Story highlights
No. 1 UConn has defeated No. 4 Syracuse to win the NCAA women's basketball national championship game Tuesday in Indianapolis
Seniors Breanna Stewart, Moriah Jefferson and Morgan Tuck are the first players -- male or female -- to win four national titles
Head coach Geno Auriemma wins his 11th title, passing UCLA men's coach John Wooden for the most all time
There just aren’t enough superlatives to describe the University of Connecticut women’s basketball team.
No. 1 UConn won the NCAA women’s basketball championship on Tuesday with an 82-51 thumping of No. 4 seed Syracuse at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.
This doesn’t come as a shock, as UConn (38-0) now has 11 titles, all under head coach Geno Auriemma.
But the amount of history that comes with this one win is tremendous.
The win gives Auriemma the most college basketball titles of all time, surpassing UCLA men’s coach John Wooden. Auriemma is perfect in national championship games, going 11 for 11.
“What those 11 national championships mean to me is how many great players I’ve had the opportunity to coach, how many great people have come through our program,” Auriemma said. “It doesn’t matter whose name I’m above, whose name I’m under, whose name I’m next to. As long as I have those names of those players in my memory, I’m good.”
UConn seniors Breanna Stewart, Moriah Jefferson and Morgan Tuck became the first basketball players – male or female – to win four national championships. The trio outscored Syracuse’s entire team with a combined 56 points.
“There’s three key ingredients that go into this kind of success,” Auriemma told ESPN’s Holly Rowe on court after the game, pointing at Stewart, Jefferson and Tuck. “One, two, three.”
Stewart, already the most decorated women’s college basketball player in history, led the Huskies with 24 points and 10 rebounds and was named the Final Four Most Outstanding Player for a record fourth time. To put that in perspective, no one else has won that award even three times.
Stewart, who grew up in Syracuse, also has bold predictions. When she was a freshman, she said she would win four championships with UConn, a bold statement considering that had never had been done before.
“It’s unbelievable,” Stewart said. “That was our goal coming in here once we were freshmen. To carry it out and win like this as seniors is unbelievable.”
UConn’s winning streak now is 75 games, the second-longest streak in NCAA history. The Huskies, of course, have the all-time record of 90 straight from November 16, 2008, until December 29, 2010.
The Huskies don’t just win games; they dominate them. They won every game this season by double digits. Heading into Tuesday’s championship game, they had routed their opponents by 52, 46, 60, 21 and 29 points in this year’s NCAA tournament. In the title game, they won by 31.
Tuesday was another one of those nights. The offensive output of Stewart, Jefferson and Tuck outscored Syracuse by themselves in the first two quarters, combining for 38 points as UConn took a 50-23 halftime lead.
It was a daunting task for Syracuse (30-8). The Orange had never played for a national title before Tuesday, and this was the first time they had reached the Final Four.
But though the final score may not show it, Syracuse didn’t quit. Despite being down 27 points at halftime, the Orange went on a 16-0 run to cut the lead to 60-43 with 2:14 left in the third quarter. The Orange actually outscored the Huskies in the period, 20-14.
Syracuse has lost to UConn 24 straight times.