Volume CXVIII No. 53
Husky Hoopla
Friday, November 11, 2011
WATCH THE THRONE
Oriakhi leads champs ... Pg. 3 Calhoun adds top freshmen to program... Pg. 4 Huskies try to fill void left by Walker ... Pg. 6
Lamb, Napier go for repeat – McDonough, Pg. 3
Page 2
THE HUSKIES 1
3
10
12
22
Enosch Wolf
C – Sophomore Goettingen, Germany
Jeremy Lamb
2
5
G – Sophomore Norcross, Ga.
Tyler Olander
11
F – Freshman Mansfield, Conn.
Andre Drummond C – Freshman Middletown, Conn.
Roscoe Smith
13
23
F – Sophomore Baltimore, Md.
THE OPPOSITION
November Time TV Fri 11 Columbia (GP) 7 p.m. ESPNU Mon 14 Wagner (GP) 7:30 p.m. SNY Thurs 17 Maine 7 p.m. SNY Sun 20 Coppin State (XL) 1 p.m. SNY Thu 24 vs. UNC Asheville (Paradise Island) 7 p.m. TBD Wed, Thu 25, 26 Battle for Atlantis TBD TBD
DeAndre Daniels F – Freshman Los Angeles, Calif.
December Sat 3 Arkansas (XL) Thu 8 Harvard (GP) Sun 18 Holy Cross (XL)
22 thu
Niels Giffey
F – Sophomore Berlin, Germany
Ryan Boatright G – Freshman Aurora, Ill.
G – Sophomore Roxbury, Mass.
Ben Stewart F – Senior Denver, Colo.
25
C – RS Freshman Chattanooga, Tenn.
January Tue 3 at Seton Hall Sat 7 at Rutgers Mon 9 West Virginia
Time 7 p.m. 8 p.m. 7 p.m.
34
C – Junior Lowell, Mass.
The calhoun File
Jim Calhoun Head Coach 26th season
Overall record: 855-367 (.696); 607-230 (.722) at UConn National titles: 3 (1999, 2004, 2011) Big East titles: 17 (regular season: 10 – 1990, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006; postseason: 7 – 1990, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2004, 2011)
7 p.m. 4 p.m. 12 p.m.
February Wed 1 at Georgetown Sat 4 Seton Hall (XL) Mon 6 at Louisville Sat 11 at Syracuse Wed 15 DePaul (GP) Sat 18 Marquette (XL) Mon 20 at Villanova
Time 7 p.m. 12 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 7 p.m. 12 p.m. 7 p.m.
TV SNY SNY ESPN2
ESPN CBS SNY TV ESPN2 SNY ESPN CBS SNY ESPN/2 ESPN
Syracuse (Gampel Pavilion), 9 p.m., ESPN College Gameday will broadcast live from Storrs in the morning, then the rivalry game at night will keep Gampel rocking during one of the biggest games of the year.
Tue 28 at Providence March
3 SAT
SNY SNY
at Notre Dame, 11 a.m., ESPN2 The Huskies will look to avenge two losses to the Irish last season, in UConn’s first big road game in Big East play.
Wed 18 Cincinnati (GP) Sat 21 at Tennessee Sun 29 Notre Dame (XL)
Alex Oriakhi
TV ESPN ESPN2 SNY
Fairfield (XL Center), 7 p.m., SNY It will be a battle of brothers in Hartford as Tyler and Ryan Olander will face each other. Ryan is a senior captain for the Stags, who could be a stiff test for UConn. 9 p.m. 12 p.m.
14 SAT
Shabazz Napier
Time 3:15 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m.
Wed 28 at USF Sat 31 St. John’s (XL)
25 Sat Michael Bradley
Friday, November 11, 2011
Husky Hoopla
7 p.m. Time
SNY TV
Pittsburgh (Gampel Pavilion), 12 p.m., ESPN/2 On Senior Day UConn will try to send Pitt out of the Big East with a loss, in what could be one of the final games between the two rivals.
GP = Gampel Pavilion, Storrs; XL = XL Center, Hartford; italics = Big East conference game
Melanie Deziel, Editor in Chief Mac Cerullo, Managing Editor Brendan Fitzpatrick, Business Manager/Advertising Director Nancy Depathy, Financial Manager Front Desk: Fax: Editor-In-Chief/Commentary: Managing Editor/Photo: News/Sports: Focus/Online:
(860) (860) (860) (860) (860) (860)
486-3407 486-4388 486-6141 486-6119 486-6118 486-6110
On The Front: All photos property of The Daily Campus. Image created by Jim Anderson. On The Back: All photos property of The Daily Campus. Image created by Ashley Pospisil.
Friday, November 11, 2011 Production Managers: Matt McDonough, Colin McDonough, Mac Cerullo Copy Editors: Nick Rondinone, Allison Downey
Brian Zahn, Associate Managing Editor Nicholas Rondinone, News Editor Amy Schellenbaum, Associate News Editor Arragon Perrone, Commentary Editor Ryan Gilbert, Associate Commentary Editor Purbita Saha, Focus Editor John Tyczkowski, Associate Focus Editor Brendan Albetski, Comics Editor
Matt McDonough, Sports Editor Colin McDonough, Associate Sports Editor Jim Anderson Photo Editor Ed Ryan, Associate Photo Editor Demetri Demopoulos, Marketing Manager Dawn Tarabocchia, Graphics Manager Nicole Butler, Online Marketing Manager Joseph Kopman-Fried, Circulation Manager
Page 3
Friday, November 11, 2011
Husky Hoopla
Oriakhi will take on different role
By Matt McDonough Sports Editor Alex Oriakhi begins the 2011 season in an uncertain position. For the first time since he was 14 years old, Oriakhi will be playing on a team without Jamal Coombs-McDaniel. “I’m not going to lie, it’s weird,” Oriakhi said. “He’s been my roommate since I was 16, so it’s like my first time being without him. It’s definitely weird but you have to move on. He already knows I hope nothing but the best for him.” Coombs-McDaniel transferred to Hofstra after last season, citing a need for more playing time. He will sit out this season due to NCAA rules and play for the Pride in 2012. CoombsMcDaniel, who was arrested for marijuana possession last April, chose Hofstra over Missouri and Miami. The forward played in all 41 games for the national champions last year, averaging 5.6 points per game. He scored 25 points in a win over Providence. Oriakhi said Coombs-McDaniel is making a fine adjustment
without him. “He said he likes it,” Oriakhi said. “He’s been working hard. He said he’s happy because he has a whole year to get his stuff straight, get his knee better. He should have a good year out there.” Both Oriakhi and Coombs-McDaniel played for the BABC AAU squad coached by Leo Papile and attended the Tilton School in New Hampshire. The Massachusetts natives co-captained Tilton to the 2009 NEPSAC Class B Championships and National Prep School Title before arriving at UConn in fall of that year. After a freshmen season together that ended with a trip to the NIT, the two helped the Huskies to an NCAA national championship as sophomores. Coombs-McDaniel, who did not attend UConn’s trip to the White House, has moved on to another school. Oriakhi, the lone upperclassman on scholarship, will have to move on to his junior season. “It is crazy I am the most experienced,” Oriakhi said. “The good thing about it is I have about seven sopho-
mores who experienced it with me so they’re going to be right there with me. I feel once you play in the Final Four and the national championship, you’ve really seen it all, so nothing can really get you now. All you have to do is go out there and play basketball.” Oriakhi, who averaged 9.6 points and 8.7 rebounds last season, had 11 points, 11 rebounds and four blocks in the Huskies’ 53-41 win over Butler in the title game. Now he’s the face of UConn basketball, appearing on most posters and promos across the state. “It definitely weird,” Oriakhi said. “I’m always used to seeing Kemba’s face or Jerome [Dyson] or Stanley [Robinson] because I’ve been here. To have my face on there, it’s a little surprising, I’m not going to lie.” Oriakhi, along with Shabazz Napier and Jeremy Lamb, will have to step up and lead the Huskies this season. “I would think Jeremy, Shabazz and Alex [are our leaders],” Calhoun said. “The personalities become so different, it’s really hard to judge the per-
sonalities,” Calhoun added. “They each have their own way of leading, part of our job is to make sure they lead in the right way. Criticizing a teammate after a coach has yelled at them is not leadership. Getting on a guy, when we don’t see a move, he didn’t screen, we couldn’t see it, we were blocked out, that’s an entire different story. That’s barking at a guy to get it going.” Although Oriakhi is expected to be barking at his teammates, one thing he refuses to do is brag to all the former UConn players who came up short in the NCAA tournament. “Roscoe [Smith] did it to Hasheem [Thabeet] but I’m not bragging,” Oriakhi said. “I know just how hard it was to get there. We had a special year so I’m definitely not bragging.” Oriakhi and the Huskies have a chance to win it all again this season. It’s an opportunity for the veteran to do something Richard Hamilton, Emeka Okafor and Kemba Walker didn’t stay to do: repeat as national champions. “For the fact that we just made history there and now
JIM ANDERSON/The Daily Campus
Alex Oriakhi helped lead the Huskies to the national title last season.
we have a chance to make history again, there’s definitely a lot of pressure but last year we didn’t even see a national championship,” Oriakhi said. “All we did was work hard and play hard so we’ll still do the same
thing we’ve been doing. I really pray to God it works out for us again.” A chance at a repeat? For Oriakhi, that’s not a bad position to be in.
