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UConn Huskies
Connecticutlogo
School Name: University of Connecticut
Location: Storrs, CT
Arena: Harry A. Gampel Pavilion
Capacity: 10,167
Conference: Big East
Head coach: Dan Hurley

The UConn Huskies, also known as the Connecticut Huskies, represent the University of Connecticut, in Storrs, Connecticut, in NCAA Division I men's basketball. The Huskies joined the Big East Conference in July 2020 after seven seasons in the American Athletic Conference. "UConn", long used as a short form for both the university and its athletic program, became the official athletic brand in the 2013–14 school year.

The Huskies have won 5 NCAA Tournament Championships (1999, 2004, 2011, 2014, and 2023), which ties the program for fourth-most all-time. The Huskies have also won seven Big East Tournament Championships and ten Big East regular season titles. Numerous players have gone on to achieve professional success after their time at UConn, including Ray Allen, Richard Hamilton, Kemba Walker, Ben Gordon and Rudy Gay. The Huskies have participated in 6 NCAA Final Fours (tied for 10th all time) and appeared in the NCAA tournament 36 times. The team has been a number one seed in the NCAA Tournament 5 times, most recently in 2009. Their most recent championship was in 2023.

History[]

Early History[]

Men's basketball at UConn began in 1901 with a single game played by Connecticut Agricultural College against Windham High School in January of that year. The college team won, and by 1903 basketball was a varsity sport.

Hugh Greer Era[]

After graduating from the Connecticut Agricultural College, former player Hugh Greer returned to his alma mater as a freshman coach. He was later named head coach of the Huskies six games into the 1946–47 season. Greer led Connecticut to a perfect 12–0 mark for the remainder of his first season. Posting a record of 16–2, this was the best single season finish in school history to that point. UConn won twelve Yankee Conference titles under Greer in 16 completed seasons, including ten consecutive titles from 1951–60. Greer also led UConn to its first seven NCAA berths and one NIT appearance while compiling an overall head coaching record of 286–112. Greer died of a heart attack in 1963, ten games into the 1962–63 season. He was replaced by George Wigton who led them to the NCAA tournament. UConn men's basketball was a regional power under Greer, winning eighteen Yankee Conference championships between 1947 and 1975—when the Yankee Conference dropped support of basketball—including twelve by Greer.

Jim Calhoun Era[]

Throughout the 1960s and 70s, Connecticut remained a regional power and earned multiple NCAA tournament berths. In 1979, UConn became one of the seven founding schools of the Big East Conference, which was created to focus on basketball.

Prior to the 1986–87 season UConn hired Northeastern head coach Jim Calhoun to take over the program. Calhoun's first team finished the season with a record of 9–19. In 1988, the team showed significant improvement and gained a berth in the National Invitation Tournament. UConn went on a run in the tournament and defeated Ohio State 72–67 at Madison Square Garden to win the NIT, the school's first national basketball title.

The 1990 "Dream Season" would bring UConn basketball back to the national stage. Led by Chris Smith, Nadav Henefeld, Scott Burrell, Tate George, and John Gwynn, UConn went from unranked in the preseason to winning the Big East Regular Season and Tournament Championships, both for the first time. 1990 also marked the opening of Gampel Pavilion, the program's new on-campus home. In the NCAA Tournament the Huskies garnered a #1 seed in the East Region, but trailed Clemson 70–69 with 1 second remaining in the Sweet 16. Burrell's full-court pass found Tate George on the far baseline. George spun, fired, and hit a buzzer-beater that is known in Connecticut simply as "The Shot". They would be eliminated on a buzzer-beater 2 days later by Duke, losing in overtime 79–78.

UConn continued to rise as a national program throughout the 1990s, winning five more Big East Regular Season and three more Big East Tournament Championships, as well as reaching several regional finals. The Final Four still eluded Calhoun and the program until the 1999 NCAA Tournament. With Richard "Rip" Hamilton leading the way, they claimed the program's first national title that same year. Calhoun's teams would go on to win two more national championships during his tenure at UConn.

Calhoun was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2005, and officially announced his retirement in September 2012.

After the breakup of the old Big East in 2013, UConn remained as a member of the American Athletic Conference, the legal successor to the original conference. It is therefore the only charter member of the original Big East still playing in that conference.

