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Essentials Inside The Story

  • Amid SEC coaches' complaints, Geno Auriemma believes the competition is about the teams and not the conferences
  • SEC coaches are unhappy with their grueling schedules
  • Auriemma is still hungry for another title

While the NCAA world is preparing for March Madness, conferences in it have been busier talking about their grueling schedule. As always, the SEC leads that conversation. Being one of the toughest conferences, the team knows what they are up for. Still, many coaches are not happy.

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Of course, a schedule can ultimately affect their chances to go into the Big One. Amid all the bedlam, one of the most tenured head coaches out of Storrs, Geno Auriemma, has given his verdict.

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“You play in your conference for a reason,” Auriemma told the media ahead of the Big East quarterfinals against Georgetown. “It’s like, ‘this is my neighborhood. Why live in a tough neighborhood?’ Well, then you should move, and you’d have an easier path, right?

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“Who gives you a right to play for a national championship when you can barely finish 0.500 in your own league? Isn’t the national championship a reward for having a great year? It’s not a reward for playing in a great conference. ‘Hey, we’re an NCAA tournament team.’ Really? You’re 14-13? You’re lucky you made your own conference tournament!”

Auriemma has spent 41 years at UConn. Apart from seeing the highs and lows of being in the business, he has also experienced what changing conferences feels like. The Huskies were the original Big East founders but moved to the AAC in 2013 after the formation of the New Big East. However, they returned to the conference in 2019, having to pay $10 million in buyout fees and wait 27 months, according to the bylaws, along with other difficulties.

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For one, Auriemma has made his mark in both conferences. So, for him, it all boils down to the teams and not the conferences.

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“Some conferences—what was their record last year in the NCAA tournament? Go check out what their record was in the first and second rounds,” he added. “I’m not accusing anybody of anything. Just saying, I just think sometimes people put too much stock in what conference you’re playing in, what your record was, who you played against, and all this other stuff.”

The teams Auriemma is subtly referring to include Tennessee, which finished 8-8 in the conference and 16-13 overall after a seven-game losing streak, including a loss to Alabama in the second round of the SEC tournaments. The other team is Ole Miss, which also finished 8-8 in the SEC but 23-11 overall after a loss to Texas. Interestingly, coaches from these programs have come up with their own complaints over the season.

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Do Caldwell and Coach Yo’s complaints have a basis?

“Yeah, I do,” Kim Caldwell said when asked if Tennessee deserves to make the NCAA Tournament. “I think we’ve played the hardest schedule in the country. I think the majority of that came in February, but we have significant wins and I think that we hope to get in.”

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Ole Miss Rebels boss Yolett McPhee-McCuin took it to another level, suggesting the SEC shouldn’t even have a conference tournament to begin with, “because all we do in the SEC is beat each other up.

“And if you look at the history of our league, we always have anywhere from four to five to six teams in the Sweet 16 because this is a really good league. But we’re in here fighting night in and night out.”

The major metrics for NCAA tournament spots rely on the NET rating. It weighs the strength of schedule, bad losses, Wins Above Bubble, among nine other factors, to finalize the at-large teams. 

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Last year, the Big 10 set the record for the most teams chosen in the NCAA tournament with 12, including No. 1 seed UCLA. The SEC was close behind at 10 teams, while the ACC sent 8. UConn’s Big East got only two. Out of which, the SEC went 18-2 in the first two rounds. Near-perfect record. Six teams made the Sweet 16, and two of them were SEC teams (South Carolina and Texas). 

So, the results did line up in favor of the SEC coaches, especially for Coach Yo and Caldwell.

Her side was 10-6 in the SEC, ranking 6th, but still reached the Sweet 16, eventually losing to top seed UCLA. Tennessee finished 8-8 in the SEC last year. Yet, they went all the way to the Sweet 16 as well, losing to Texas. 

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Even if Geno Auriemma is somewhat wrong about his facts, it doesn’t mean his point is not valid. The debate isn’t limited to women’s basketball either. Across college hoops, similar arguments about conference strength and tournament access are emerging. A mid-American team in Miami (OH) is having an unbeaten season in men’s college basketball. Yet, their NCAA tournament place has been called into question. 

To which their AD has fiercely battled against this, calling the NCAA system “rigged” in favor of the top teams. While that is from the perspective of a mid-major, and UConn is anything but that, the common point is that the system needs some change.

They need to find a balance in weighing the NET and the metrics, along with the eye test. For now, Auriemma would have to make do with the current system. He himself has a confirmed bid in sight by winning the conference tournament. 

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Geno Auriemma Focusing On Himself Ahead Of Big East Tournament

UConn is certainly the best team in the country. A 31-0 record with the best defense in the country and one of the best offenses. With Sarah Strong, they have the Athletic Player of the Year and the best player in the country by a mile (arguably). Azzi Fudd is shining as a senior. What do they need to change? According to Geno Auriemma, there are still some ‘tweaks’ to be made.

“I mean, at this time of year, we can tweak a couple things and know you’re getting ready to play teams for a third time,” Auriemma said. “Most things are going to be exactly the same in some ways. You can only change so much at this time of the year. Mostly it was just about us facing us, not necessarily worrying about anybody else.”

He further emphasized that this tournament was very important to them and that they “want to win it as much as we ever have.”

The top-seeded team will face Azzi Fudd’s mother’s team, Georgetown, in the quarterfinals on Saturday at noon in Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville. The No. 8 seed beat No. 9 seed Butler, 62-58, in the first round. UConn will face the winner of Marquette and Creighton in the semifinals if it goes past Georgetown. 

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Written by

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Soham Kulkarni

1,250 Articles

Soham Kulkarni is a WNBA Writer at EssentiallySports, where he focuses on data-backed reporting and performance analysis. A Sports Management graduate, he examines how spacing in efficiency zones, shot selection, and statistical shifts drive results. His work goes beyond the numbers on the scoreboard, helping readers see how underlying trends affect player efficiency and the evolving strategies of the women’s game. With a detail-oriented and analytical approach, Soham turns complex data into accessible narratives that bring clarity to the fastest-moving moments of basketball. His reporting captures not just what happened, but why it matters, showing fans how small efficiency gains, defensive structures, and tempo shifts can alter outcomes. At ES, he provides a sharper, stats-first lens on the WNBA’s present and future.

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Snigdhaa Jaiswal

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