Matthew.McDonough@UConn.edu
Lamb and Napier look to celebrate again By Matt McDonough Sports Editor When Jeremy Lamb came away with the rebound off a Matt Howard miss with eight seconds left in the 2011 NCAA national championship game, the freshman was about to fulfill a childhood dream. Yes the UConn men’s basketball team was seconds away from beating Butler, 53-41, and claiming the school’s third national championship, but the celebration was even sweeter for Lamb because he was the one who had the ball at the end. He was the one who was able to dribble out the clock. “Yeah it was funny,” Lamb said. “I always thought about at the end when you throw the ball up and I always thought, I wonder where the ball lands. I’m going to throw it up and look at it. But I threw it up and Shabazz [Napier] was hugging me and I didn’t even see where it went.” Lamb threw the ball towards the Reliant Stadium roof after the buzzer had sounded. But it looked as though Lamb had began celebrating a little too early. As Napier jumped on his back, Lamb started jumping up and down while holding onto the ball with three seconds remaining. It was a clear traveling violation, but the referees let it slide. “That’s another thing,” Lamb said. “Me and my brother used to always say, I wonder at the end of the game, if you travel, what would they do? So I traveled and I wanted to see what they’d do and they didn’t do anything.” The 2010-11 UConn recruiting class was a bit of a mystery, so it was fitting Lamb and Napier, perhaps the two most underrated AP PHOTOS recruits in the national class, were Jeremy Lamb and Shabazz Napier celebrate UConn’s 53-41 win over Butler in the the ones celebrating together at the national championship on April 4 in Houston. end.
“We could’ve never expected them to do what they did in many ways, with all those freshmen and no experience, but they did it” said coach Jim Calhoun. Now it’s up to Lamb and Napier to avoid a sophomore slump and put last season behind the team. “Once we got our championship rings, that was the end of the celebration... Last year is over with,” Napier said. Lamb agreed and said he doesn’t expect a letdown this season. He did add that he won’t be forgetting the Huskies title run anytime soon. “I definitely still think about it but I guess we’ve had to put it behind us,” Lamb said. “That’s what you have to do to move on and have another good season. I definitely put it behind me but I’ll always have those memories.” Calhoun believes that the two sophomores have done a good job building team chemistry with the freshmen. “I have a great deal of confidence that we’re good,” Calhoun said. “If every coach had a bottle of chemistry, then everybody would win every championship and nobody does.” Napier thinks that last year did nothing but recharge his coach. “The championship didn’t do anything but make him hungrier,” Napier said. Napier is hungry too. The point guard spent the summer doing workouts at home with his brother. He also attended basketball camps hosted by Lebron James and Deron Williams as well as tried out for Team USA’s World University Games team after Alex Oriakhi withdrew. The result is s stronger and more serious Shabazz. “Luckily I was able to put on some weight,” Napier said.
In addition to more muscle, Napier has a more serious demeanor. The first indication was Napier not dancing during player introductions at First Night. “I didn’t really like the music and I just wanted to be professional in a way,” Napier said. “Hopefully I could get someone to dance in the circle before our games because I hate dancing in the circle before our games. I’m always doing it so I’m trying to get [Ryan] Boatright, somebody to do it. Right now I have to be stuck with it” A more subtle change for Napier was his hometown. After being listed and announced as a Randolph native last season, Napier made sure his hometown, Roxbury Mass., was correct for the media and fans this season. “That’s where I’m from,” Napier said. “Randolph is where I live. I always told [men’s basketball SID Kyle Muncy] can you change that for me because I don’t want to be coming out to Randolph and people at home say they keep saying you’re from Randolph... God-willing he did it for me.” Napier, Oriakhi, another Mass. native, and Lamb are expected to be the three top dogs this season. “I’m a leader and so are they,” Lamb said. “Alex, he’s our inside presence and he’s really going to lead the boards. Shabazz is a great floor general, he runs the team well. He really knows how to pass and find us on the court. I’m a leader in the aspect of scoring and encouraging my teammates. You put that all together and we’re all pretty good leaders for this team.”
Matthew.McDonough@UConn.edu
Friday, November 11, 2011
Page 4
Husky Hoopla
Drummond headlines freshman class By Colin McDonough Associate Sports Editor When Tropical Storm Irene hit the Storrs campus, so did Andre Drummond. On Aug. 26, the Middletown native joined Los Angeles’ DeAndre Daniels and Aurora, Ill. product Ryan Boatright in the No. 4 UConn men’s basketball team’s freshman recruiting class by announcing he was a Husky in the “Tweet heard ‘round the world.” “It’s official I’m heading to the university of connecticut to be a husky this year!” Drummond posted. “Husky fam welcome me cause I’m coming this year!!” And after Drummond asked UConn Country, “Do I hear #repeat?” the chances of a second consecutive national championship for the Huskies greatly improved. Drummond, who was ranked as a No. 1 or No. 2 overall recruit by most media outlets, was expected to attend prep school this year before making a college decision. “We had a family meeting,” Drummond said. “My mom said going to prep school is not going to help you at all. She was just like, ‘I know you’re ready for college.’” Drummond said that his mother and uncle were integral in him making his decision. He said his uncle told him that he “had all the tools to be a great player.” Due to the program’s loss of scholarships because of NCAA violations, redshirt freshman Michael Bradley, gave up his scholarship so that Drummond could join the team. Although Drummond enrolled at the start of classes, he has caught up to college life. “I think it was a good transition,” Drummond said. “The coaches, my mom and all the players on the team helped me have a great transition from high school to college. They
all helped me get settled into my classes, help me find all my books and places I need to be on time.” There is one thing that’s surprised the freshman. “I didn’t expect so many essays, writing five-page papers everyday,” Drummond said. Although NBA players can’t help Drummond with essays, the lockout has helped the entire team, with players like Hasheem Thabeet, Kemba Walker, Jerome Dyson and Ray Allen coming to practice to work out with the team. “He’s rebounding against some of the best pros who have come back,” said coach Jim Calhoun. Alex Oriakhi said Drummond already has the makings of a pro. “I would say he has Dwight Howard athleticism, that’s how athletic he is,” Oriakhi said of Drummond. While his fellow freshmen Boatright and Daniels come from two of the biggest metropolitan areas in the country, Drummond is used to life in Connecticut and enjoys staying in his home state for college. “It’s great,” Drummond said. “A lot of people say, you’re a hometown hero. That’s what it really boils down to, what people say. It’s a humbling experience so far and I’m just trying to put forth a great season this year.” The Three Amigos Boatright committed to UConn last year, and was the only commit before Daniels signed on to be a Husky on June 18. “Kemba was going to go pro and I knew that when I came in here but I just saw the potential that we had,” Boatright said. “Even if they didn’t do what they did last year I knew they had the potential this year... I know me and Shabazz are going to terrorize the backcourt if we work hard.” Walker is still helping the
team, especially working with the point guards prior to the start of the season. “Me being a guard, I could work with Shabazz and Ryan,” Walker said. Watching Walker lead the Huskies to the national championship last year was inspiring, but Daniels said it didn’t pull him to Storrs. “Yes I think I would’ve been here if they didn’t win the national championship,” Daniels said. “The reason why I picked UConn was because of the coaching staff and I just felt that I’d get better here, as a person on and off the court.” Coming to Northeastern Connecticut is a big change of scenery for Daniels, but he is enjoying his time here thus far. “I like Storrs a lot,” Daniels said. “It’s totally different from L.A., a lot of trees and cows and stuff but I like it a lot.” The three freshmen have already made a splash together on campus, and have become very good friends. “We’re pretty much already like brothers,” Daniels said. Boatright said: “Honestly, truly this team is one big family. We all get along and do everything together.” Drummond said: “Me and DeAndre and Boat, we hang out with each other every single day. Me and DeAndre, we go in other people’s dorms and introduce ourselves. We just go out and have fun. We’re not trying to be like with just basketball players... we have to hang out with the people around campus, not just our teammates.” Repeat? The impact that these freshmen can make was apparent to a sold out crowd at First Night, when Boatright beat Drummond in the finals of the dunk contest. The pair sent the packed gym into a frenzy with NBA Dunk Contest-like jams. Last season at this time, players
ED RYAN/The Daily Campus
Andre Drummond dances during introductions at First Night on Oct. 14. Along with Ryan Boatright and DeAndre Daniels, the new freshmen class will try to dance in New Orleans in April.
like Shabazz Napier, Jeremy Lamb and Roscoe Smith were question marks, there weren’t large expectations for them on campus at that point. This year it’s different. The three freshmen have already been exposed to the national championship atmosphere. Drummond, Daniels and Boatright were on the field with their teammates on Sept. 16 at Rentschler Field. Alex Oriakhi announced the new recruiting class to the crowd while holding last year’s national championship trophy. On Oct. 6, the freshmen went to the national
championship dinner where members of last year’s team received their rings. “I was really happy, I enjoyed being there,” Daniels said. “It also motivated the three freshmen, me, Andre and Ryan to get ours.” Tonight, as the three freshmen watch the curtain come down on the 2011 national championship banner, perhaps they’ll be dreaming of getting theirs.