Kevin Ollie Era[]

Kevin Ollie was hired as UConn's men's basketball coach shortly after Calhoun's retirement. During his first season, the Huskies record was 20-10. That year the Huskies were banned from postseason play by the NCAA because of a low APR score in 2010.[1] In Ollie's second season, the team made the NCAA tournament. On March 30, 2014, Ollie became the first UConn coach other than Jim Calhoun to lead the Huskies to a Final Four. They won the Men's NCAA tournament on April 7, 2014, beating the University of Kentucky 60-54. His team was the first 7th seed to ever win the NCAA tournament.

National Championships[]

1999 NCAA Title[]

The Huskies were the top seed in the West region, and a win over Gonzaga in the regional final sent UConn to Tropicana Field for the program's first Final Four appearance. They defeated Ohio State 64–58 in the semi-final to face off against Duke in the final. Despite having been ranked #1 for half of the year, the Huskies entered the national championship game as 9-point underdogs.

UConn won their first national title with a 77–74 victory. Hamilton was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

1999 NCAA Tournament
Round Opponent Score
Round #1 #16 UTSA 91-66
Round #2 #9 New Mexico 78-56
Sweet 16 #5 Iowa 78-68
Elite 8 #10 Gonzaga 67-62
Final Four #4 Ohio State 64-58
Championship #1 Duke 77-74

2004 NCAA Title[]

In 2004, the Huskies returned to the Final Four. Once again they faced Duke, this time in the National Semifinal, and used a late run to beat the Blue Devils 79–78. Two nights later, led by Emeka Okafor and Ben Gordon, Connecticut won their second national title with an 82–73 victory over Georgia Tech. Okafor was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

One day later the UConn women's basketball team also won a national title, making UConn the first and only school in NCAA Division I history to have its men's and women's basketball programs win a national championship in the same season.

2004 NCAA Tournament
Round Opponent Score
Round #1 #15 Vermont 70-53
Round #2 #7 DePaul 72-55
Sweet 16 #6 Vanderbilt 73-53
Elite 8 #8 Alabama 87-71
Final Four #1 Duke 79-78
Championship #3 Georgia Tech 82-73

2011 NCAA Title[]

The 2011 Huskies won eleven straight games in postseason play, the final six of which resulted in the program's third national championship. On April 4, 2011, they defeated the Butler Bulldogs, 53-41. UConn junior Kemba Walker was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

Many consider UConn's win in the Championship Game to be a great defensive performance, as the Huskies held Butler to only 18.8% shooting from the field (a record for field goal percentage defense in a championship game) and tied a title game record with ten blocked shots.[2] An analysis by Sports Illustrated columnist Luke Winn credited the Huskies' defense by demonstrating, for instance, that they blocked or altered a staggering 26.6% of Butler's shots - compared to just 3.8 percent by Pittsburgh and 12.1 percent by VCU in earlier rounds.[3] The 53 points scored by Connecticut was, in turn, the lowest point total by a winning team in a championship game since 1949.

2011 NCAA Tournament
Round Opponent Score
Round #2 #14 Bucknell 89-52
Round #3 #6 Cincinnati 69-58
Sweet 16 #2 San Diego State 74-67
Elite 8 #5 Arizona 65-63
Final Four #4 Kentucky 56-55
Championship #8 Butler 53-41

2014 NCAA Title[]

In 2014 led by American Athletic Conference Player of the Year Shabazz Napier, UConn became the first #7 seed to win the NCAA Championship, getting past No. 1 seed Florida, No. 2 seed Villanova, No. 3 seed Iowa State, and No. 4 seed Michigan State, before defeating the Kentucky Wildcats 60-54 in the championship game in Arlington, Texas. UConn is undefeated in the state of Texas in the Final Four (6-0).

2014 NCAA Tournament
Round Opponent Score
Round #2 #10 Saint Joseph's 89-81 OT
Round #3 #2 Villanova 77-65
Sweet 16 #3 Iowa State 81-76
Elite 8 #4 Michigan State 60-54
Final Four #1 Florida 63-53
Championship #8 Kentucky 60-54

Postseason[]

NCAA tournament results[]

The Huskies have appeared in the NCAA Tournament 32 times. Their combined record is 58–29. They have been to five Final Fours and are four time National Champions (1999, 2004, 2011, 2014).

