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    UConn Women's Basketball
    Monday, May 06, 2024

    Huskies' Samuelson looks to end shooting slump

    Storrs — Nobody has to read off the numbers to Katie Lou Samuelson. The highly-motivated leading scorer for the top-ranked UConn women's basketball team is fully aware that connecting on shots has become more of a chore in the last couple of weeks.

    Samuelson had connected on at least one 3-pointer in each of the season's first 21 games culminating with a streak of 13 games with multiple treys in a game. Both of those runs ended after the first meeting of the season with Temple. With the Huskies preparing to host the 23rd-ranked Owls on Wednesday night at the XL Center (7 p.m., SNY), Samuelson is looking to get back into rhythm offensively.

    Twice in the last five games she failed to make a 3-pointer as she is shooting 32 percent from long distance during that span. For many players, that shooting percentage number would be a cause for celebration, but not for a player shooting better than 43 percent before hitting this recent cold spell.

    Samuelson spent the much of Tuesday's practice working on going to various places on the court with more of her shots coming inside the 3-point line.

    "I worked on it at the beginning of the season of doing different things to create my shot," Samuelson said. "I have to consistently do that in practice because once I get away from doing it every day, you can see it in the games that I stand around more but when I doing it in practice I can feel myself doing it more in games.

    "I have to be able to do other things even if I don't score. Sometimes if I don't score, I don't impact the game as much as I could. Missing shots kind of comes and goes, I have been through this before in high school, There are definitely periods where I haven't shot as well. There are times when I shoot well in practice and in games they don't fall. I have been trying to get shots up but I am not too caught up with it because I know I will keep missing if I think about it too much."

    UConn is expected to be without fourth-leading scorer Kia Nurse for at least the next two games as she rests her tender right ankle. Nurse recently moved ahead of Samuelson for the team lead in 3-point percentage and her absence on the perimeter makes it somewhat easier for teams to throw an additional defender at Samuelson. That is what Tulane did in Saturday's three-point loss to the Huskies which is the smallest margin of victory for UConn in the four seasons of the American Athletic Conference. It was the Huskies' 101st straight win.

    "When you are a really good shooter, you are only as good as the people around you so if you have the ability to put three other people on the perimeter or two anyway where they have to be concerned with those players," UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. "All of a sudden you are being concerned with a player being guarded 1 on 1 by everybody and you can figure out a million ways to get Lou shots. When there is nobody else making any shots on the perimeter, now Lou is being guarded by three guys. How do we help Lou? Well, the other guys make some shots."

    Auriemma knows that Temple has three guards who have scored more than 1,000 points and the Owls could make things challenging without Nurse, who he considers to be the team's top perimeter defender. UConn hasn't played in back to back games decided by single digits since the 2007-08 season and it remains to be seen if the Owls can make the Huskies work as hard to remain undefeated as Tulane did.

    "We couldn't be playing a worse team for us in our league than playing Temple in that they may have the quickest, toughest guards to guard 1 on 1 than anybody in the league and they are as good as any guards in the country at getting their own shots," Auriemma said. "They have a lot of freedom to get shots. Being down a guard and being down our best defensive guard is not exactly the ideal way to go into it. We have to figure out a way to compensate for that, play to our strengths and see what happens."

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