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I agree with you on the bolded areas. The four problem areas I keep repeating are 1) UConn is unable to handle or respond to constant physicality without fouling. 2) When the opponent plays a Belichick defensive scheme and takes away their biggest offensive threat, Bueckers, UConn goes into scramble mode and has nobody to take control. 3) When the opponent gets up in their face and doesn't back off on defense, UConn struggles to look through the defense and run their sets and their timing is gone. 4) UConn's interior players have little understanding of post positioning and box out fundamentals. And if they do they don't use them against strong competition. Right now they're the same team that got beat by Arizona.Eric, there is a lot of truth in your take. I've been thinking a lot about UConn this past weekend. Lots of thought ran through my mind. Here are a few:
About 5-6 years ago, Kara Lawson was doing color for a UConn women's TV broadcast. One thing I remember her saying was: "There's UConn, a BIG gap, then there's everyone else." At THAT time, she was correct. UConn WBB had no peers. We were far and away THE BEST team in WCBB. WE were the elephant in the room. Those days are over, and the gap has completely closed. Whether we want to admit it or not, UConn has fallen back with the other top ranked teams in the country. Teams no longer fear UConn. How can you fear a team that was held to 3 points in a quarter? This summer, we were all excited about the potential fortunes of this team, given the new players coming in. We reveled in the amount of "depth" we now had and would be able to use and enjoy all year.
Then the season started, and surprisingly we saw for ourselves that the things we expected to happen didn't. Very quickly the team proved not to be as deep as we thought. Players we thought were going to perform at a high level CONSISTENTLY didn't. Admittedly I didn't read most of the post game comments after the SC game. I didn't need to. I already knew the tenor and direction most of them took. I also noticed how many other top 10 teams lost last week. Most of those teams lost to teams ranked below them, or not ranked at all. As bad as I hate to admit it, THIS UConn team may not be as good as we hoped it would. I'm NOT throwing in the towel here. It's much too early for that. I'm just going by what I see. Talk is cheap. Games are not won on paper.
I'm concerned about the team, not so much the individual players. We could have and should have won the SC game. We took a 3 point lead in at half time, then completely got out played in the 2nd half. Why, what happened? SC didn't stop playing, why did we? If we were good enough to win the first half, we were good enough to win the second half. Being held to 3 points in the 4th quarter is of grave concern to me. How can the number 2 ranked team in the country be held to 3 points in 10 minutes of play?
THAT is a question Geno, his staff and the players MUST find the answer to BEFORE they take the floor again this Friday at Seton Hall. After the SC game, we were all mad, disillusioned and a little embarrassed. Three points in the 4th quarter. How do you hold one of the most offensively potent teams in the country to 3 points? Of the 6 other games SC has played this season, only Clemson was also held to 3 points in the 2nd quarter of their game. Clemson is unranked and does not have the talent or expectations UConn has.
If UConn has aspirations of winning the national championship this year, they are going to have to be able to defeat the likes of South Carolina and others of their ilk. The only road to the national championship this year goes directly through Columbia South Carolina. There will be no detours. Unless and until we prove we can defeat them, I can't realistically engage in talk (or hope) of winning the national championship. It's similar to the other schools in the BIG East Conference wanting and expecting to win the conference championship this year without having beating UConn. We have to be ready willing and ABLE to do our own dirty work. We can't expect another program to do it for us (knock off SC).
What we do against the Big East Conference mid-majors and lower ranked teams that we'll probably not see in the tournament is of no consequence. UConn could beat Seton Hall by 40 points Friday, it wouldn't mean anything. Seton Hall (3-2) is not ranked, nor are they a true barometer for where UConn is right now. How will we perform against the top 5-6 teams in the county? THEY will provide the final hurdles to the national championship.
Right now, I think (the way we are playing as a team) there may be some other teams we wouldn't fair too well against. I think today there are some top 15 teams UConn would have a tough time beating. I want to see how we perform against Notre Dame, UCLA, Oregon, Louisville and Tennessee. Those games (win or lose) will tell me EXACTLY where we stand. Our next test is against Notre Dame at home in 6 days. Let's see how we do against them and go from there.
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