Did anyone read the article posted on the Internet this morning? I looked for it in a thread but could not find it.
Very interesting reading. It ended with the statement that players no longer had to attend UCONN in order to win a NC. It also included some comments about situations of which some on here were concerned but were denied by some UCONN fans who do not want to believe it.
I did not see it, but it isn't difficult to imagine the contents.
It is obvious that players no longer need attend UCONN to be " assured " of a national championship. They never were, really. But you are assured of becoming the best you can be, if you want that to be your goal. You are assured of " competing" for a championship, pretty much guaranteed.
I think the parallel is growing between the UConn Lady Huskies and the UCLA men's teams under the " Wizard of Westwood." Coach Auriemma is closer to the end of his coaching career than the beginning. Some of the magic will then end ( the magic of appealing to the top HS players, each recruiting season. ) Some of that magic has already gone. Donna Della Donne left UCONN for personal reasons. A'Jai Wilson went to South Carolina to become a candidate for Governor. Notre Dame gets all the best players from catholic high schools. And now Mississipi State draws UCONN players who are not compatible with the UCONN approach to basketball.
When coach Wooden left, the UCLA men's team succeeded sporadically, pretty much on "fumes." The kids that were recruited by Wooden, and remained after he left, were enough to compete. After the remnants of his recruiting was gone, however, UCLA has just been another team. Sometimes good, sometimes not.
We have to face facts. The days of UCONN dominance are over. And, truth be told, it is what most of us wanted. Not for UCONN to fall, but for others to rise. So that the championship meant even more.
We take no satisfaction from our undefeated, unprecedented success in the AAC. Am I right?
And now, though coach Geno remains, we lose Azura Stevens. She came for a crown, didn't get it, and moved on. No blame. Just reality.
So the UCONN team begins next season with three great players at the core; one player whom everyone hopes will emerge as
great ( Walker ); a very weak and unproductive bench; and two highly touted freshman.
That is not a " given " formula for a championship. It will take incredibly hard work, and good fortune. The days of just showing up and winning it all are over.