Colin.McDonough@UConn.edu
BIG EAST CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE » 2010-2011 STANDINGS Conference
Team •Pittsburgh •Notre Dame •Syracuse •Louisville •St. John’s •Cincinnati •West Virginia •Georgetown •UConn •Villanova •Marquette Seton Hall Rutgers Providence South Florida DePaul
W-L
Pct.
15-3 14-4 12-6 12-6 12-6 11-7 11-7 10-8 9-9 9-9 7-11 7-11 5-13 4-14 3-15 1-17
.833 .778 .667 .667 .667 .611 .611 .556 .500 .500 .389 .389 .278 .222 .167 .056
GB
– 1 3 3 3 4 5 5 6 6 8 8 10 11 12 14
2011 NCAA TOURNAMENT Overall
W-L
Pct.
28-6 27-7 27-8 25-10 21-12 26-9 21-12 21-11 32-9 21-12 22-14 13-18 17-15 15-17 12-19 7-24
.824 .794 .771 .714 .636 .743 .636 .656 .780 .636 .611 .419 .469 .469 .303 .226
• indicates team qualified for 2011 NCAA Tournament 2011 Big East Tournament Second Round: UConn 79, Georgetown 62; St. John’s 65, Rutgers 63; Cincinnati 87, South Florida 61; Marquette 87, West Virginia 66 Quarterfinals: UConn 76, Pittsburgh 74; Syracuse 79, St. John’s 73; Notre Dame 89, Cincinnati 61; Louisville 81, Marquette 56 Semifinals: UConn 76, Syracuse 71 ot; Louisville 83, Notre Dame 77 ot Championship: UConn 69, Louisville 66
Second, Third Round – March 17-20 Southeast: [1] Pittsburgh 97, [16] UNC Asheville 83 Southeast: [11] Gonzaga 86, [6] St. John’s 71 West: [3] UConn 81, [14] Bucknell 52 West: [6] Cincinnati 78, [11] Missouri 63 East: [3] Syracuse 77, [14] Indiana State 60 East: [8] George Mason 61, [9] Villanova 57 East: [5] West Virginia 84, [12] Clemson 76 East: [11] Marquette 66, [6] Xavier 55 Southwest: [13] Morehead St. 62, [4] Louisville 61 Southwest: [11] VCU 74, [6] Georgetown 56 Southwest: [2] Notre Dame 69, [15] Akron 56 West: [3] UConn 69, [6] Cincinnati 58 Southwest: [10] Florida St. 71, [3] Notre Dame 57 East: [4] Kentucky 71, [5] West Virginia 63 East: [11] Marquette 66, [3] Syracuse 62 Southeast: [8] Butler 71, [1] Pittsburgh 70 Regional Semifinals – March 24-25 West: [3] UConn 74, [2] San Diego St. 67 East: [2] North Carolina 81, [11] Marquette 63 Regional Finals – March 26-27 West: [3] UConn 65, [5] Arizona 63 National Semifinals – April 2 West: [3] UConn 56, East: [4] Kentucky 55 National Championship – April 4 West: [3] UConn 53, Southeast: [8] Butler 41
» 2012 BIG EAST TOURNAMENT All games at Madison Square Garden, New York
Tuesday, March 6 – First Round
No. 9 seed vs. No. 16 seed (noon, ESPN2) No. 12 seed vs. No. 13 seed (2 p.m., ESPN2) No. 10 seed vs. No. 15 seed (7 p.m., ESPNU) No. 11 seed vs. No. 14 seed (9 p.m., ESPNU)
Wednesday, March 7 – Second Round 9/16 winner vs. No. 8 seed (noon, ESPN) 12/13 winner vs. No. 5 seed (2 p.m., ESPN) 10/15 winner vs. No. 7 seed (7 p.m., ESPN) 11/14 winner vs. No. 6 seed (9 p.m., ESPN)
Thursday, March 8 – Quarterfinals 8/9/16 winner vs. No. 1 seed (noon, ESPN) 5/12/13 winner vs. No. 4 seed (2 p.m., ESPN) 7/10/15 winner vs. No. 2 seed (7 p.m., ESPN) 6/11/14 winner vs. No. 3 seed (9 p.m., ESPN)
Friday, March 9 – Semifinals 7 p.m. and 9 p.m., ESPN
Saturday, March 10 – Championship 9 p.m., ESPN
Friday, November 11, 2011
Husky Hoopla
Breaking down the Huskies
Walking the walk without Walker
Centers — Freshman Andre Drummond is the clear headliner at this position, as the Middletown native was the top recruit this year in the nation at his position. He’s off to a solid start in the two exhibition games he’s played in, scoring a total of 26 points in 42 minutes. Alex Oriakhi also rotates in at center occasionally, backed up by sophomore Enosch Wolf and redshirt freshmen Michael Bradley.
Mac Cerullo The wait is finally over. Tonight the men’s basketball team will officially begin its title defense. The championship banner will be unveiled, tributes will be paid and the Huskies will take the court for the first time in a meaningful game since winning the championship in Houston. And once the whistle blows and the ball goes up, the whole cycle will begin anew. It’s a whole new year with a whole new team, but the goal remains the same – to bring the championship back to Storrs once again. The team is loaded and expectations are high, so there’s no reason to believe this year shouldn’t be a good one. But before we cancel the season and crown the team right now, there’s a big question remaining that can’t be ignored. How will they do without Kemba Walker? I don’t have an answer to that question now, and we probably won’t get one until midway through the Big East schedule, but you can’t lose a player like Walker and expect to just carry on smoothly without him. He was the best player in the country and the engine that drove last year’s team to the championship. You take him out of the equation and what happens? Last year? Probably disaster. But this year? The team will have to recalibrate somehow, but this year’s team should have the pieces to transition successfully, even if nobody is quite at Walker’s level. I expect we’ll likely see a shift toward a more frontcourt-oriented style of play as a start. Last year, there wasn’t much depth up front, at least not early on, but this year the Huskies will have the luxury of an improved Alex Oriakhi, a dominant newcomer in Andre Drummond, two versatile wingmen in Roscoe Smith and DeAndre Daniels and a solid, fundamentally sound body off the bench in Tyler Olander. If you can’t have Walker torment every defender who gets in his way, then you might as well take advantage of the superfreshman who can dunk on anyone and the gang of big men who can wear down everyone who tries. But even if you don’t have Walker to break down defenses, the guards who remain from last year’s team might be more than up to the task. Jeremy Lamb is a preseason All-American and is considered by most people to be one of the best players in the country going into this year. He emerged late last year to become a force, and now he will likely become the guy taking the last shot at the end of games in place of Walker. There isn’t anyone else quite like Lamb out there, with his height, long arms, shooting ability and composure, so it’ll be interesting to see just how productive he will be. And then, of course, there is Shabazz Napier. A sophomore co-captain, Napier will likely be called upon to be the engine of this year’s offense, much like Walker was last year. He’s the best ball handler on the team, a lockdown defender and most importantly, he can log minutes. And that matters, because there isn’t going to be a lot behind him in terms of backup. Freshman Ryan Boatright will be relied upon a lot because Napier shouldn’t have to play 40 minutes a game, but beyond him, that’s about it. The pieces are clearly there, and they are good ones, but the tricky thing is that unlike last year, nobody jumps out as “the guy” quite as obviously as Walker did. Lamb could be the best player, Oriakhi could be the biggest presence, Napier could be the ringleader on the court and Drummond could be the difference maker. But together, could the Huskies be champions? Follow Mac Cerullo on Twitter at @ MacCerullo.
Michael.Cerullo@UConn.edu
Page 5
Guards — The guard position appeared to be an area of great strength for the Huskies, with Jeremy Lamb and Shabazz Napier returning to play big minutes and Ryan Boatright entering the mix as a freshman. But with the recent eligibility questions surrounding Boatright, a chink in the armor has been highlighted for the Huskies, who are a little thin at point guard. If Boatright happens to miss any time, look for newly added walk-on Brendan Allen to log some minutes, and his play could be big for UConn if either Napier or Boatright should miss time due to suspension or injury.
Forwards — If UConn wants to repeat as national champions it will undoubtedly be due to the return of a group of forwards with arguably the most talent in the country. Junior Alex Oriakhi looks to build on an impressive 2010-11 season where he averaged 9.6 points per game and 8.7 rebounds per game. With the departure of Jamal Coombs-McDaniel, sophomores Niels Giffey, Tyler Olander and Roscoe Smith are expected to earn more playing time. Highly touted freshman DeAndre Daniels rounds out the deep and experienced group of forwards.