NCAA Tournament Seeding History[]

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1951 Sweet Sixteen St. John's L 52–63
1954 First Round Navy L 80–85
1956 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place Game
Manhattan
Temple
Dartmouth
W 84–75
L 59–65
L 64–85
1957 First Round Syracuse L 76–82
1958 First Round Dartmouth L 64–75
1959 First Round Boston University L 58–60
1960 First Round NYU L 59–78
1963 First Round West Virginia L 71–77
1964 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Temple
Princeton
Duke
W 53–48
W 52–50
L 54–101
1965 First Round Saint Joseph's L 61–67
1967 First Round Boston College L 42–48
1976 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Hofstra
Rutgers
W 80–79OT
L 79–93
1979 #5 Second Round #4 Syracuse L 81–89
1990 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#16 Boston University
#9 California
#5 Clemson
#3 Duke
W 76–52
W 74–54
W 71–70
L 78–79OT
1991 #11 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#6 LSU
#14 Xavier
#2 Duke
W 79–62
W 66–50
L 67–81
1992 #9 First Round
Second Round
#8 Nebraska
#1 Ohio State
W 86–65
L 55–78
1994 #2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#15 Rider
#10 George Washington
#3 Florida
W 64–46
W 75–63
L 60–69OT
1995 #2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#15 Chattanooga
#7 Cincinnati
#3 Maryland
#1 UCLA
W 100–71
W 96–91
W 99–89
L 96–102
1996 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#16 Colgate
#9 Eastern Michigan
#5 Mississippi State
W 68–59
W 95–81
L 55–60
1998 #2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#15 Fairleigh Dickinson
#7 Indiana
#11 Washington
#1 North Carolina
W 93–85
W 78–68
W 75–74
L 64–75
1999 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
#16 UTSA
#9 New Mexico
#5 Iowa
#10 Gonzaga
#4 Ohio State
#1 Duke
W 91–66
W 78–56
W 78–68
W 67–62
W 64–58
W 77–74
2000 #5 First Round
Second Round
#12 Utah State
#4 Tennessee
W 75–67
L 51–65
2002 #2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#15 Hampton
#7 NC State
#11 Southern Illinios
#1 Maryland
W 78–67
W 77–74
W 71–59
L 82–90
2003 #5 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#12 BYU
#4 Stanford
#1 Texas
W 58–53
W 85–74
L 78–82
2004 #2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
#15 Vermont
#7 DePaul
#6 Vanderbilt
#8 Alabama
#1 Duke
#3 Georgia Tech
W 70–53
W 72–55
W 73–53
W 87–71
W 79–78
W 82–73
2005 #2 First Round
Second Round
#15 UCF
#10 NC State
W 77–71
L 62–65
2006 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#16 Albany
#8 Kentucky
#5 Washington
#11 George Mason
W 72–59
W 87–83
W 98–92OT
L 84–86OT
2008 #4 First Round #13 San Diego L 69–70OT
2009 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#16 Chattanooga
#9 Texas A&M
#5 Purdue
#3 Missouri
#2 Michigan State
W 103–47
W 92–66
W 72–60
W 82–75
L 73–82
2011 #3 Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
#14 Bucknell
#6 Cincinnati
#2 San Diego State
#5 Arizona
#3 Kentucky
#8 Butler
W 81–52
W 69–58
W 74–67
W 65–63
W 56–55
W 53–41
2012 #9 Second Round #8 Iowa State L 64–77
2014 #7 Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
#10 Saint Joseph's
#2 Villanova
#3 Iowa State
#4 Michigan State
#1 Florida
#8 Kentucky
W 89–81OT
W 77–65
W 81–76
W 60–54
W 63–53
W 60–54
2016 #9 First Round

Second Round

#8 Colorado

#1 Kansas

W 74-65

L 61-73

2021 #7 First Round #10 Maryland L 54-63
2022 #5 First Round #12 New Mexico State L 63-70
2023 #4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
#13 Iona
#5 Saint Mary's
#8 Arkansas
#3 Gonzaga
#5 Miami
#5 San Diego State
W 87-63
W 70-55
W 88-65
W 82-54
W 72-59
W 76-59

The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.

Year → '79 '90 '91 '92 '94 '95 '96 '98 '99 '00 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '08 '09 '11 '12 '14
Seed → 5 1 11 9 2 2 1 2 1 5 2 5 2 2 1 4 1 3 9 7
Year → '21 '22 '23
Seed → 7 5 4

Seeds in bold indicate NCAA Champions.

NIT results[]

The Huskies have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) 12 times. Their combined record is 15–11. They were NIT champions in 1988.

