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The Fighting Illini are 1-2 against Connecticut all time. But the teams have not played each other since the 1994-95 college basketball season, when the Huskies beat Illinois 71-56 in Storrs ...
This is a list of the seasons completed by the UConn Huskies men's basketball team. UConn has fielded a men's college basketball team since 1900. The team played in the Athletic League of New England State Colleges from 1900 to 1923, in the New England Conference from 1923 to 1946, and then in the Yankee Conference from 1946 to 1976.
The Huskies played their home games at the Harry A. Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Connecticut and the XL Center in Hartford, Connecticut. The UConn Huskies men's basketball team drew an average home attendance of 12,733 in 16 games in 2023-24. [1] The Huskies finished the season 37–3, 18–2 in Big East play to win the regular season championship.
Their Elite Eight matchup found themselves facing the George Mason Patriots. The Patriots were able to defeat the top-seeded Huskies, 86–84 in overtime, in what is recognized as one of the most memorable games in tournament history. East Connecticut 72, Albany 59; Connecticut 87, Kentucky 83; Connecticut 98, Washington 92; George Mason 86 ...
Here’s what we learned from seven hours of elite basketball in Connecticut on Sunday. UConn isn’t done. Paige Bueckers turned a mourning into a block party, making a statement that UConn’s ...
Basketball Base-ball Soft-ball Ice hockey Soccer M W M W M W Bridgeport Purple Knights: University of Bridgeport: Bridgeport: Central Atlantic: New Haven Chargers: University of New Haven: West Haven: Northeast-10: Post Eagles: Post University: Waterbury: Central Atlantic [a] [b] [c] Southern Connecticut Owls: Southern Connecticut State ...
They made it to the Elite Eight in the 2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. The Huskies played their home games at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Connecticut and the Hartford Civic Center in Hartford, Connecticut, and they were led by sixteenth-year head coach Jim Calhoun. [2] [3]
Connecticut resumed sponsorship of men's basketball as a varsity sport in the 1914–15 season following the construction of Hawley Armory, the school's first on-campus basketball court. The Aggies, as they were called at the time, had no coach from 1901 to 1915 and posted a 1–4 record on the 1914-15 season.