2010-2011 SEASON IN REVIEW SCHEDULE AND RESULTS – 32-9, 9-9 Big East tournament champs, NCAA champs
NOVEMBER 3 7 12 17 22 23 24 30
GP AIC (exh.) XL Bridgeport (exh.) GP Stony Brook XL Vermont EA Sports Maui Invitational % Wichita St. % Michigan St. % Kentucky GP New Hampshire
W, 96-58 W, 103-97 W, 79-52 W, 89-73
DECEMBER 3 8 20 22 27 31
XL GP XL XL at XL
W, 94-61 W, 78-54
JANUARY 4 8 11 15 17 22 25 29
at at XL at GP XL at GP
UMBC Fairleigh Dickinson Coppin State W, 76-64 Harvard Pittsburgh Cincinnati
W, 83-79 W, 70-67 W, 84-67 W, 62-55
FEBRUARY 2 5 10 13 16 18 24 27
XL at at GP XL at XL at
Syracuse Seton Hall St. John’s Providence Georgetown Louisville Marquette Cincinnati
L, 66-58 W, 61-59 L, 89-72 W, 75-57 W, 78-70 L, 71-58 L, 74-67, ot W, 67-59
MARCH 2 5
at GP
West Virginia Notre Dame
L, 65-56 L, 70-67
2011 Big East Championship 8 * DePaul (R1) 9 * Georgetown (R2) 10 * Pittsburgh (Quarters) 11 * Syracuse (Semis) 12 * Louisville (Finals)
W, 81-52 L, 78-63 W, 66-61,ot
W, 97-71 W, 79-62 W, 76-74 W, 76-71, ot W, 69-66
2011 NCAA Tournament 17 $ Bucknell (R2) W, 81-52 19 $ Cincinnati (R3) W, 69-58 24 # San Diego St. (Sweet 16) W, 74-67 26 # Arizona (Elite Eight) W, 65-63 APRIL 2 ! Kentucky (Final Four) W, 56-55 4 ! Butler (NCAA Final) W, 53-41 Bold indicates Big East game. % Maui Invitational (Lahaina Civic Center, Lahaina, Hawaii) *Big East Championship (Madison Square Garden, New York) $ Verizon Center, Washington, D.C. #Honda Center, Anaheim, Calif. ! Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas GP = Gampel Pavilion; XL = XL Center; bold denotes conference game
Notre Dame L, 73-70 Texas W, 82-81 Rutgers W, 67-53 DePaul W, 82-62 Villanova W, 61-59 Tennessee W, 72-61 Marquette W, 76-68 Louisville L, 79-78,2ot Scores in bold indicate Big East opponents.
2010-2011 FINAL STATISTICS ## 15 03 34 13 22 04 35 05 02 10 01 23
Player WALKER, Kemba LAMB, Jeremy* ORIAKHI, Alex* NAPIER, Shabazz* SMITH, Roscoe* COOMBS-MCDANIEL, J. OKWANDU, Charles GIFFEY, Niels* BEVERLY, Donnell OLANDER, Tyler* WOLF, Enosch STEWART, Ben
GP-GS 41-41 41-40 41-39 41-0 41-33 41-2 41-19 41-10 39-0 39-21 7-0 4-0
* indicates returning letterwinner
FG-FGA 316-739 182-374 153-302 100-270 87-227 81-197 54-115 31-77 20-54 25-67 3-5 1-2
FG Pct. .428 .487 .507 .370 .383 .411 .470 .403 .370 .373 .600 .500
3FG-3FGA 75-227 46-125 0-0 46-141 25-83 24-84 0-0 11-34 7-15 0-2 0-0 0-0
3FG Pct. .330 .368 .000 .326 .301 .286 .000 .324 .467 .000 .000 .000
FT-FTA 258-315 47-59 87-138 74-96 59-75 44-55 11-21 17-21 21-28 8-12 1-2 0-0
FT Pct. .819 .797 .630 .771 .787 .800 .524 .810 .750 .667 .500 .000
Reb 223 183 358 99 213 108 113 56 49 72 6 2
RPG 5.4 4.5 8.7 2.4 5.2 2.6 2.8 1.4 1.3 1.8 0.9 0.5
Ast 184 66 15 124 19 22 22 6 47 22 0 0
TO 93 52 45 75 36 30 36 11 29 14 5 0
Blk 7 25 67 5 51 7 51 4 4 7 0 0
Stl 77 35 16 66 21 10 11 9 10 4 0 0
Pts 965 457 393 320 258 230 119 90 68 58 7 2
PPG 23.5 11.1 9.6 7.8 6.3 5.6 2.9 2.2 1.7 1.5 1.0 0.5
Page 6
Friday, November 11, 2011
Husky Hoopla
2011-12 Daily Campus Men’s All-Big East Team Preseason Player of the Year — Ashton Gibbs, G, Pittsburgh
Alex Oriakhi, C, UConn
Yancy Gates, F, Cincinnati
Tim Abromaitis, F, Notre Dame
Jeremy Lamb, G, UConn
Ashton Gibbs, G, Pittsburgh
AP PHOTOS
PROSPECTUS CINCINNATI
Mick Cronin (6th year)
DEPAUL
Oliver Purnell (2nd year)
GEORGETOWN
John Thompson III (8th year)
Last Season: 26-9 (11-7), 6th
Last Season: 7-24 (1-17), 16th
Last Season: 21-11 (10-8), 8th
Mick Cronin’s Bearcats enter the season ranked preseason No. 22. Cincy returns its top two scorers in Yancy Gates and Dion Dixon, and adds what should be a strong seven-member freshman class. After finishing seventh in the Big East last year with an 11-7 conference record, Cincinnati will look to make a return trip to the NCAA tournament, where they lost to UConn in the third round.
The Blue Demons were only able to muster one win in the powerful Big East last year, a three-point road victory at Providence. DePaul has already lost three freshmen to eligibility issues, and it will be a struggle for them to improve this season. They will try to build some chemistry against mid-major opponents before entering Big East play.
This will be the eighth year coaching Georgetown for John Thompson III. The Hoyas were a major disappointment last season, limping into the NCAA tournament after losing its last four games before falling to Cinderella favorite VCU in the Second Round. Thompson is a very capable coach, but a young team will prove a challenge for the Hoyas this season.
Rick Pitino (10th year)
Buzz Williams (4th year)
Mike Brey (12th year)
LOUISVILLE
MARQUETTE
NOTRE DAME
Last Season: 25-10 (12-6), 4th
Last Season: 22-14 (7-11), 11th
Last Season: 27-7 (14-4), 2nd
The Louisville Cardinals return much of last years squad that finished tied for third in the regular season, as well as breakout start Peyton Siva. With another top recruiting class entering the 2011-12 season, the Cardinals should be a force to reckon with in the Big East.
With the return of leading scorer Darius Johnson-Odom, the Marquette Golden Eagles will once again find themselves right in the middle of things in the Big East. Having only one senior will hurt the Golden Eagles but they always seem to find their way into the tournament when all is said and done.
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish should be a solid team in the Big East this season but the loss of Ben Hansbrough is going to hurt a lot. Lucky for them, they have Tim Ambromaitis who can step in and be the senior leader that Hansbrough was last season.
PITTSBURGH
PROVIDENCE
RUTGERS
Last Season: 28-6 (15-3), 1st
Last Season: 15-17 (4-14), 14th
Last Season: 17-15 (5-13), 13th
Pittsburgh had a great Big East season in 2010-11, going 15-3 and winning the regular season title. Pitt is only returning two starters, as Gary McGhee, Gilbert Brown and Brad Wanamaker have all graduated; however, one of those starters is Ashton Gibbs (16.8 ppg, 49 3P%), the Big East Preseason Player of the Year. Freshman big man Khem Birch was ranked 12th overall in the 2011 recruiting class.
Providence made a big move this offseason by firing head coach Keno Davis and hiring former Fairfield head coach, Ed Cooley. With Marshon Brooks (24.6 ppg) gone, the Friars will likely turn to point guard Vincent Council (13.7 ppg) and shooting guard Gerard Coleman (10.3 ppg, 53.7 FT%) to pick up the scoring load.
The Scarlet Knights are a very young team, but head coach Mike Rice pulled in the No. 16 recruiting class this summer. Big things are expected out of freshmen guards Myles Mack and Kadeem Jack, while sophomore Gilvydas Biruta (9.6 ppg, 5.6 rpg) is expected to lead Rutgers in the paint.
SETON HALL
SOUTH FLORIDA
ST. JOHN’S
Last Season: 13-18 (7-11), 12th
Last Season: 12-19 (3-15), 15th
Last Season: 21-12 (12-6), 5th
The number one issue for the Pirates this season is replacing the scoring lost by the dangerous Jeremy Hazell, who averaged 19.8 points per game last year. Seton Hall also lost Jeff Robinson, the team’s second leading scorer at 12.1 points per game. In order to fill those voids, Jordan Theodore, Fuquan Edwin and rebound-machine Herb Pope will need to pick up some of the scoring slack.
