UConn Huskies superstar Paige Bueckers is currently six points away from reaching the 2,000-point mark in her NCAA Women's Basketball career. Some expected tha
WNBA legend and four-time champion Sue Bird expressed her thoughts about the rumors that longtime UConn Huskies head coach Geno Auriemma is leaving.
Gov. Ned Lamont's State of the State address included a mention of CT's basketball superiority and UConn women's basketball coach Geno Auriemma.
The UConn Huskies women's basketball team improved to 16-2 in the 2024-25 NCAA season after they cruised to a 71-45 victory over the St. John's Red Storm on Jan
Geno Auriemma and Paige Bueckers' UConn came up short in last season's NCAA tournament but made history in ticket sales. On Wednesday, the UConn Huskies disclosed that it garnered $3.
Geno Auriemma is used to all this by now: the star players, the big crowds cheering on Connecticut at road games, the continuing dominance of the Big East. But even the winningest coach in college basketball history — men or women,
Dawn Staley became the highest paid NCAA women's basketball coach in history after signing a contract extension, moving her ahead of UConn's Geno Auriemma.
Former Bishop Kenrick guard Geno Auriemma is now the all-time winningest coach in NCAA basketball history. If that sentence required a double-take, you’re likely not alone. Even after his 40 years of dominance in women’s college basketball at the University of Connecticut,
UConn women's basketball redshirt senior Aubrey Griffin will make her 2024-25 season debut Sunday after recovering from a Jan. 2024 ACL injury.
A court settlement that would require colleges – for the first time – to pay athletes billions for their play is not going to settle the debate over amateurism in
UConn's prodigious guard Paige Bueckers was on the cusp of 2,000 career points. The post UConn Community Turns On Geno Auriemma Over His Insecurities Around Paige Bueckers appeared first on EssentiallySports.
Many in the college space view the idea of athletes as employees as an existential threat, claiming athletic departments will have to make massive cuts to programs if forced to put hundreds of players across all sports on the payroll, earning scholarships, retirement benefits and potentially NIL money.