thanks for sharing. As a season ticket holder at that time Hartford CC changed dramatically as well, it was a special time for sure. It slowly began with the NIT that Cliff and Phil Gamble brought us but it was full blown Huskymania when Smitty/Nadav/Scotty arrived. Great memories and some of the most raucous crowds in history of the program.
You'd have to be at least 6-7 years old to even have memories of the Dream Season.
So basically anyone born after 83-84 has no real time memories of that season.
To them it's history just like peach baskets on barn doors.
I’ve been thinking about the most painful loss ever. The Duke loss was brutal, but that was the Dream Season for a reason. It truly was a dream for our fans. The most painful for me was the 1994 loss to Florida. The missed FTs by Donyell in a year we could have done some serious damage. The 1996 loss to Mississippi State was also a tough one to stomach. Anything after 1999 is caveated by the fact that we’ve won 6 championships since then. Talk about a dream. Wow.That 1990 E8 loss to you know who and the shot by you know who is still the lowest I've ever been after a UConn loss. That magical season just seems like it wouldn't end until we had won it all. It all seemed so predestined, especially after the Clemson win. It was all so new and it hurt so much. Like that first girlfriend break up. It was the end the world.
Then came the local news report that summer that Nadav wouldn't be coming back to Storrs.
I looked at ‘96 as the toughest loss because it was the third consecutive year of frustration and the team was 32-2(!!!) going into that game. The Donyell missed FTs felt like a tragedy because fans felt we should have won that game. ‘95 vs UCLA we were on fire offensively… but UCLA was even more on fire scoring the ball. We didn’t actually play poorly in that game and we knew UConn was facing a juggernaut. Then ‘96, Ray and Sheffer were ice cold and it wasn’t even Dampier or Dontae Jones who crushed our dreams. Some guy named Darryl Wilson went berserk from 3. And our bench of freshman Rash, Hayward and Dion Carson contributed 3 points. A crazy-talented, but not deep team, crapped the bed that day and the fan base felt like we were never getting over the hump. But we did. We really did.I’ve been thinking about the most painful loss ever. The Duke loss was brutal, but that was the Dream Season for a reason. It truly was a dream for our fans. The most painful for me was the 1994 loss to Florida. The missed FTs by Donyell in a year we could have done some serious damage. The 1996 loss to Mississippi State was also a tough one to stomach. Anything after 1999 is caveated by the fact that we’ve won 6 championships since then. Talk about a dream. Wow.
I thought loss to George Mason was worse than loss to Florida in 1994 and I was there in Miami in 1994. I didn’t think UConn had much of a chance against Mississippi State due to their size.I’ve been thinking about the most painful loss ever. The Duke loss was brutal, but that was the Dream Season for a reason. It truly was a dream for our fans. The most painful for me was the 1994 loss to Florida. The missed FTs by Donyell in a year we could have done some serious damage. The 1996 loss to Mississippi State was also a tough one to stomach. Anything after 1999 is caveated by the fact that we’ve won 6 championships since then. Talk about a dream. Wow.
Providence fans yelled some stuff towards him also, but a player doing it is crazy. Mourning would probably say it was to get in his head, and that's just what guys do. But there are lines.That incident went beyond intimidation. Nadav took the high road and never really talked about it. But people knew. Any respect I had for Mourning was gone after that game.
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