With four of their top-five scorers returning, the Bulls should look to improve on their horrible Big East record of 3-15 last year. They have transfers Ron Anderson and Victor Rudd who should look to contribute, and guard Jawanza Poland should be a staple in the offense once he returns from a back injury.
With six new faces in their seven-man rotation, the highly anticipated recruiting class of this year will have to step up big time for the Red Storm to achieve the success of last year’s team. Expect Nurideen Lindsey and God’s Gift Achiuwa (yes, that’s his name) to lead the team this year, with freshmen forwards Moe Harkless and Sir’Dominic Pointer making significant contributions.
Jim Boeheim (34th year)
VILLANOVA
Last Season: 27-8 (12-6), 3rd
Jay Wright (11th year)
WEST VIRGINIA
Last Season: 21-12 (9-9), 10th
Last Season: 21-12 (11-7), 7th
Coach Jim Boeheim may not exactly be thrilled with his school’s pending move to the ACC, but one thing that does put a smile on his face these days is his team. Seniors Scoop Jardine and Kris Joseph, along with guard Brandon Triche and talented incoming freshmen Rakeem Christmas and Michael Carter-Williams will help the Orange this year.
Gone are the Corey brothers, Stokes and Fisher, as well as steady bruiser Antonio Peña. The reins have been handed to bonafide point guard Maalik Wayns, who will have the big responsibility of leading a very young Wildcats squad. Mouphtaou Yarou is poised for a breakout year in the post.
Jim Boeheim recently said WVU headman Bob Huggins has a chance to break the all-time wins record someday. Huggins might have his toughest test this year, however, as the Mountaineers already lost an exhibition game. Darryl “Truck” Bryant and Kevin Jones (13.1 ppg) must carry the load.
Jamie Dixon (9th year)
Kevin Willard (2nd year)
SYRACUSE
Ed Cooley (1st year)
Stan Heath (5th year)
Mike Rice (2nd year)
Steve Lavin (2nd year)
Bob Huggins (5th year)
DC Staff Predicted Order of Finish:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.
West Virginia Villanova Providence St. John’s Seton Hall DePaul Rutgers USF
Team, order of finish and Player of the Year was compiled by a majority vote of the Daily Campus sports department.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Page 7
Husky Hoopla
2011-12 Daily Campus Women’s All-Big East Team Preseason Player of the Year — Skylar Diggins, G, Notre Dame
Skylar Diggins, G, Notre Dame
Bria Hartley, G, UConn
Tiffany Hayes, G, UConn
Devereaux Peters, F, Notre Dame
Sugar Rodgers, G, Georgetown
AP
DC Staff Predicted Order of Finish:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
9. West Virginia 10. Cincinnati 11. Syracuse 12. Providence 13. Villanova 14. Pittsburgh 15. South Florida 16. Seton Hall Team and order of finish compiled by a majority vote of the Daily Campus sports department.
PROSPECTUS CINCINNATI
Jamelle Elliott (3rd Year)
DEPAUL
GEORGETOWN
Last Season: 9-20 (2-14), 15th
Doug Bruno (26th Year)
Last Season: 29-7 (13-3), 2nd
Terri Williams-Flournoy (8th Year)
After a rough season in which the lady Bearcats finished 9-20, Cincinnati is losing their 2010-2011 top scorer in Shareese Ulis but have the next four top scorers returning, including Kayla Cook and Jeanise Randolph, who were both named to last year’s BIG EAST All-Freshman team.
The Blue Demons earned a spot in the Top 25 preseason rankings with the return of three starters, including senior guard and leading scorer Keisha Hampton. Although depth may be an issue for the team late in the season, DePaul has the tools to stay competitive in the Big East and return to the Sweet 16.
With the return of four starters, including junior guard Sugar Rodgers, the 2011 season is looking bright for the preseason No. 10 Hoyas. After a near upset of top ranked Connecticut in the regional semifinals last season, Georgetown will rely on its depth and experience to make a deep tournament run.
LOUISVILLE
MARQUETTE
NOTRE DAME
Jeff Walz (5th Year)
Terri Mitchell (16th Year)
Last Season: 24-11 (9-7), 9th
Muffet McGraw (24rd Year)
Last Season: 22-13 (10-6), 6th
Last Season: 24-9 (10-6), 5th
Last Season: 31-8 (13-3), 3rd
Louisville is fresh off their most recent sweet sixteen appearance, their third in the past four seasons. The Cardinals return four starters, including sophomore point guard Shoni Schimmel, who averages 15.1 points a game. Louisville looks to build off its 22-win season of last year in which they upset second seeded Xavier in the NCAA Tournament.
Marquette comes into this season ranked 11th in the coach’s poll. The Golden Eagles return two starters but will need to replace many key players due to graduation. With 74.8 of Marquette’s scoring lost to graduation the Golden Eagles will need to rely on their freshmen to compete in the highly competitive Big East.
PITTSBURGH
PROVIDENCE
The Irish come into this season ranked No. 1 over perennial favorite UConn. Notre Dame’s squad includes four starters that brought the team to the school second NCAA national title game in school history. The Irish are led by Preseason Big East Player of the Year Skylar Diggins, who averages 15 points a game and by Senior forward Devereaux Peters, who was the Big East Defensive Player of the Year last season.
Agnus Berenato (9th Year)
Phil Seymore (7th Year)
RUTGERS
C. Vivian Stringer (17th Year)
Last Season: 14-17 (5-11), 12th
Last Season: 13-16 (6-10), 11th
Last Season: 20-13 (11-5), 4th
Pittsburgh is hoping to bounce back after a loss to Marquette in the quarterfinals of last year’s Big East tournament. Head Coach Agnes Bernato has the youngest team in NCAA women’s basketball for 2011-2012. Four of the Panther’s leading scorers graduated, leaving no seniors and making sophomore guard and top-scorer Ashlee Anderson the only returning starter.
The Providence Friars finished last year 11th in the Big East regular season. Under head coach Phil Seymore, the Friars have won a total of 13 conference games the past two years. After the loss of their top scorer, Mi-Khida Hankins, who averaged 10.4 points per game, Providence now has six seniors and two juniors to lead the team.
Rutgers is eager for a 10th-straight trip to the NCAA Tournament. Under the direction of head coach Vivian Stringer, the Scarlet Knights finished last season with a record of 20-13. Stringer, an experienced coach, is one of only three female coaches with 850 wins under her belt. Not to mention Rutgers has five returning starters, including Khadijah Rushdan, who averaged 11.8 points per game.
Anne Donovan (2nd Year)
Jose Fernandez (12th Year)
Kim Barnes Arico (10th Year)
SETON HALL
SOUTH FLORIDA
ST. JOHN’S
Last Season: 8-22 (1-15), 16th
Last Season: 12-19 (3-13), 13th
Last Season: 22-11 (9-7), 9th
The good news for Seton Hall (8-22, 1-15 Big East) is that after finishing last in the conference last season; the only place to go is up. Secondyear coach Anne Donovan’s squad is returning all but one player from last year’s team, including Ka-Deidre Simmons who earned a spot on the 2010-11 All-Big East freshman team. Simmons averaged 7.2 points per game in 30 games.
The South Florida Bulls (12-19, 3-13 Big East) had an overall disappointing 2010-11 season but finished the year with two impressive road wins over Villanova and then No. 18 Georgetown. Head coach Jose Fernandez looks to carry the momentum into this season with the top two scorers from last season returning, Andrell Smith and Andrea Smith.
St. John’s (22-11, 9-7 Big East) are coming off a second round NCAA tournament loss to eventual Final Four Team, Stanford. The back court is led by a pair of experienced juniors, Shenneika Smith and Nadirah McKenith. McKenith was a key piece to St.John’s tournament run recording 130 assists and 276 points last season.
Quentin Hillsman (6th Year)
VILLANOVA
Last Season: 25-10 (9-7), 7th
Harry Perretta (33rd Year)
WEST VIRGINIA
Last Season: 12-19 (3-13), 14th
Last Season: 24-10 (8-8), 10th
Syracuse finished last season at 22-9 with a 9-7 conference record, good for seventh in the Big East. They finished their season in the NIT quarterfinals, where they lost to Toledo. While not being ranked, the Orange did receive votes in the preseason AP Top 25 poll. Three of last year’s starters are returning, and sixth-year coach Quentin Hillsman will try to guide the Orange back into the NCAA Tournament.
A 3-13 Big East record last year put Villanova near the bottom of the conference. Big East coaches picked the Wildcats to finish 13th this season. They will return three of their starters and eight members of last year’s team, but a tough Big East schedule will prove a challenge for the Wildcats.
The Mountaineers went an even 8-8 in the Big East last year, compiling a 22-8 regular-season record that was good enough to make it to the NCAA tournament. After an opening-round win against Houston, WVU ran into Brittney Griner and the Baylor Bears, this season’s preseason favorite. The team lost five seniors and has four true freshmen on this year’s roster.
