I'm still irked by Reed's too small gesture at the beginning of a game.
Last night’s game against St. John’s was frustrating, no doubt—but it might end up being one of those losses that helps more than it hurts.
Reed is obviously a huge part of what makes this team dangerous. His energy, confidence, and swagger can spark runs and lift the whole group. That said, the early-game gestures and demeanor stood out in the wrong way. Instead of rattling St. John’s, it felt like it poured gasoline on the fire. Pitino-coached teams thrive on that kind of emotion—they feed off it.
There was even a moment when AK seemed to be in Reed’s ear trying to calm things down, and it didn’t quite land. Reed can be a handful for opponents, but on nights like this he can also become a liability if the edge turns into a distraction. That balance matters, especially in March.
And honestly—were we expecting anything different from a Rick Pitino team? Relentless pressure, attacking the rim, forcing mistakes. Those are areas that have bothered UConn before, and Hurley will absolutely zero in on that film. Reed’s on-court demeanor is something that can be coached, and handling pressure defense has to become second nature by tournament time.
The encouraging part? These are fixable things. Better composure, sharper responses to pressure, and turning frustration into focus—that’s what championship teams do after a tough loss. If UConn uses this as fuel instead of letting it linger, it could be exactly the kind of wake-up call that makes them sharper, tougher, and more dangerous when the games really matter in March.