As Paige Bueckers joins the 2,000-point club with UConn women’s basketball, it’s a good time to forget ‘what-ifs’ and appreciate what is.
Paige Bueckers has the chance to make program history when the UConn women's basketball team hosts Seton Hall Sunday on campus.
Although she was dubbed the most elite women’s basketball player ever by South Carolina head coach Dawn Staley, Bueckers surprised her legendary head coach Geno Auriemma and decided not to declare for the 2024 WNBA Draft.
As Breanna Stewart and Napheesa Collier begin the first season of Unrivaled, investors Geno Auriemma and Paige Bueckers will be watching proudly back at UConn.
Bueckers returned after sitting out wins over Xavier and Georgetown and heads into Sunday’s game against Seton Hall six shy of becoming UConn’s 12th 2000-point scorer. Bueckers is on the verge of the milestone through 101 fewer games and would surpass Maya Moore as the fastest to reach 2,000 points for the Huskies.
UConn's Paige Bueckers expressed enthusiasm over the NCAA's announcement that revenue sharing will be implemented for the women's basketball tournament.
Unrivaled is a new 3-on-3 professional women's basketball league comprised of 36 players separated into six teams — the Laces Basketball Club, Lunar Owls Basketball Club, Mist Basketball Club, Phantom Basketball Club, Rose Basketball Club and Vinyl Basketball Club.
It’s finally here! The post Unrivaled President Confirms Stance Against Cathy Engelbert’s WNBA as Paige Bueckers & Co. Could Be the Game-Changer appeared first on EssentiallySports.
After missing the last two games with a left knee sprain, Paige Bueckers will be available to play for UConn women's basketball in its game at St. John's.
On what was suppose to be a milestone day for Connecticut guard Paige Bueckers turned into a scary one for the Huskies' women's basketball star. The 2021 national player of the year played in her 100th game for UConn when the Huskies faced Villanova on Sunday.
In July 2021, the NCAA implemented Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) policies, allowing collegiate student athletes to receive compensation for how they are commercially represented. Three years later, in December 2024,