SYRACUSE
Mike Carey (11th Year)
Page 8
Friday, November 11, 2011
Husky Hoopla
Breaking down the Huskies
Huskies are out of the spotlight
Centers — 6-foot-5 sophomore Stefanie Dolson will look to build off last season’s numbers where she scored an average of 10.2 points a game and blocked 46 shots. Dolson also earned All-Freshmen team honors playing center for the Huskies. Junior Heather Buck and freshmen Kiah Stokes will also look to do great things for UConn.
Guards — After averaging more than 13 points-pergame last season, senior guard Tiffany Hayes will lead the way for the Huskies this season. Assisting her will be Caroline Doty, who is returning after knee surgery sidelined her for the entire 2010-2011 season, sophomore Bria Hartley, who average more than 12 points per game last year, and junior Kelly Faris. Looking to make a name for herself will be freshman Brianna Banks, a 2011 McDonald’s All-American.
Andrew Callahan
Forwards — Likely the weakest spot on the court for the Huskies, the forward positions will be filled by mostly inexperienced players this season. The three returning forwards for UConn – Heather Buck, Lauren Engeln and Michala Johnson – each averaged less than 10 minutes per game last season, with Buck, who splits time between forward and center duties, leading the way at 8.5 minutes per game. On top of the three returning players, the Huskies will have Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis, who will be sporting Maya Moore’s old No. 23.
2010-2011 SEASON IN REVIEW SCHEDULE AND RESULTS – 36-2, 16-0 Big East; Big East Tournament Champions; NCAA Final Four NOVEMBER 4 GP Franklin Pierce (exh.) 10 XL Indiana Pa. (exh.) 14 GP Holy Cross 16 XL Baylor 21 at Georgia Tech WBCA Classic 26 GP Howard 27 GP Lehigh 28 GP LSU
W, 86-25 W, 81-38 W, 81-51
DECEMBER 2 5 9 19 21 28 30
at XL GP MSG XL at at
South Florida Sacred Heart Marquette Ohio State Florida State Pacific Stanford
W, 80-54 W, 86-32 W, 79-47 W, 81-50 W, 93-62 W, 85-42 L, 59-71
JANUARY 5 8 12 15 17 22 26 29 31
GP at at XL at GP at at GP
Villanova Notre Dame St. John’s Louisville North Carolina Pittsburgh Rutgers Cincinnati Duke
W, 81-35 W, 79-76 W, 84-52 W, 78-55 W, 83-57 W, 66-46 W, 63-40 W, 80-46 W, 87-51
FEBRUARY 5 8 12 14 19 22 26 28
W, 112-41 W, 100-41 W, 117-37 W, 65-64 W, 71-51
XL at at XL GP XL at GP
MARCH
DePaul West Virginia Providence Oklahoma Notre Dame Seton Hall Georgetown Syracuse
W, 89-66 W, 57-51 W, 68-38 W, 86-45 W, 78-57 W, 80-59 W, 52-42 W, 82-47
2010 Big East Championship Georgetown (QF) W, 59-43 Rutgers (SF) W, 75-51 Notre Dame (F) W, 73-64
6 7 8
XL XL XL
20 22 27 29 APRIL 3
% % ^ ^
2010 NCAA Tournament Southern Univ. (R1) W, 75-39 Temple (R2) W, 64-40 Georgetown (Sweet 16) W, 68-63 Duke (Elite Eight) W, 75-40
#
Notre Dame (Final Four) L, 63-72
Bold indicates Big East game. % - NCAA First and Second Round (Storrs, Conn.) ^ - NCAA Regionals (Philadelphia, Pa.) # - NCAA Final Four (Indianapolis, In.) GP = Gampel Pavilion; XL = XL Center; bold denotes conference game
2010-2011 FINAL STATISTICS ## 23 03 14 31 34 11 30 32 12 25
Player MOORE, Maya HAYES, Tiffany* HARTLEY, Bria* DOLSON, Stefanie* FARIS, Kelly* WALKER, Samarie* DIXON, Lorin BUCK, Heather* ENGELN, Lauren* Johnson, Michala*
GP-GS 38-38 38-38 38-34 38-36 38-38 17-1 37-4 32-1 30-0 30-0
* indicates returning letterwinner
FG-FGA 333-636 167-383 173-370 162-263 102-240 44-75 43-94 25-50 18-46 16-36
FG Pct. .524 .436 .468 .616 .425 .587 .457 .500 .391 .444
3FG-3FGA 68-177 51-146 69-176 0-1 30-97 0-0 5-25 0-0 2-7 0-1
3FG Pct. .384 .349 .392 .000 .309 .000 .200 .000 .286 .000
FT-FTA 134-159 134-173 57-78 62-76 62-82 17-32 18-30 17-21 11-15 6-11
FT Pct. .843 .775 .731 .816 .756 .531 .600 .810 .733 .545
Reb 313 174 138 233 256 99 91 63 22 45
RPG 8.2 4.6 3.6 6.1 6.7 5.8 2.5 2.0 0.7 1.5
Ast 151 139 110 60 142 13 106 9 4 4
TO 85 91 100 78 86 21 53 27 16 15
Blk 46 15 2 46 22 5 10 12 2 3
Stl 89 52 45 20 70 17 30 11 6 3
Pts 868 519 472 386 296 105 109 67 49 38
PPG 22.8 13.7 12.4 10.2 7.8 6.2 2.9 2.1 1.6 1.3
Pressure is a funny thing. Physics tells us it’s a matter of force and area, yet the growing pit we all get in our stomachs as the clock ticks tells us something entirely different. This season, the UConn women’s basketball team will have very little in the way of outside pressure, regardless of definition. For the first time in years, they’re not tabbed as the preseason No. 1, and for that matter, they’re not even in the top 3. The Huskies are currently being overlooked for the likes of Notre Dame, Baylor and Tennessee this season, and it is simply wonderful. Sure, any program in the country would rather bear the burden of a No. 1 ranking rather than any stake claim other spot. Sure, the perks that come with the title of “top dog” typically include being the best team in every game they’ll play. But it’s about time for a break. In his immediate reflection of the Huskies’ Final Four loss to Notre Dame last year, Geno Auriemma remarked that his freshmen were caught up in the “bigness of the moment.” Having witnessed the game one row up from the out-of-bounds line, I could see this plainer than the hardcourt in front of me. The pressure had indeed gotten to UConn. Of course, this happens to all of us. But for the last few years, this remarkable program hasn’t just dealt with the pressure of one Final Four appearance– but four of them. Also, try carrying the titles of reigning champions, two-time reigning champions and “best team ever.” Finally, imagine shouldering a 90-game winning streak, conference championships and taking the best shot of every single opponent for 40 minutes. No other team in the history of sport – or at least very few – has ever had to deal with the accumulation of such monumental expectations and external pressure. The reason the Huskies were able to sustain all of this force from the outside was because they matched it with pressure they put on themselves internally. Their quest for perfection in every practice, cut, pass and shot drove them and blocked out everything else. UConn did this at a remarkable level for an even more remarkable length of time, even when looking at last season. 36-2 doesn’t just happen on its’ own. However, when the spotlight got hottest and the pressure built up, there simply weren’t enough shoulders to carry the load. Auriemma’s short bench couldn’t alleviate his struggling freshmen or replace an ineffective Tiffany Hayes. Thus, the Huskies finally fell to the Fighting Irish despite the courageous efforts of four-time AllAmerican Maya Moore. But this year, they’re deeper. The spotlight has shifted elsewhere. And even if it were to return in full, any sort of outside force could be spread to more Huskies, thereby lessening the pressure on the overall team. Maya Moore is indeed gone, and the chance at winning a national title is less than it has been in recent years. But it’s not gone entirely. Never will a shot at victory disappear– especially in college sports. So, get excited for the season. Get excited for the start of a new chapter ready to be written in UConn women’s basketball history. Let’s just hope it has that same old happy, championship ending.
Andrew.J.Callahan@UConn.edu
Page 9
Friday, November 11, 2011
Husky Hoopla
Doty to make long-awaited return After missing all of last season with ACL injury, junior guard ready to make up for lost time
By Danielle Ennis Staff Writer
ASHLEY POSPISIL/The Daily Campus
Caroline Doty, seen here against Hofstra in 2009, missed last season after tearing her ACL. The redshirt junior will return to the court Sunday against Holy Cross.
