Change Ad Consent
Do not sell my data
Reply to thread | The Boneyard
Menu
Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
Chat
UConn Football Chat
UConn Men's Basketball
UConn Women's Basketball
Media
The Uconn Blog
Verbal Commits
This is UConn Country
Field of 68
CT Scoreboard Podcasts
A Dime Back
Sliders and Curveballs Podcast
Storrs Central
Men's Basketball
News
Roster
Schedule
Standings
Women's Basketball
News
Roster
Schedule
Standings
Football
News
Roster
Depth Chart
Schedule
Football Recruiting
Offers
Commits
Donate
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
UConn Athletics
UConn Men's Basketball Forum
You can clone any player from UConn basketball history ...
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
[QUOTE="alohachris, post: 3244847, member: 10025"] The late GREAT [B]Wes Bialosuknia[/B]. Five Wes-es? They'd never miss. [U]The name of the game is to put the ball in the hole[/U] - something that's forgotten in this era of 'athleticism above everything else,' hyper coaching control, specialized skills & limited roles. Wes Bialosuknia was UConn's best of all time in that department, by far, and he created his own shots. He was not a catch & shoot guy. He was unconscious from everywhere on the court & never had an off-night. Wes was also wicked smart - UConn's first First Team Academic All-American. Wes was also great off the backboard from long-distance or off the move as a very fast & quick ball-handler. Wes averaged the all-time UConn best 28 ppg. (season) & 23.6 ppg. (career), - mostly [B]from way outside[/B] - ten years BEFORE the three-point circle, & shot clock arrived on the college court. He also made a record 43 free-throws in a row & neared that several times. UConn was 56-18 during Wes' three years w/ two NCAA trips. The Huskies haven't had a truly great shooter since Wes graduated in '67. Excellent shooter Ray Allen became great when he got to the pro's. IMO, UConn hasn't had a [B]consistent[/B], lights out distance shooter in decades (Cliff Robinson, Chris Smith, Ray Allen, Rashad Anderson), especially the last two decades. Remember, scoring is not shooting. A team needs consistent, outside shooters, not just streaky guys who might hit two three's in a row. Wes put fear in the eyes of the opponent & opened up the paint with his distance shooting. [B]NOTE[/B]: When a shooter gets hot, coaches need to keep calling plays for them & get them the ball, something that UConn coaches Calhoun, Ollie & Hurley have not done (even w/ Chris, Ray, Kemba & Shabazz). Maybe that's why they haven't been able to consistently recruit the best outside shooters to Storrs, especially of late. They could not have done that with an unusual, shooting talent like Wes Bialosuknia. Fred Shabel gave Wes the rock. [B]Five Wes-es? That would be fun to watch. Kemba Walker[/B] would be my runner-up choice. He's a winner on any court & the quickest player & scorer of any Huskie. Kemba's [U]healthy[/U] confidence would make his four other Kemba teammates much better players in any game - unlike some of the others mentioned like Donyell, Caron or even a Corny Thompson who never passed the ball. alohachris PS: I once saw Wes Bialosuknia hit a record 9 three-pointers in a row, in overtime, while playing for the Oakland Oaks of the old ABA - all from Curry distance. He was 2nd in ABA 3-point percentage & free-throws. -alohachris- [/QUOTE]
Verification
First name of men's bb coach
Post reply
Forums
UConn Athletics
UConn Men's Basketball Forum
You can clone any player from UConn basketball history ...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
Accept
Learn more…
Top
Bottom