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Storrs, Conn.
As faux $100 bills adorned with coach Geno Auriemma’s face rained down on the sellout crowd at UConn after the team’s 100th consecutive win, the Hall of Fame coach waxed poetic about the Huskies’ past and present.
It’s the future, though, that he’s most interested in.
With 100 straight victories in the books, Auriemma and his top-ranked Huskies can turn their attention to the more important streak — a fifth consecutive national championship and 12th overall.
“Tonight they carried the torch across the finish line to 100, so to speak, they took the last baton and crossed the finish line,” Auriemma said after the 66-55 win over South Carolina on Monday. “If we win the national championship it is all theirs start to finish. I want to focus on trying to do that instead of worrying about all this other stuff. Don’t get me wrong, it is a lot of fun, everybody gets a kick out of it, our players, our former players, the fans, so I think that is great.”
UConn’s past was out in full force Monday night. Sitting a few rows behind the Huskies’ bench was UConn women’s basketball royalty with former greats Sue Bird, Tina Charles, Morgan Tuck and Breanna Stewart watching the milestone win.
They paved the way for the current success, including Tuck and Stewart being a huge part of the first 75 victories of this current streak.
Auriemma’s main priority with this team all along is to have them cut down the nets in Dallas in early April. He built this year’s schedule — as he does many practices — to test his team, expecting them to fail before solving a challenge. He figured they would take some lumps early before hopefully coming together to make another March run.
The funny thing is, the Huskies haven’t failed yet,
“I’m probably the most surprised person in the country,” Auriemma said. “I set the schedule up so that (the streak continuing) wouldn’t happen, and it has happened. I’m flabbergasted to a certain extent.”
If that streak continues, they’ll enter the NCAAs with 107 consecutive wins.
Six wins in the NCAAs would get UConn a 12th national championship. Then talk will turn to how long can the Huskies keep the run going?
UConn returns six of its seven rotation players and adds transfers Azura Stevens and Batouly Camara. Throw in the nation’s top recruiting class and the Huskies could break Wayland Baptist’s record of 131 consecutive wins set from 1953-58.
Then what? 150 straight? 200 in a row?
Those numbers may seem crazy, but it’s tough to bet against these Huskies right now.
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