
UConn's Geno Auriemma Takes Aim at NCAA Over Women's March Madness Format
UConn men's basketball coach Geno Auriemma is ripping the double-regional format being used in the women's NCAA Tournament, saying it doesn't make sense for the teams still playing or for efforts to grow the game.
Auriemma brought up attendance, bad shooting percentages and teams having to come to the arena early and late on the same day when taking aim at the format that's in place for the fourth year, and set to continue for at least five more.
"Well, I think the first question you’d have to ask is why did they go from four (sites) to two. What was the rationale?" the 12-time national champion coach said Saturday. "If they can explain it legitimately and then prove that it works, then great. So what was the reason?"
NCAA officials didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press.
The defending national champion Huskies (37-0), the overall No. 1 seed, play Notre Dame (25-10) in the Fort Worth Regional 1 final on Sunday.
The Huskies held their required media availability Saturday morning, after the Fighting Irish had already completed their session and before two Sweet 16 games in Fort Worth Regional 3 were played at Dickies Arena. UConn and Notre Dame both had scheduled practice times there later in the evening.
"So we had to get our kids up, come over here. You already knew who we were playing last night, but we can’t get on the court, and neither can the other teams," Auriemma said. "Does anybody who makes these decisions ever ask the coaches and the players, hey, does this work?"
AP All-America teammates Azzi Fudd and Sarah Strong agreed with their coach's strong sentiment.
"Everyone’s trying to figure that out right now," Fudd said. "Every team is going through that. There’s no excuse in that. So we’ll figure it out. We’re making it work, but it definitely isn’t the most ideal setup."
Auriemma, the winningest men's or women's NCAA basketball coach with 1,287 victories, didn't wait for a question from reporters to share his thoughts on the format, opening his session by reading off a piece of paper these numbers: 4 for 20, 4 for 22, 1 for 17, 5 for 17, 4 for 16, 7 for 26.
"That’s the 3-point shooting yesterday across the country," he said. "How many arenas are we going to sell out with that? Now, maybe it was just a bad day shooting by everybody. These are all teams that average probably 30%, over 30, for the season. Know what time our shootaround was yesterday? Six in the morning, 6:20, I think, for half an hour."
He also mentioned the total combined attendance (18,821 announced) at the two venues Friday, in Fort Worth and Sacramento, California.
UCLA coach Cori Close, whose team is the top seed in Sacramento Regional 2 and plays Duke in an Elite Eight game on Sunday, said it is important to get maximum exposure and coverage while also looking for the best setup to have high-level basketball played on the court.
"I think that I was in favor of going to the two regional sites when that happened," Close said. "I think every year we should look and go, where are we in our game, how did this play out efficiency-wise, from a student-athlete well-being side, is there some ways in which we can organize to make things a little bit more cohesive so teams aren’t going back and forth from media coverage to practices later and those kinds of things?"
Auriemma said there is a lack of input from coaches, and that nothing changes even when the NCAA sends representatives to schools every year after the tournament.
"Hopefully I’m speaking for the other coaches," he said. "Some coaches might think I’m full of it. And this is not about UConn. I hope everybody understands that. This is not about us. … We’ve managed to go to the Final Four and win national championships no matter where they’re played, when they’re played, what time they’re played, whatever.
"I think there is a level of frustration right now among the coaches that’s higher than any time I’ve ever seen it."
Duke coach Kara Lawson would like more practice time on the game court, especially more than the designated half-hour on game days for shootarounds, which routinely last about an hour the rest of the season.
"That would be the only thing I’d change," Lawson said. "I mean two regionals. I think the arena thing is the thing that’s hard. It’s not that we’re in the same city, it’s that we don’t get long enough practice or shootaround times in the venue for your most important games of the season."
For the second day in a row, Auriemma mentioned new rims and new basketballs being used during NCAA Tournament games, and the impact those have on shooting.
"It's hard to make shots in the postseason," Auriemma said Friday after UConn's 63-42 win over North Carolina, in which the teams were a combined 8 of 42 on 3-pointers. "They just break out these new baskets, new rims, and then it gets in the kids' heads."
The coach on Saturday again brought up "new basketballs right out of the box" and the rims.
"Got people dribbling the ball off their feet," he said. "You got people missing layups all over the place. You bounce the ball, and it goes up to the ceiling. There’s just no concept of how basketball is played. Not that I have any of the answers.
"Believe me, I just have questions."
Reporting by The Associated Press.

