University Of Connecticut Women's Team Destroys Notre Dame In Ncaa Final: But Does Basketball Matter If Few People Watch?

But Does Basketball Matter If Few People Watch?

Michael Sanchez
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2 min read
University of Connecticut Women's Team Destroys Notre Dame in NCAA Final
UConn Huskies’ head coach Geno Auriemma ( ESPN )
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A week ago, the NCAA Division I basketball tournament reached its apex. And the University of Connecticut won. Nope, not the men’s game, which was fantastic, sure, but the women’s game. It was truly historic, and not just according to the wonks at 538, the newly minted sports blog from famed statistician Nate Silver. While there have been undefeated teams ostensibly playing for a national championship before—in college football at least—that’s never been the case in basketball.

Many say the latest victory for the UConn women represents an endorsement of their coach,
Geno Auriemma. With long-time rival Pat Summitt retired, it seems as though almost no one can stand in the way of the Huskies and their long-running records. Notre Dame fought valiantly for their place as the spoiler, and maybe if they’d had Natalie Achonwa or Ace playing alongside her senior teammates, things could have gone differently.

There’s no shame in losing to this UConn team, but there are definitely columnists who have wondered if all those Husky wins piling up are leading to Geno and Co. fatigue. While Mechelle Voepel argues that UConn’s winning ways are
good for women’s basketball overall, there’s definitely room for disagreement. Kate Fagan reasons that games are better when they’re truly competitive and if Notre Dame represents the best team that UConn had to face, things are getting into a bad place. The bottom line: We need a multitude of better teams, not just UConn.

The takeaway a week later, with almost no one talking about the women’s game, despite the
WNBA Draft already occurring, is that NCAA Division I basketball is still all about the men’s game. March Madness, to most people, means men’s games exclusively. Even if—or rather, when—two undefeated teams play, something that has never happened in the sport before, there’s very little attention for the women. Something needs to change.
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