UConn vs DePaul Prediction, College Basketball Game Preview

UConn vs DePaul prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might – or might not – win on Saturday.

UConn vs DePaul prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch: Saturday, January 29


UConn vs DePaul How To Watch

Date: Saturday, January 29
Game Time: 6:30 ET
Venue: Wintrust Arena, Chicago, IL
How To Watch: FS1
Record: UConn (14-4), DePaul (10-9)
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UConn vs DePaul Game Preview


Why UConn Will Win

The Huskies are dominating in the interior.

The combination of Adama Sang and Isaiah Whaley are fantastic at coming up with blocks – UConn is second in the nation in blocked shots – the team is a bear on the boards, and they’re great overall at forcing offenses to struggle.

The D has allowed more than 70 points just four times all season, and now it gets a DePaul offense that doesn’t score.

The Blue Demons have lost eight of their last nine games and didn’t hit 48 points in either of their last two games. They don’t have the offense to move the ball around well enough to get easy shots, but …

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Why DePaul Will Win

The Blue Demons will hit the boards.

They might not do a whole lot from the outside, the don’t generate enough easy points in transition, but they get a whole lot of rebounds and can hold their own on the offensive glass.

To make this a fight, they have to get to the free throw line over and over and over again like they did in the 96-92 win over Seton Hall, and UConn is more than good for at least 15 fouls to help the cause.

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What’s Going To Happen

Can DePaul do anything from the outside?

The three point shooting has gone bye-bye, and there’s no consistency whatsoever to the offense as a whole, but it’s been a bit better at home lately.

UConn will send the Blue Demons to the line a bit too often, but the offense will be too good inside for the upset to be a possibility after a tight first half.

UConn vs DePaul Prediction, Lines

UConn 74, DePaul 60
Line: COMING, o/u: COMING
ATS Confidence out of 5: COMING

Must See Rating: 2

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Arizona women’s basketball coach Adia Barnes isn’t apologizing for impassioned postgame speech

Arizona women’s basketball coach Adia Barnes isn’t apologizing for her postgame speech, which included a middle finger and an expletive.

The Arizona women’s basketball team stunned top-seeded UConn 69-59 in the Final Four on Friday night to advance to the national championship. But it’s not the victory itself that has people talking, it’s a moment during the Wildcats’ postgame huddle that has drawn plenty of attention.

Arizona’s Final Four victory was the kind of moment that you live for as a player and as a coach. So you can’t fault Arizona head coach Adia Barnes for being extremely enthusiastic after her Wildcats took down arguably the best women’s basketball team in the country to advance to the championship game.

In the moments following the victory, ESPN cameras captured Barnes’ impassioned speech to her team in a huddle, which happened to include a middle finger and an expletive, and it didn’t take long for the moment to go viral.

Barnes addressed the viral moment during a Saturday morning press conference, where she explained that she believed she was sharing a private moment with her team after pulling off the upset. But she also made it clear that she’s not going to apologize for what she said and did.

“I honestly had a moment with my team, and I thought it was a more intimate huddle,” Barnes said. “I said to my team something that I truly felt and I know they felt, and it just appeared different on TV, but I’m not apologizing for it because I don’t feel like I need to apologize. It’s what I felt with my team at the moment. I wouldn’t take it back. We’ve gone to war together. We believe in each other. So I’m in those moments, and that’s how I am, so I don’t apologize for doing that. I’m just me, and I have to just be me.”

Plenty of people love that Barnes was just being herself, and the Wildcards have earned some new fans that will be pulling for Arizona to once again upset a top seed — this time in Stanford — in the national championship game on Sunday at 6 p.m. ET.

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UConn basketball players: ‘Racism is not getting worse, it’s getting filmed’

“As a team we are hurting,” the players wrote in a statement.

UConn basketball players released a statement of solidarity on Sunday, expressing their support for people protesting racial injustice across the country and condemning police brutality.

For days, people nationwide have been protesting police violence and the deaths of George Floyd, a black man who died Monday after a white Minneapolis police officer held his knee on his neck for almost nine minutes; Breonna Taylor, who Louisville police shot and killed in her own apartment in March; and Ahmaud Arbery, who was shot and killed while jogging in February. Protesters are demanding justice for those killed and the arrests of those involved.

The Huskies are among many in the sports world — although, not enough people — showing their support for anti-racism action “because we are tired of innocent black lives dying at the hands of police officers who do not care about our humanity,” they wrote, in part, in their statement. Like activists and other athletes, they also put the protests into a historical context to highlight that these protests are not solely about Floyd but also about “the 400 years of oppression that black people have been subjected to in America.”

Others who recently have spoken out against racial injustices and in support of protestors include Colin Kaepernick — who initially took a knee to peacefully protest police brutality and is now paying for protesters’ legal fees in MinneapolisLeBron James, Dwyane Wade, JJ Watt and Joe Burrow.

Additionally, the UConn women’s team’s statement called out people who are not black and not vocal, describing their silence “the biggest betrayal right now.”

Here is their full statement:

As a team we are hurting. We feel responsible for speaking out and advocating for our black community and the injustices we face. Racism is not getting worse, it’s getting filmed, and more people are becoming aware of the 400 years of oppression that black people have been subjected to in America.

We are nauseated by the social injustice and police brutality that is reoccurring toward the black community. So yes, we kneel during the national anthem. Yes, we are rioting. And yes, we are protesting because we are tired of innocent black lives dying at the hands of police officers who do not care about our humanity.

For those who are not black, silence is the biggest betrayal right now. The hardest part is watching our friends who are not of color not even question what is happening right now. It’s time for us to start preaching togetherness, justice, and love amongst one another.

We are proud to be a team made up of diverse women who will never stop pushing for the most basic human rights for our people. Standing up, fighting for what you believe in, and bringing attention to these injustices is the only way it will progress.

As a team, we are here. We are listening. We are woke.

#BlackLivesMatter

The Huskies’ powerful statement echoes similar sentiments expressed by those in sports who have spoken up.

San Jose Sharks left winger Evander Kane insisted white professional athletes, like Tom Brady and Sidney Crosby, to utilize their platforms to fight systematic racism. Eric Reid and Steve Kerr were among the many who called out Vice President Mike Pence’s hypocritical statement about peaceful protests. Boston Celtics player Jaylen Brown marched with protesters in Atlanta on Saturday. Borussia Monchengladbach striker Marcus Thuram took a knee on the field after scoring a goal in a Bundesliga match Sunday in an apparent statement of solidarity.