Before we proclaim the Mohegan Sun as the new Jerusalem for the AAC tournament, let me raise a note of dissent. My spouse and I attended all four days of the tournament and, as we drove back to West Hartford on Monday night, decided that we would not again attend a tournament at the Mohegan Sun. Our reasons are as follows: (1) at our ages, 4 two hour road trips (2 of which were in the dead of night on dimly lit highways) in 4 days was simply too much; (2) no matter what Mohegan Sun claims, the purpose of holding the tournament was to encourage Uconn fans to gamble in the casino - all exits from the arena lead to the ubiquitous slot machines. (While we have no objection to those who care to engage in gambling, we resent being importuned to do so.) And the claim that the arena can be accessed without contact with the casino is simply not true - at the Mohegan Sun, all roads lead to games of chance; (3) the acrid smell of smoke as we embarked upon the long journey from garage to arena was offensive; (4) the arena itself is anything but state of the art. The seats are uncomfortable, the stairs to access the upper levels were difficult for this senior citizen to negotiate, and the "scoreboards" were an embarrassment - the players were identified only but number not name, there was no apparent provision for video replay (we had to watch ESPN upon our return home to see a replay of Brianna Stewart's incredible length-of-the-court dash to block a Rutger's players shot), and there was no listing of how many timeouts the teams had left - many high schools have better scoreboards; and (5) the irrationality of the Mohegan Sun's decision to ban nook and kindle book readers (according to a Mohegan Sun supervisor because such readers "looked like tablet computers") and binoculars (presumably because of the threat that the laser light shows that were NOT a part of the tournament would cause some imaginary damage to they eyes of fans, or maybe it was because the Mohegan Sun had the sovereign right to act idiotically). And so, notwithstanding the arena amenities and the varied and excellent casino food choices, we bid a fond farewell to the AAC tournament - if you can call this series of mismatches a "tournament."