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UConn only includes three-point statistics since the national adoption of that rule, and only began recording steals in 1978–79, but otherwise includes statistics from the entire history of UConn women's basketball. These lists are updated through February 19, 2025. Players active in the 2024–25 season are in bold type.
First-overall selection and UConn women's basketball alumna Diana Taurasi was named WNBA Most Valuable Player in 2009. Tina Charles was the third UConn player to be selected first overall, in 2010. She was named WNBA Most Valuable Player in 2012. The fourth UConn alumna to be selected first overall, Maya Moore was the 2014 WNBA Most Valuable ...
The sports under consideration were the four major professional sports (NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL) along with the three most prominent college sports: football, men's basketball and women's basketball. The Connecticut Huskies were the #3 selection on the list, behind only the professional basketball Lakers and the professional football Patriots ...
Geno Auriemma has seen hundreds of players come through UConn over the past 30 years. The names have changed from Rebecca Lobo to Sue Bird, Diana Taurasi, Maya Moore and Breanna Stewart — the ...
During her college career Moore won 150 games and only lost four, [30] amassing a total 3036 points (first Husky ever and fourth all-time in NCAA division I women's basketball), 1276 rebounds (second Husky ever), 310 steals (third Husky ever), 544 assists (sixth Husky ever) and 204 blocks (fourth Husky ever); she is the only women's basketball ...
Paige Bueckers waited two years for UConn's matchup with Jackson State on her home court Saturday. It was the 22-year-old's first appearance in the NCAA women's tournament in 720 days, and she ...
Paige Madison Bueckers [1] (/ ˈ b ɛ k ə r z / BEH-kərz; born October 20, 2001) is an American college basketball player for the UConn Huskies of the Big East Conference.. Nicknamed "Paige Buckets", Bueckers attended Hopkins High School in Hopkins, Minnesota and was ranked as the number one recruit in her class by ESPN, receiving national high school player of the year honors.
White House visits: Bird is one of the only athletes ever to have been invited to the White House for their championship performance as a collegiate player (University of Connecticut Huskies Women's Basketball), professional player (Seattle Storm), and as part of a championship team's ownership group (Gotham FC). [132]