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"Pursuit of Perfection": Sue Bird Breaks Down What Separates UConn Players Right Out of College - The SportsRush

Published 8 hours ago3 minute read

WNBA legend Sue Bird’s UConn legacy is the gold standard in college basketball. Under coach Geno Auriemma, she collected two national championships (2000 and 2002), powered the Huskies to a 136–9 record, and led UConn in career 3-point shooting (45.9%) and free-throw percentage (89.2%).

Bird also captured the Wade Trophy and Naismith Player of the Year in 2002, took home two Nancy Lieberman Awards, and steered UConn to a perfect 39–0 senior season along with eight Big East titles. She finished with 1,378 points and 585 assists, becoming UConn’s first No. 1 overall WNBA draft pick in 2002. 

On June 15 earlier this year, following the end of her storied WNBA career, Bird was inducted into the Hall of Fame. On a recent episode of her Birds Eye View podcast, Bird sat down with fellow UConn alum and 2023 MVP Breanna Stewart to unpack what makes the Huskies different.

Stewart recalled the highs and lows of playing for coach Geno, and Bird patiently listened, knowing all too well how demanding he was. “Practices were awful. He stayed on me constantly, saying I wasn’t doing this or that. He made me run the stadium stairs just for missing a rebound…” said Stewart. 

Auriemma wasn’t punishing her. He was preparing her to be great. And while she didn’t realize it at the time, it’s what shaped her and ultimately made her the basketball great she would become. After a while, Bird grinned and said, “He [Geno] loves a break-you-down-to-build-you-up moment.” 

The 4-time WNBA champ then revealed why she thinks UConn stars fit into the league so seamlessly. It’s the obsession with perfection. “To me, what always separates UConn players, especially right when they get out of college because it’s so fresh, is like, this pursuit of perfection. Like because he coaches, and the whole staff expects that…you can’t miss a rebound. God forbid you miss a layup. I don’t even know what you had to do if you missed a layup.” 

That intensity instills players with perfectionist instincts in both games and practices. “I always joked that they have adult tantrums on the sidelines, when these things happen, but that feeds into the players, because we do… we have this idea that perfection can be met, can be reached. We play that way,” Bird added

Both Bird and Stewart understood the role Coach Geno and UConn played in their growth as players and individuals. Stewart’s career skyrocketed, with two league MVPs, three WNBA titles (two with Seattle and one with the New York Liberty in 2024), four NCAA championships, multiple international gold medals, and the 2023 WNBA MVP.

Bird summed it up perfectly on the podcast: UConn’s culture and never-settle mindset give its players a unique edge. Auriemma broke his players down to build them into relentless professionals ready to dominate. The UConn-to-WNBA pipeline remains one of the strongest in U.S. sports, and Bird and Stewart are proof of that. The pursuit of perfection defines UConn and fuels everything the program produces, including this season’s consensus WNBA Rookie of the Year, Paige Bueckers.

About the author

Ayo Biyibi

Ayo Biyibi

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International Basketball Journalist | Scorned Bulls fan | Formerly of the London Lions | NBA, BAL, EuroLeague & FIBA Expert | Breaking News, Insider Reports & Analysis

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