alexrgct
RIP, Alex
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
- 10,091
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I just want to relive this with all of you in honor of Senior Day tomorrow.
Tuesday, November 16 2010 is a big day for UConn basketball. It's the program's national debut, this season against Baylor. There's no Tina Charles around to school Brittney Griner anymore. Nope, it's a night to expose how green Stef Dolson is and to see if anyone other than Maya Moore (brilliant as always tonight) can make a play when needed.
Bria Hartley has played like a freshman on this night, but also like a young player with promise- if anything, every bit like the New York-area kid she is. However, as nice to see as that is, UConn has a game to win and a 79-game streak on the line in Hartford.
After UConn went on a run to go up 15 points, Baylor mounted a furious comeback and even took the lead. That's when something magical happens.
With 3:56 remaining, Bria nails a three-pointer to tie the game at 58. Griner scores two more, and then Bria gets a layup with 2:46 left. Now it's 60-60. And then, with 2:09 left, Bria launches- and nails- one more three-pointer to go up 63-60. Uconn would eventually win 65-64.
I remember Bria hitting that last three-pointer. It was a moment, a point in time when a freshman with the potential freshmen are supposed to have at UConn blossom and take a step forward. Sometimes, it's magic, like when Kaleena opened up against Stanford a year later. This Bria moment was magic, too. Sue Bird, who's in the stands, emphatically points out to Swin Cash (also in the stands, seated next to Sue) how crystal clear a moment this is for Bria.
This was about Bria becoming Bria, becoming a UConn girl, extending that winning streak, and so clearly actualizing that even Sue Bird could recognize what this meant in the continuum of UConn.
This was Bria Hartley. This was UConn basketball.
Tuesday, November 16 2010 is a big day for UConn basketball. It's the program's national debut, this season against Baylor. There's no Tina Charles around to school Brittney Griner anymore. Nope, it's a night to expose how green Stef Dolson is and to see if anyone other than Maya Moore (brilliant as always tonight) can make a play when needed.
Bria Hartley has played like a freshman on this night, but also like a young player with promise- if anything, every bit like the New York-area kid she is. However, as nice to see as that is, UConn has a game to win and a 79-game streak on the line in Hartford.
After UConn went on a run to go up 15 points, Baylor mounted a furious comeback and even took the lead. That's when something magical happens.
With 3:56 remaining, Bria nails a three-pointer to tie the game at 58. Griner scores two more, and then Bria gets a layup with 2:46 left. Now it's 60-60. And then, with 2:09 left, Bria launches- and nails- one more three-pointer to go up 63-60. Uconn would eventually win 65-64.
I remember Bria hitting that last three-pointer. It was a moment, a point in time when a freshman with the potential freshmen are supposed to have at UConn blossom and take a step forward. Sometimes, it's magic, like when Kaleena opened up against Stanford a year later. This Bria moment was magic, too. Sue Bird, who's in the stands, emphatically points out to Swin Cash (also in the stands, seated next to Sue) how crystal clear a moment this is for Bria.
This was about Bria becoming Bria, becoming a UConn girl, extending that winning streak, and so clearly actualizing that even Sue Bird could recognize what this meant in the continuum of UConn.
This was Bria Hartley. This was UConn basketball.
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