From the 14 minute mark in the second half to under 2 neither team led by more than 3, something like 7 ties and 8 lead changes, then Blake hit his first shot, a 3 to go ahead 86-80, absolute back breaker. Lost 90 to 82.He just never gave up. He left it all on the floor. Maryland just had some ballers. I think they won the tournament that year.
I Could be thinking of the wrong game, game wasn't as close as the final score would indicate.Damn, I thought we blew OSU out that day.
A random one...
Okafor at UNC in 2004. 29 & 13 with six blocks against Sean May, who many people considered the second best big man in the country. May was 3/14 from the floor.
We were #1, UNC was somewhere in the top 10. This was their core that won the title the following season.
Gordon had just broken his nose and was wearing mask. He shot horribly. Okafor and Rashad carried us and brought us back from a sizeable deficit but ultimately we lost on a late three from Rashad McCants.
Okafor was as good as any Husky has ever been that day, dominating both ends of the floor against another elite big.
20 of 20 from the lineDonyell scoring 42 against the Johnies at quarterfinals of the Big East tournament.
An underrated one for me: Nadav vs. Georgetown on Jan 20, 1990. Georgetown came into that game 10-0, technically No. 2 in the nation but expected to be No. 1 since Kansas had lost earlier that day. It was the first time we'd beaten a team ranked that high, and Mike Gorman called it the best win in program history at the final buzzer. Beating Georgetown then was like beating UK and Duke at the same time.
Nadav had 21 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists and 5 steals, and every single time Georgetown made a run, he was the guy who pushed us back ahead. This was the first and only time they had the lead all game, and watch what happened:
To this day it's still our biggest regular-season win. I honestly don't think we'll ever have a bigger one.
Thanks for bringing back that memory I gotta dial this one up again soon! F’in love Rash Jones one of my favorites to ever wear the jersey1) Caron in 2002 against Maryland. We win the national title if we get anything out of Ben in that game.
1A) Rashamel Jones, 1998 Big East Championship game.
He scores 17 points and nine rebounds, UConn comes back and wins 69-64.
And this, from Jim Calhoun…
“Watching him tonight is probably the best moment I have had in coaching.”
I was there and totally agree. Ray was unbelievable!Ray against UCLA in 1995.
Thats the game Larrier tore his ACLFrom the 14 minute mark in the second half to under 2 neither team led by more than 3, something like 7 ties and 8 lead changes, then Blake hit his first shot, a 3 to go ahead 86-80, absolute back breaker. Lost 90 to 82.
Those back to back games, Maryland and Texas were maybe the two most soul crushing March defeats in any two year span for UConn. Texas won 82-78. I think someone that year had a huge performance too.
I Could be thinking of the wrong game, game wasn't as close as the final score would indicate.
![]()
Oklahoma State 98-90 UConn (Nov 21, 2016) Final Score - ESPN
Game summary of the Oklahoma State Cowboys vs. UConn Huskies NCAAM game, final score 98-90, from November 21, 2016 on ESPN.www.espn.com
First two Uconn games i ever watched. Been a fan since. Very special games for me.The program in 1990 in the week we beat Cuse and GTown in the HCC
I think it might be the greatest defensive performance ive ever seen. He completely dominated that game even beyond what could be quantified by stats. Just his presence on the floor effected that entire game.I love Caron and that was an incredible second half performance but it carried them to a loss and Maryland hung 90 on them.
Clingan's line of 22 pts, 10 rebs, 5 blocks, 3 steals is an awesome line but it doesn't even begin to describe how dominant he was against Illinois. The Illini were 0-19 against Clingan and Illinois scored 14 points for the entire game when Clingan was on the court. You probably have to go back to Bill Walton for any defensive performance that can maybe rival that in a high stakes game.
Perhaps a quibble, since we don’t know for sure - but Newton had the ball in his hands and threaded the needle with the pass to Spencer as KU tried to jump the passing lane. I think he had the opportunity to keep it and go for the hero shot and easily say that the pass wasn’t there. Whatever play we ran, the fallback option that day (and all season) was Newton creating something at the end of the clock.wouldn’t have been the all time greatest since the stakes weren’t high enough…
if Newton took final shot vs. KU instead of a hobbled Spencer and hit a walk off game winning 3 at Allen Fieldhouse it would have capped off a legendary performance.