On Sunday, shooting guard Caroline Doty will return to the court for the first time in a year and a half. After three ACL tears, she’ll put her rehab, attitude and body to the test. On Tuesday, she joked that no one told her how much business casual clothing she’d need for a sport that she thought she’d be in a jersey and shorts, but she’s taken the hardship of sitting on the bench with a mindset that will propel her to success this season. After finally getting cleared to play, Doty sprained her ankle just a few days before the first exhibition game. The sight looked all too familiar: sweater, flats and hair down. But she didn’t express any frustration. Instead, she provided the same off-court energy she provided to the team all last season, jumping off the bench, clapping, smiling and highfiving. “I’ll raise my voice, get people energized,” Doty said. “I want to help the young kids. We’re going to need them. I’ll do anything to help them.” Last time Doty played in uniform, she was one of the “young kids.” Doty played the first 17 games of her freshman year before her ACL tear against Syracuse. But over the span that seems to have lasted nearly a whole college career, she said she has grown. “However many games I’ve missed, however many injuries, I know everyone has a problem and things could be worse,” Doty said. “I truly believe everything happens for a reason. If I can keep that in mind and handle every day the best I can, there will be more good days than bad days. You have to have more good days than bad.” The 5-foot-10 redshirt junior has focused on the success of her team rather than the setbacks of her personal injury. “ I’ve been a part of two national championships. Not many people can even say they’ve been to the Final Four,” Doty said. “And I’ve and been part of a 90-in-a-row win streak. No one has done that.” She attributes her ability to stay positive to everyone who surrounds her. “My teammates keep me laughing all the
time, and my supporting staff of coaches and trainers have made rehab enjoyable,” Doty said. As quick as Doty is to thank everyone else, she is just as much responsible for her optimism. “While I’m here and playing, I’m going to work my hardest. My No. 1 passion is basketball, and I’m here to play basketball. I’m not a quitter. No matter what happens, I’m always going to keep working at it. I’ve learned so much off the court. ” That’s not to say it’s been easy to keep that outlook. “It’s tough when something is nagging day in and day out. But I have to deal and adjust,” Doty said, adding that, rather than feeling unfortunate, she finds herself to be lucky. “I still have the opportunity to play basketball. I’m focused in school more than ever. I feel so strong, and I’ve met so many new people from the training room,” Doty said. As much time as Doty has devoted to her own recovery, she still manages to find time for everyone else. Freshman Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis, the top-ranked recruit, cited Doty as one of her role models. “She’s taken me under her wing,” Mosqueda-Lewis said. “When I get pulled out, she’s the first one encouraging me and telling me what I need to work on.” As Mosqueda-Lewis faces her first-ever New England winter, Doty plans on buying Lewis her first beanie. “She says I need to keep my ears warm,” Mosqueda-Lewis said. Some doubt her play will be as tenacious before for fear of a re-injury. “I’ll be a little cautious, of course. I need to be smart,” Doty said. At the same time, she has no plans of playing soft. “If there’s a loose ball, I’m going after. If there’s an opportunity for a rebound, I’ll go for it. It’s a game, and you’ve got to compete to win. That’s what we all are here for.” Now, she’s more confident than ever that her knee is 100 percent and is restless to return to action. “There are some nerves,” said Doty with a smile, “but I am so ready to play.”
Danielle.Ennis@UConn.edu
BIG EAST CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE » 2010-2011 STANDINGS Conference
Team •UConn •DePaul •Notre Dame •Rutgers •Marquette •Louisville Syracuse •Georgetown •St. John’s •West Virginia Providence Pittsburgh South Florida Villanova Cincinnati Seton Hall
W-L
Pct.
16-0 13-3 13-3 11-5 10-6 10-6 9-7 9-7 9-7 8-8 6-10 5-11 3-13 3-13 2-14 1-15
1.000 .812 .812 .688 .625 .625 .563 .563 .563 .500 .375 .313 .188 .188 .125 .063
GB
– 3 3 5 6 6 7 7 7 8 10 11 13 13 14 15
2011 NCAA TOURNAMENT
Overall
W-L
Pct.
36-2 29-7 31-8 20-13 24-9 22-13 25-10 24-11 22-11 24-10 13-16 14-17 12-19 12-19 9-20 8-22
.947 .806 .795 .606 .727 .629 .714 .686 .667 .706 .448 .452 .387 .387 .310 .267
• indicates team qualified for 2010 NCAA Tournament 2010 Big East Tournament Second Round: Georgetown 61, Syracuse 60; Marquette 65, Pittsburgh 61; St. John’s 59, West Virginia 51; Louisville 69, Villanova 47 Quarterfinals: Rutgers 68, Marquette 62; UConn 59, Georgetown 43; DePaul 66, St. John’s 54; Notre Dame 63, Louisville 53 Semifinals: UConn 75, Rutgers 51; Notre Dame 71, DePaul 67 Championship: UConn 73, Notre Dame 64
First and Second Rounds – March 20-23
Philadelphia: [1] UConn 75, [16] Hartford 39 Philadelphia: [5] Georgetown 65, [12] Princeton 49 Philadelphia: [3] DePaul 56, [14] Navy 43 Dayton: [8] Marquette 68, [9] Texas 65 Dayton: [2] Notre Dame 67, [15] Utah 54 Dallas: [7] Rutgers 76, [10] Louisiana Tech 51 Dallas: [9] West Virginia 79, [8] Houston 73 Spokane: [7] Louisville 81, [10] Vanderbilt 62 Spokane: [9] St. John’s, [8] Texas Tech 50 Philadelphia: [1] UConn 64, [9] Purdue 40 Philadelphia: [5] Georgetown 79, [4] Maryland 57 Philadelphia: [3] DePaul 75, [6] Penn State 73 Dayton: [1] Tennessee 79, [8] Marquette 70 Dayton: [2] Notre Dame 49, [10] Temple 33 Dallas: [2] Texas A&M 70, [7] Rutgers 48 Dallas: [1] Baylor 82, [9] West Virginia 68 Spokane: [7] Louisville 85, [7] Xavier 75 Spokane: [1] Stanford 75, [9] St. John’s 49
Regional Semifinals & Finals – March 28-31
Philadelphia: [1] UConn 68, [5] Georgetown 63 Philadelphia: [2] Duke 70, [2] DePaul 63 Dayton: [2] Notre Dame 78, [6] Oklahoma 53 Spokane: [11] Gonzaga 76, [7] Louisville 69 Philadelphia: [1] UConn 75, [2] Duke 40 Dayton: [2] Notre Dame 73, Tennessee [1] 59
National Semifinals and Finals – April 3-5
Dayton: [2] Notre Dame 72, Philadelphia: [1] UConn 63 Dallas: [2] Texas A&M 76, Dayton: [2] Notre Dame 70
» 2012 BIG EAST TOURNAMENT All games at XL Center, Hartford
*BETV – local regional sports networks
Friday, March 2 – First Round No. 12 seed vs. No. 13 seed (noon) No. 9 seed vs. No. 16 seed (2 p.m.) No. 10 seed vs. No. 15 seed (6 p.m.) No. 11 seed vs. No. 14 seed (8 p.m.)
Saturday, March 3 – Second Round 12/13 winner vs. No. 5 seed (noon, BETV*) 9/16 winner vs. No. 8 seed (2 p.m., BETV*) 10/15 winner vs. No. 7 seed (6 p.m., BETV*) 11/14 winner vs. No. 6 seed (8 p.m., BETV*)
Sunday, March 4 – Quarterfinals
5/12/13 winner vs. No. 4 seed (noon, ESPNU) 8/9/16 winner vs. No. 1 seed (2 p.m., ESPNU) 7/10/15 winner vs. No. 2 seed (7 p.m., ESPNU) 6/11/14 winner vs. No. 3 seed (9 p.m., ESPNU)
Monday, March 5 – Semifinals 6 p.m. and 8 p.m., ESPNU
Tuesday, March 6 – Championship 7 p.m., ESPN
Friday, November 11, 2011
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Husky Hoopla
Freshman has massive shoes to fill By Dan Agabiti Senior Staff Writer
ED RYAN/The Daily Campus
Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis, here in UConn’s 89-30 win over Assumption on Nov. 3, will take Maya Moore’s spot.
The expectations for 2011 ESPNU’s highest-ranked recruit, who will be coming to women’s basketball’s most successful program of the last 10 years, were already high enough. Those expectations increased exponentially when she took UConn legend and recent graduate Maya Moore’s number, 23. For the 6-foot forward, pressure is not something to shy away from. Instead, Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis considers it a good challenge and something she looks forward to. “It’s exciting to play for the program,” Mosqueda-Lewis said. “A lot of people don’t get a chance to be on a team. Most people aren’t contending for a national championship every year.” Mosqueda-Lewis comes to Storrs from Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, Calif. Mater Dei has a rich history of successful athletes at the collegiate level, including USC quarterbacks Matt Leinart and Matt Barkley and Hawaii’s Colt Brennan. In her days at Mater Dei, MosquedaLewis had no shortage of accomplishments. Last year, her team won the Fab-50 National Title as the best high school women’s basketball team in the country. It was the second year in a row that her school won the award. She also earned the Gatorade National Player of the Year award last season. She was the first California player to do so in 21 years. Legendary center Lisa Leslie of Morningside High School in Inglewood last won the award in 1990. One of the things that impressed scouts about Mosqueda-Lewis was her maturity. It is common for her to pass up shots when
a teammate is open for a better look. Aside from maturity, she demonstrates an incredible ability to defend and a high level of offensive versatility. Outside of basketball, Mosqueda-Lewis said she loves cooking, and that her favorite thing to do when she’s not playing basketball is sleep. At some point in her life, she would love the chance to take on former Husky great Sue Bird in a one-on-one game. As a native of sunny Southern California, the change in weather has caused her to get used to wearing heavy jackets more frequently. “It’s not been warm,” Mosqueda-Lewis said. “But I finally got a winter coat. I wish there were more days like [Tuesday], but I know there are few left. She said the snowstorm that occurred the weekend before Halloween was the first time she physically saw snow fall from the sky. For her teammates, it was all too common, but Mosqueda-Lewis thought it was cool to see. “That was really pretty,” she said. “My teammates said that’s not that cool, but I’ve never seen it.” So far this season, the pressure has not gotten to her. In her first 19 minutes of play, she scored 14 points, going 4-7 on 3-pointers. Mosqueda-Lewis fits in perfectly with the Huskies’ team mentality of practicing and playing hard. She’s ready to play and take on the highest level of competition that the NCAA has to offer. Auriemma typically recruits players who are winners, and Mosqueda-Lewis is no exception. “We’re all winners. It’s in our heads,” Mosqueda-Lewis said.
