Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Huskies Breeze to Fifth Straight American Title



By Bob Phillips                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Photos By Bill Harper
The UConn Huskies are champions... again!
UNCASVILLE—Can you say “Five-Peat?” Indeed, at this point, it’s legitimate to wonder if the
UConn women’s basketball team will ever lose a game in American Athletic Conference play. After missing the conference tourney semifinals, senior forward Gabby Williams turned in one of her patented solid overall performances to lead the Huskies to a 70-54 victory over the No. 19-ranked University of South Florida in the American Athletic Conference title game before 7,501 fans at the Mohegan Sun Arena on Tuesday. The game was televised nationally on ESPN2, and streamed on ESPN3 and WatchESPN.

Napheesa Collier and Katie Lou Sameulson each had 12 points each for the Huskies, while Azura Stevens came off the bench to pour in 13 points. USF’s Kitija Laksa led all scorers with 26 points. She was the only Bull to score in double digits, however.

USF's Kitija Laksa led all scorers with 26 points,
but was the only Bull in double digits.
Williams had spent the entire game on the bench during UConn's semifinal drubbing Cincinnati on Monday after tweaking her left hip—an injury that has been bothering her all season—in the Huskies' quarterfinal win over Tulane on Sunday. It was UConn coach Geno Auriemma’s decision to give her the night off. Williams, however, was committed to making a splash in the finals. And that she certainly did, putting up 19 points, grabbing seven boards, dishing out six assists, and adding five steals for good measure.

“[The decision to play] was made when I woke up this morning,” said Williams. “I knew that if I was going to make the decision to play, I would have to go out there and attack it. I didn't want to show I'm halfway there. I was going to play like I always do.”

Geno Auriemma had nothing but praised by the effort given by Williams. “It was hard to take her out tonight,” said the Hall-of-Fame coach.

Stevens earned tournament MVP honors in leading the undefeated Huskies to their 32nd straight victory. She became UConn’s first reserve player to win MVP since Charde Houston did it in 2008, when the Huskies played in The Big East.

Lou for two! Samuelson popped in 12
“We don't see Azura as someone who doesn't start for us,” Auriemma explained. “She's the same as anyone else in the starting lineup. We choose to start a smaller lineup, but if we ever wanted to change it wouldn't be because we didn't like the performance of someone else, it would be because we wanted a different look. We have a starting six.”

This was the fourth straight year that these teams met for the AAC title. South Florida lost the first three meetings by an average of 32 points and has never beaten UConn in 26 all-time meetings. Then again, no one has ever beaten the Huskies conference play since The American was formed in 2013. Overall, UConn is 101-0, including 15-0 in championship tournament play.

The Huskies led 23-20 early in the second quarter as the Bulls were able to slow down the game, but the vaunted UConn “D” allowed South Florida to score just three more points for the rest of the half. Katie Lou Samuelson's three-pointer just before the buzzer staked UConn to a 14-point advantage at intermission.

“I thought we got out to a good start out of the gate,” said South Florida coach Jose Fernandez who broke Auriemma’s four-year reign as the AAC’s Coach of the Year. This even though the Bulls were 0-for-3 vs. the Huskies this season, including an embarrassing 100-49 spanking at the Sun Dome in Tampa on Jan. 3. “For us, Connecticut closed that first quarter and closed the second quarter,” he continued. “Look at final minute of each quarter. [You’ve got to] hand it to them, the way they closed the two quarters.''
Crystal Dangerfield gets a high five from Samuelson for a job well done.

The Bulls scored the first four points of the second half to close to within 10, but a 7-0 Husky run put UConn up by 17. And that, folks, was pretty much all she wrote.

Not Such a Charitable Stripe
It took just over 38 minutes for South Florida to get its first attempts at the foul line. Laksa hit both attempts with 1:41 left in the game. Meanwhile, the Huskies were 8-for-13 from the charity stripe.

Bomb’s Away!
Laksa set a new USF record for three-pointers in a single season with 121. The old mark, 117, was set by Janae Stokes in the 2008-09 campaign.

Models of Perfection
This will be the ninth time that the Huskies will enter The Dance unbeaten. UConn has six undefeated seasons on its resume, as well as two more undefeated regular season and conference tournaments, only to lose in the NCAA Tournament—including last year’s loss to Mississippi State in the national semifinals. The Huskies’ undefeated national championship seasons were in 1995, 2002, 2009, 2010, 2014 and 2016.

This year, the Huskies will be seeded No. 1 overall in the tournament as the only other unbeaten regular season team, Mississippi State, was topped by South Carolina in the SEC championship game. The Huskies drummed the Gamecocks, 83-58, in Columbia, SC, on Feb. 1. They will most likely commence play in the Albany Region.
—With Staff Reports

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