DC - I think that misses the nature of most teams and the sanctity of their locker room when the door is closed. Most coaches have meetings on the court in a circle and have their little speech about the circle, and everything inside the circle matters and everything outside that circle is extraneous and of no importance. That gets extended to the 'court' and what happens between the lines vs. what happens outside the lines. And the locker room is the home of that circle. So granting admission to that place for media is a necessary evil and part of the rules - but when the door is not open, only insiders are allowed. Pat's request is not without precedence, but it is very unusual and has never been an easy thing for any coach to grant to an opponent, even after a win. Its like inviting a business rival to family dinner.
On Saint Pat vs, Evil Geno - Pat is gone from the game, and lost to a terrible disease. You not get honest reflection on the failings of the recently departed at funerals nor honest assessments of important people immediately after they leave the stage - it takes time and distance to get to that place. And you never get sainthood while you are alive and working at your craft in a competitive field. At the moment, people are in mourning for a still living but diseased Pat and in general no one wants to examine her warts. And Geno is very much at the top of his game and creating conflict and jealousy and whatever else. In twenty years you will get more perspective on both coaches, and in fifty years you will probably get a pretty honest picture of both and their place in basketball, their strengths and weaknesses. Expecting that now is foolish.
All that said, the author seems to be a poisonous person - and I agree, while Uconn and Geno are enemy number one on the checkerboard, that board is just as spiteful and nasty and ugly about any coaches, players, and teams that dare to compete in TN's personal arena of WCBB. And sometimes just as nasty and ugly about their own players that disappoint! Rumor and inuendo are stock in trade. This column is really dreadful and a waste of the bits required to create it, and display it on a computer.
Indeed, going into the opponent's locker room even with some kind of permission from assistant coaches is not usual, something that has never had a ghost of a tradition for many obvious reasons. If you want to congratulate the other team, do it on the court where the battle took place. Ask the opposing coach if after the handshake line that you can have another little gathering on the spot to give your kudos to the players in front of their coach in public where everything can be heard. You supposedly have nothing to hide about what you are saying, so why not say it right there, or say it at the press conference? There is no reason to make up your own little event and get more attention for yourself.
As to what being suspicious of this extra spotlighting says about Geno, to me it is the normal reaction, and the abnormal reaction is to claim that he is maybe being paranoid and ungracious that Pat walked into his locker room while he was gone. Beyond the obvious situation that the Huskies may have some information marked up on the board that Pat really shouldn't be seeing, there are all the other questions that could be asked in light of what Pat would do to UConn in later years (Yes, yes, we have been told that any obnoxious thing Pat did was caused by early signs of her disease, I suppose even when she was stealing players from other teams back in the 1970s.)
Q1: There's still an NC game to be played. Do you want an opposing coach in your locker room perhaps in some way either knowingly or unknowingly affecting your team's play two nights later? We do not really know what Pat said, but an overly congratulatory type "you have shown yourselves to be unbeatable" remark would not be what Geno wanted said. After a big effort and a big win, the locker room is considered a sanctuary for kicking back and celebrating and relaxing with your teammates, and the opposing coach has no place there. Even if Pat's talk was 100% respectful, there are certainly many other situations where an opposing coach would let loose with a "you got the calls tonight" or "you held my star all night" that would be an upsetting damper on the occasion.
Q2: Quite simply, Pat was usurping the position that the winning coach has of addressing his team after a big win. It is his right as the UConn coach to be the first and last conveyor of the message that the team takes out of the locker room. It is hardly being "suspicious" to have some big concerns that a coach decided to butt her way into your team's victory celebration while you are off talking to the press. It's an unusual potentially disruptive event that can easily upset the dynamics for a team.
Q3: Was Pat just using her talk to teach a lesson to her own team? She was highly upset with the Vols' play for much of the game, so rather than rejoin her team in the locker room for a period was she using the appearance in the locker room to tell her team how disappointed she was in them? Was this a precursor of the post Ball State game extended practice in 2009 that she used to send her message? If so, why should the Huskies be involved in the act?
There's a good reason why the visits to the opposing team's locker room are very very very rare except perhaps when an injury and maybe an apology is involved. And there is good reason to be suspicious that the "32-page peeve Pat" was being just a gracious loser in 2002.