Year Round Opponent Result
1955 First Round Saint Louis L 103–110
1974 First Round
Quarterfinals
St. John's
Boston College
W 82–70
L 75–76
1975 First Round South Carolina L 61–71
1980 First Round Saint Peter's L 56–71
1981 First Round
Second Round
South Florida
Minnesota
W 66–55
L 66–84
1982 First Round Dayton L 75–76
1988 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfials
Semifinals
Finals
West Virginia
Louisiana Tech
VCU
Boston College
Ohio State
W 62–57
W 65–59
W 69–60
W 73–67
W 72–67
1989 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Charlotte
California
UAB
W 67–62
W 73–72
L 79–85
1993 First Round Jackson State L 88–90
1997 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
Iona
Bradley
Nebraska
Florida State
Arkansas
W 71–66
W 63–47
W 76–67
L 65–71
W 74–64
2001 First Round
Second Round
South Carolina
Detroit
W 72–65
L 61–67
2010 First Round
Second Round
Northeastern
Virginia Tech
W 59–57
L 63–65

Huskies of Honor[]

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On December 26, 2006, UConn announced the inaugural inductees into the "Huskies of Honor" recognition program. The class comprised 13 players and 3 coaches. The "Huskies of Honor" class was officially unveiled at a halftime ceremony during a game between UConn and Syracuse on February 5, 2007.[4] Former athletic director John Toner was inducted on February 28, 2009.[5] On April 5, 2011, Kemba Walker was the first men's basketball player to be added to the Huskies of Honor since the inaugural inductees after leading the team to a national championship.

The Huskies of Honor are each recognized by a four by five foot panel which displays his name, jersey number and years of service, and a plaque which summarizes each's career accomplishments.[4] Both the panels and the plaques are on permanent display at Gampel Pavilion on the University of Connecticut campus in Storrs, CT.

Players[]

Coaches and administrators[]

  • Jim Calhoun, Head Coach, 1986–2012
  • Dee Rowe, Head Coach, 1969–77
  • Hugh Greer, Head Coach, 1946–63
  • John Toner, Athletic Director, 1969–87

Teams[]

  • 1999 National Championship Team

Notable victories[]

  • February 27, 1954 - Worthy Patterson's buzzer-beater at Holy Cross gave UConn an upset of the then-powerhouse Crusaders, 78-77.
  • March 14, 1964 - UConn upset Princeton and star forward Bill Bradley 52–50 in the Sweet 16. The victory was sealed when Dom Perno stole the ball from Bradley with 19 seconds to play. Perno would later become UConn's coach.
  • February 28, 1970 ("The Slowdown Game") - With four players unavailable and a share of the Yankee Conference Regular-Season Championship on the line, UConn beat Rhode Island 35–32 at the Field House. Played before the shot clock-era, UConn dribbled endlessly for 38 minutes to make up for the limited roster.
  • March 30, 1988 - UConn defeated Ohio State 72–67 at Madison Square Garden to win the NIT.
  • January 27, 1990 - UConn beat #15 St. John's 72–58 in the first game played at Gampel Pavilion.
  • March 11, 1990 - UConn beat Syracuse 78–75 at Madison Square Garden to win its first Big East Tournament Championship.
  • March 22, 1990 ("The Shot") - Tate George made a shot at the buzzer to beat Clemson 71–70 in the 1990 Sweet 16 at Brendan Byrne Arena in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
  • March 9, 1996 - With 4 minutes remaining, UConn trailed Georgetown 74–63. The Huskies closed the game with a 12–0 run and won the Big East Championship 75–74 on an off-balance floater from All-American Ray Allen at Madison Square Garden.
  • March 20, 1998 (Hamilton "Rips" Washington’s heart out) - Down 74-73 in the sweet sixteen to the eleventh seeded Washington Huskies with fifteen seconds remaining, two seeded Uconn gets three shots off on its final possession including Hamilton's buzzer beating jumper as time expired to lift Uconn 75-74 to advance to the Elite Eight.
  • March 29, 1999 - UConn won its first National Championship, defeating Duke 77–74 at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida.
  • April 5, 2004 - UConn won its second National Championship, defeating Georgia Tech 82–73 at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas.
  • March 28. 2009 – defeated Missouri 82–75 to win the Arizona Regional Final and advance to their third Final Four
  • March 12, 2011 - In the final of the Big East Tournament, the Huskies defeated Louisville by a score of 69-66 to claim their seventh Big East Championship. The victory capped an unprecedented run wherein the Huskies won five tournament games in five consecutive days. Four of those wins came against top-25 opponents. Junior All-American guard Kemba Walker scored a tournament-record 130 points in the five-game run, and was named tournament MVP.
  • April 4, 2011 - The Huskies defeated Butler 53-41 to claim the National Championship in Houston's Reliant Stadium.
  • November 9, 2012 - In Kevin Ollie’s first game as Connecticut head coach the Huskies beat the #14 Michigan State Spartans 66-62 in Ramstein Air Base, Germany.
  • February 13, 2013- In the final conference game against rival Syracuse the Huskies defeat the #6 Orange 66-58, at the XL Center.
  • March 30, 2014- The Huskies defeat Michigan State 60-54 at Madison Square Garden to advance to the Final Four for the fifth time.
  • April 7, 2014 - The Huskies defeated Kentucky 60-54 to win the 2014 National Championship in AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Impact on the NBA[]