Daniel.Agabiti@UConn.edu
Lone senior Hayes hopes to go out on top By Ryan Tepperman Staff Writer
ASHLEY POSPISIL/The Daily Campus
Tiffany Hayes, seen here in UConn’s Final Four loss to Notre Dame, will look to make a return trip her senior season.
When Tiffany Hayes arrived at UConn in the summer of 2008, she was part of a loaded four-member recruiting class that included top-ranked prospect Elena Delle Donne, No. 10 Caroline Doty and No. 31 Heather Buck. Three years later, after Buck and Doty used medical redshirts and Delle Donne transferred to Delaware, Hayes is now the lone senior on the Huskies’ roster. Throughout her first three seasons, Hayes has been surrounded by both talent and experience. As a freshman, she played in the same backcourt as All-American point guard Renee Montgomery. During her sophomore year, she had National Player of the Year center Tina Charles to dump the ball to down low, and last season she had Maya Moore, a four-time All-American and the program’s all-time leading scorer, to carry the bulk of the load. “I’ve always had help,” Hayes said after Tuesday’s practice, although she added that she doesn’t think it’s changed that much. “I’ve had help every year,” Hayes said. “It’s just the fact that I’m the only senior, I’m the oldest.” With Moore gone, the Huskies, who were ranked No. 4 in the preseason poll and picked to finish second in the Big East behind Notre Dame, will look to new faces to shoulder more responsibility on the court. When asked on Tuesday who he thought those players would be, coach Geno Auriemma had a couple players in mind. “I would say the two people who have added more to their roles would be Tiffany [Hayes] and Kelly [Faris],” Auriemma said. “I think the two of them have taken on a much greater role in
every area, offensively and defensively. I really believe that a lot of our offense is going to come from those two.” Hayes put that increased role on display last Thursday in UConn’s 89-30 exhibition win over Assumption, a Divison II school out the Northeast-10 conference. The 5-foot-9 combo guard scored 18 points on 8-of-14 shooting, stole the ball four times and dished out a game-high 10 assists. “[She’s] much better in making decisions when to do what,” Auriemma said. “As she gets in the lane it’s way more under control… It’s more, ‘I’m going to get in there and make a play, but if not I can be a playmaker,’ and that’s been the biggest difference that I’ve seen.” On Tuesday, Hayes agreed with much of her coach’s assessment. “I haven’t been fouling as much, or getting in there and not knowing where to go,” she said. “Just lately in practice I’ve been finding the open 3-point player, or Stef or whatever post player’s been in there. So just the fact that I can get in there and do that, I think that’s a big change from last year.” Hayes, a 2010-11 Big East First Team selection, enters her senior campaign with career averages of 10.7 points (1,242 overall), 4.0 rebounds (459), 3.1 assists (357), 1.2 steals (136) and 142 total 3-pointers. She’s currently 457 points, 116 assists and nine 3-pointers shy of breaking into UConn’s top 10 in each category. While Hayes’ personal goals may have changed – she listed consistency as her main one for this year – she said her goal for the team hasn’t wavered. “Of course [it’s] a National Championship,” she said.
Ryan.Tepperman@UConn.edu
Friday, November 11, 2011
THE HUSKIES 3
12
Tiffany Hayes G – Senior Lakeland, Fla.
Lauren Engeln F - Sophomore Laguna Hills, Calif.
Page 11
Husky Hoopla
5
13
Caroline Doty
G – Redshirt Junior
Doylestown, Pa.
Brianna Banks G – Freshman Newnan, Ga.
THE OPPOSITION November Sun 13 Holy Cross (GP) Sun 15 Pacific (GP) Fri 25 Fairleigh Dickinson (GP)
21
The team that ended the Huskies’ 89-game win streak last season makes the trip up to Connecticut.
Sat 26 Buffalo (GP) Sun 27 Dayton (GP) Wed 30 Towson (XL) December Fri 9 at Seton Hall
14
25
G – Sophomore North Babylon, N.Y.
Michala Johnson F – Sophomore Bellwood, Ill.
23
31
Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis F – Freshman Anaheim Hills, Calif.
Stefanie Dolson C – Sophomore Port Jervis, N.Y.
Redshirt Junior 32 G –Stonington, Conn.
34
Kelly Faris G – Junior Planfield, Ind.
18 Sun
Thu 29 Fairfield (GP) January Wed 4 West Virginia (XL)
41
Kiah Stokes C – Freshman Marion, Iowa
Shea Ralph
Assistant Coach 4th season
Chris Dailey
Assoc. Head Coach 27th season
Marisa Moseley Assistant Coach 3rd season
The GENO File
Geno Auriemma Head Coach 27th season
Overall record: 771-124 (.861), all at UConn National titles: 7 (1995, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009, 2010) Big East titles: 33 (regular season: 17 – ‘89 - 91, ‘94 - ‘04, ‘07, ‘08, ‘09, ‘10, ‘11; postseason: 16 – ‘89, ‘91, ‘94, ‘95, ‘96, ‘97, ‘98, ‘99, ‘00, ‘01, ‘02, ‘05, ‘06, ‘08, ‘09, ‘10, ‘11.)
7 p.m.
CPTV
7:30 p.m Time 7 p.m
CPTV TV CPTV
at Notre Dame (Purcell Pavilion), 4 p.m., CBS UConn will look to avenge their loss to the Fighting Irish in last season’s national semifinal. Notre Dame was also picked to finish ahead of the Huskies in the Big East conference.
7 SAT
Tues 10 Providence (XL) Sat 14 at Villanova
7 p.m. 2 p.m.
CPTV CPTV
North Carolina (Gampel Pavilion), 7 p.m., ESPN2
The Lady Tar Heels will battle both the Huskies and rowdy Storrs crowd in this nationally televised contest.
Thu 19 Cincinnati (GP) Sat 21 at DePaul Wed 25 at Syracuse Sat 28 USF (XL)
30 MON
CPTV CPTV CPTV TV WTIC
at Baylor, 2:30 p.m., ESPNU Brittney Griner and the Lady Bears welcome UConn to Waco in a potential Final Four matchup. Griner has yet to get the best of the Huskies.
16 MON Heather Buck
7:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 7 p.m. Time 7 p.m.
vs. Texas A&M (XL Center), 7 p.m., ESPN2 The Huskies host the defending NCAA national champion Aggies at the Jimmy V Classic in what could’ve been the title game matchup last year.
Wed 21 at College of Charleston
Bria Hartley
TV CPTV CPTV CPTV
vs. Stanford (XL Center), 7:30 p.m., ESPNU
MoN
6 TUES
Time 2 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m. 8 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m.
CPTV CPTV WTIC WTIC
at Duke (Cameron Indoor Stadium), 7 p.m., ESPN2
The Huskies will have to fend off the Blue Devils and the Cameron Crazies in this late-January game.
February Sat 4 Rutgers (GP) Tue 7 at Louisville Sat 11 Georgetown (GP)
13 MON Sat 18 Tue 21 Sat 25 Mon 27
Time 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 4 p.m.
TV CPTV CBSSN CPTV
at Oklahoma (Lloyd Noble Center), 9 p.m., ESPN2 Big 12 heavyweight Oklahoma hosts UConn in Norman Okla. The Huskies will try to pull of the road win against the Sooners. St. John’s (GP) at Pittsburgh at Marquette Notre Dame (XL)
7 p.m. 7 p.m. 5 p.m. 9 p.m.
CPTV CPTV CPTV ESPN2
GP – Gampel Pavilion, Storrs; XL – XL Center, Hartford; italics indicates Big East conference game.
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Friday, November 11, 2011
Out of the spotlight - Callahan, Pg. 8
HAYES’ LAST DANCE Mosqueda-Lewis dons No. 23 ... Pg. 10 Doty returns from injury... Pg. 9
Breaking down the Big East... Pg.10