Log In


Reset Password
  • MENU
    Sports
    Saturday, May 04, 2024

    UConn men looking to take care of business against Alabama

    UConn players practices ahead of a Final Four college basketball game in the NCAA Tournament, Friday, April 5, 2024, in Glendale, Ariz. UConn plays Alabama on Saturday. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
    UConn head coach Dan Hurley watches his team practice ahead of a Final Four college basketball game in the NCAA Tournament, Friday, April 5, 2024, in Glendale, Ariz. UConn plays Alabama on Saturday. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson )
    UConn forward Alex Karaban practices ahead of a Final Four college basketball game in the NCAA Tournament, Friday, April 5, 2024, in Glendale, Ariz. UConn plays Alabama on Saturday. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson )

    Glendale, Ariz. – Talk of winning another national championship started shortly after raising the program’s fifth title banner last spring.

    UConn wasn’t satisfied despite its success.

    And the Huskies are still not satisfied after advancing to the Final Four in consecutive years for the first time in program history to set up a national championship semifinal date with fourth-seeded Alabama (25-11). Game time is 8:49 p.m. Saturday at State Farm Stadium.

    None of their program-record setting success and winning an NCAA record 10 straight tournament games by double digits will really matter much to them if they fall short of their goal of becoming the first team since Florida in 2007 to repeat.

    “Coming into the year, I don’t think people on the outside expected us to play this well,” coach Dan Hurley said on Friday. “I don’t know if you stuck a lie detector on me if I thought we’d play this well, especially in a tournament that’s so hard. It’s so hard to advance in this tournament and get to a Final Four.

    “The best programs historically have a hard time getting to a Final Four in recent history. I get it. We’ve played great. The thing about this tournament, none of that matters on Saturday. We’re going to have a two-hour game versus Alabama. If we’re not on point, we won’t play on Monday.”

    Odds heavily favor that if top-seeded UConn (35-3) plays at its usual elite level, it will advance to Monday’s title game for a matchup with either Purdue or North Carolina State.

    Only three teams have found a way to defeat UConn this season. The Huskies have lost just one game since late December and racked up dominating win after dominating win.

    “When we’re on, this is an extremely amazing team,” senior guard Hassan Diarra said.

    In recent weeks, some media members began referring to this tournament as the UConn Invitational.

    That should sound familiar to UConn fans. The 1999 NCAA tournament was called the Duke Invitational, but the heavily-favored Blue Devils lost to the Huskies, 77-74, in the title game.

    Alabama is looking to pull off the upset in the program’s first Final Four appearance. The Crimson Tide knocked off No. 1 seed North Carolina during their impressive March Madness run.

    “We’ve been the underdogs through this tournament,” Alabama coach Nate Oats said. “Nobody expected us to be here at this point. Last year we had the No. 1 overall seed. … It’s a one-game elimination tournament. The best team doesn’t always win. That happened last year.

    “We’ve been able to make a run now and we’re going to get our team ready for Saturday night. We know we have a daunting task ahead of us.”

    UConn’s daunting task is trying to contain a high-powered, uptempo Alabama, which averages 90.6 points per game and regularly bombs away from 3-point range, sinking an average of 11 per game. Senior Mark Sears, an All-American guard, leads a potent attack with 21.5 points per game.

    “That’s probably one of the most important things that we have to do is limit their threes,” redshirt sophomore Alex Karaban said. “If they get hot from three, it’s a dangerous game for us and that’s something that we don’t want to get into with them, a scoring battle.

    “... It’s hard playing those types of teams that just run up and down and look for threes.”

    The Huskies don’t want to make it a perimeter shooting contest. They’ve struggled from beyond the arc during the postseason, converting just 28 percent in four tournament games.

    But they can do something that Alabama can’t, and that’s play lock-down defense. The Huskies are allowing a stingy 53.5 points in the last four games and the Crimson Tide 81.5 points.

    UConn has an edge in another area, and that’s experience of playing and succeeding on the Final Four stage.

    The Huskies own an NCAA record 10-1 all-time in Final Four games.

    “Hopefully, history repeats itself,” said graduate transfer Cam Spencer, whose birthday is Saturday. “The fact of the matter is, we have to do what we’ve done well all year. That’s what has gotten us to this point.

    “We’re focused on Alabama and doing the things we need to do in that game to take care of business and hopefully get our first win.”

    Freshman Stephon Castle, who’s been UConn’s defensive stopper, is ready for his first Final Four game.

    His older teammates and coaching staff drove home the message about the program’s national championship standard the moment he first stepped on Storrs campus.

    “I feel we belong in the Final Four,” Castle said. “I feel like they set that standard last year and we’re kind of upholding it.”

    g.keefe@theday.com

    UCONN vs. ALABAMA

    Game: National championship semifinal

    Location: State Farm Stadium, Glendale, Az. (71,000)

    Tip time: 8:49 p.m. (TBS)

    Records: Top-seeded UConn 35-3, No. 4 Alabama 25-11

    Series: UConn leads, 2-0, winning 82-67 in Nov. 2022 in the Phil Knight Invitational in Portland and 87-71 in 2004 NCAA Elite Eight.

    Tournament path: UConn beat No. 16 Stetson, 91-52, No. 9 Northwestern, 75-58, No. 5 San Diego State, 82-52, No. 3 Illinois, 77-52; Alabama beat No. 13 College of Charleston, 109-96, No. 12 Grand Canyon, 72-61, No. 1 North Carolina, 89-87, and No. 6 Clemson, 89-82.

    Probable starters, UConn, 6-5 grad guard Tristen Newton (15 pts, 6.7 rebs, 6.1 assists), 6-4 grad guard Cam Spencer (14.4 pts, 4.7 rebs), 6-6 fr. guard Stephon Castle (10.7 pts, 4.7 rebs), 6-8 r-so. forward Alex Karaban (13.5 pts, 4.9 rebs), 7-2 so. center Donovan Clingan (12.9 pts, 7.5 rebs, 2.4 blks)

    Alabama, 6-1 sr. guard Mark Sears (21.5 pts, 4.1 rebs, 4.1 assists), 6-3 grad guard Aaron Estrada (13.5 pts, 5.5 rebs, 4.7 assists), 6-6 so. guard Rylan Griffen (11.3 pts, 3.5 rebs), 6-10 sr. forward Nick Pringle (7 pts, 5.3 rebs), 6-11 sr. forward Grant Nelson (11.7 pts, 5.6 rebs)

    Noteworthy: UConn is making its seventh Final Four appearance, Alabama its first. … The Huskies are an NCAA record 10-1 all-time in Final Four games, losing to Michigan State, 82-73, in the 2009 national semifinals in Detroit. … An All-SEC first team selection, Sears is averaging 24.7 points in tournament play. … Alabama senior Latrell Wrightsell Jr. (head injury) could return to action after missing the last two games. He averages 9.0 points and 3.0 rebs. … Alabama has scored at least 100 points in a game 10 times, allowing that mark three times. It leads the SEC in scoring 90.6) but ranks last in scoring defense (81.10. … Hot: Clingan leads UConn in scoring and rebounding through four tourney games. Cold: UConn is shooting 28% from three during the tournament. … Newton needs 12 assists to pass Marcus Williams (243, 2004-05) and move into 2nd place in the school’s single season record list. … Huskies are 31-1 vs. non-conference foes the last two seasons. … In the AP top 25, UConn is No. 1, Alabama No. 19. … UConn is 6-0 in NCAA tournament games in the state of Arizona. … Huskies are 69-32 all-time in March Madness action. … Up next: If UConn advances, it will face either No. 1 Purdue or No. 11 NC State in the national title game on Monday.

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.