Since the 1990s, UConn has been recognized as being a consistent pipeline for players to enter the National Basketball Association. During the 2006–2007 season, there were an NBA-high 14 former Huskies on active rosters.[6] During the 2013-14 Season, 13 former Huskies were on active NBA rosters.

UConn has had 13 players selected as lottery picks in the NBA Draft:

UConn Lottery Picks
Player Year Pick # Team
Donyell Marshall 1994 4 Minnesota Timberwolves
Ray Allen 1996 5 Minnesota Timberwolves
Richard Hamilton 1999 7 Washington Wizards
Caron Butler 2002 10 Miami Heat
Emeka Okafor 2004 2 Charlotte Bobcats
Ben Gordon 2004 3 Chicago Bulls
Charlie Villanueva 2005 7 Toronto Raptors
Rudy Gay 2006 8 Houston Rockets
Hilton Armstrong 2006 12 New Orleans Hornets
Hasheem Thabeet 2009 2 Memphis Grizzlies
Kemba Walker 2011 9 Charlotte Bobcats
Andre Drummond 2012 9 Detroit Pistons
Jeremy Lamb 2012 12 Houston Rockets
  • The 2006 Draft class was notable for tying the record of most first-round picks from one school, with four. With five players drafted in the two rounds, UConn tied for the second-most ever taken in an NBA draft.[7]
  • Two players (Clifford Robinson, 1992–93, and Ben Gordon, 2004–05) have been winners of the NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award.
  • Emeka Okafor was the winner of the 2004–05 NBA Rookie of the Year Award.
  • Ray Allen was the winner of the 2002–03 NBA Sportsmanship Award, and is the NBA all-time leader in 3-point field goals made.
  • Five players (Scott Burrell, '97–'98, Travis Knight, '99–'00, Richard Hamilton, '03–'04, Ray Allen, '07–'08 and '12–'13, Caron Butler, '10–'11) have won NBA championships.

NBA Players Past and Present

  • Adrien, Jeff 2010–Present
  • Aleksinas, Chuck 1984-1984
  • Allen, Ray 1996–2014
  • Armstrong, Hilton 2006–Present
  • Bialosuknia, Wes 1967-1968
  • Boone, Josh 2006–2010
  • Burrell, Scott 1993-2000
  • Butler, Caron 2002–Present
  • Drummond, Andre 2012–Present
  • Dyson, Jerome 2012
  • El-Amin, Khalid 2000-2002
  • Foster, Jimmy 1974-1975
  • Gay, Rudy 2006–Present
  • George, Tate 1990-1994
  • Gordon, Ben 2004–Present
  • Hamilton, Richard 1999–2013
  • Kimball, Toby 1966-1974
  • Knight, Travis 1996-2002
  • Kuczenski, Bruce 1983-1984
  • Lamb, Jeremy 2012–Present
  • Marshall, Donny 1995-2002
  • Marshall, Donyell 1994-2009
  • Okafor, Emeka 2004–Present
  • Ollie, Kevin 1997–2010
  • Patterson, Worthy 1957
  • Price, A.J. 2009–Present
  • Robinson, Clifford 1989-2006
  • Smith, Chris 1992-1994
  • Thabeet, Hasheem 2009–Present
  • Thompson, Corny 1982-1983
  • Villanueva, Charlie 2005–Present
  • Voskuhl, Jake 2000–2009
  • Walker, Kemba 2011–Present
  • Williams, Marcus 2006–2010

References[]

External links[]

References[]

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