I’m still annoyed we didn’t give him that opportunity…
That was a different game, not in the Big East Tournament. Donyell scored 42 points against St. John's twice that season. I was at the 20-20 free throw game at MSG. That was sometime in January. Then a couple months later he scored 42 points against St. John's again in the Big East Tournament quarterfinals. Donyell was amazing that season.20 of 20 from the line
A random one...
Okafor at UNC in 2004. 29 & 13 with six blocks against Sean May, who many people considered the second best big man in the country. May was 3/14 from the floor.
We were #1, UNC was somewhere in the top 10. This was their core that won the title the following season.
Gordon had just broken his nose and was wearing mask. He shot horribly. Okafor and Rashad carried us and brought us back from a sizeable deficit but ultimately we lost on a late three from Rashad McCants.
Okafor was as good as any Husky has ever been that day, dominating both ends of the floor against another elite big.
He was insanely good once it all clicked.Not one of the best performances, but Christian Vital had some memorable ones in 2020 down the stretch.
Felt like he should be mentioned.
Ok it's not the best individual performance but I kinda hate how overlooked Hasheem Thabeet is after a disappointing professional career. He was an absolute terror at UConn and every team had to gameplan for him (most unsuccessfully).
Mid February of 2009 we played a hot Seton Hall team (winners of their past 5 games) and he put up a monster line of 25 points, 20 rebounds, and 9 blocks (just missing his second triple double of the season) in a 62-54 win in Newark.
Jeff Adrien had 14 points and 15 rebounds in the same game.
Again, not an all time performance but Jeff had a great NCAA tournament game where he was draining the foul line jumper with ease. Think it was against Texas A&M in the second round.. He went 11/16 from the field for 23 pts and 8 rebounds. We crushed them so it didn't matter but it was beautiful to witness.
I mean, it was very similar to how opponents respected Donovan and that's not surprising since Thabeet was even bigger at 7'3" and similarly mobile. He was a consensus second-team All-American and the Big East co-Player of the Year in 2009, and a two-time Big East Defensive Player of the Year.Thabeet's impact was truly impossible to measure, as cliche as it was. People would refuse to go inside the paint against him out of fear of him. I remember a game against Notre Dame maybe his sophomore year where their guys were pump faking 4 or 5 times before passing back out if they happened to get into the lane.
I always felt he should've stayed another year to atone for that, but many still remember him for those misses rather than his greatness. He could do it all. Tough way to end a career. Kemba and Donyell are my two favorite Huskies.Oh the irony here... the biggest thing most remember from Donyell was missing free throws against Florida, not how good he was.
hard upvote for "diamonds in our stool"Calling it the greatest is an overreach, since he only had 21, but here’s one that’s criminally underrated: Rip vs. Gonzaga.
The reason is the context and the in-game circumstances. If you didn’t live it, you’ll never understand the pressure of that game. It is seriously maybe my least favorite sporting event I’ve ever watched, at least for 39:55. The bracket opened up for us big time, Gonzaga wasn’t Gonzaga yet, they were just some random 11 seed school that John Stockton played for, and we had a red carpet to the Final Four, at last. Except, Gonzaga wouldn’t go away.
The in game circumstances were that Khalid was having a dumpster fire of a game. He shot 0-12 and dribbled off his own leg out of bounds down the stretch. And the guy Khalid was guarding (Quentin Hall) was lighting it up. With KEA off the rails, Gonzaga went ahead and threw a box and one on Rip and didn’t give him any room to breathe, and he shot 9-16 against it, and he found Jake twice down the stretch for layups when we were only up 2. And then he had to guard a legit scorer (Richie Frahm) and locked him up (Ricky locked up Santangelo).
Free did well in a supporting role, especially on the boards, but Rip essentially had to carry us over the FF hurdle against a box and one with the weight of the world on his shoulders, and a fan base wound so tight we had diamonds in our stool.
I’ve always appreciated that game from him. A loss there and who knows - maybe we are still sitting on zero titles.