Paige Bueckers helped UConn do the improbable on Monday night: secure the team’s 23rd Final Four berth.
The No. 3 seed Huskies – who have been injury-laden once again this season – took down No. 1 seed USC 80-73. It was due in large part to Bueckers, who had 28 points, 10 rebounds, 6 assists, 3 steals and 2 blocks.
In short, she was doing it all.
"Paige always wants to be superhuman," UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. "She tries her damndest to be superhuman. … When you have players that think, there's nothing I can't do, there's nothing that escapes me, they're just on another level. They play the game on another level. They think on a different level. They inspire everybody around them. So, yeah, today was Paige doing Paige things.”
It was Bueckers’ third performance this tournament with at least 25 points, five rebounds and five assists. That ties her with Caitlin Clark and Courtney Vandersloot for the most by any player in a single NCAA tournament since 2000.
"Last year I was praying to be back at this stage," Bueckers said on the ESPN broadcast. "So much joy and pride for this team, I'm so proud. We're not even supposed to be here and here we are."
She then expanded on it in the postgame press conference, calling the win “one of the most rewarding feelings I’ve ever felt in my life.” Fellow senior Nika Muhl agreed.
"This has been probably the most rewarding one," Muhl said. "I would say this group is very special. We overcame so much and learned from it.
"Although a lot of people didn't believe we were ever gonna do this, we did. Don't get me wrong — we don't really care what other people think. But at the same time, it feels really, really good to prove those people wrong."
The Huskies lost six players on the year to injuries and lost five non-conference games. Among the stars absent are Azzi Fudd and Caroline Ducharme, who both suffered season-ending injuries early.
Auriemma said earlier in the tournament it would take a “miracle” for the team to reach the Final Four. On Monday, he joked that this year was one of the greatest coaching jobs of his career.
"I did think it would take a miracle," he said. "The greatest coaching job ever done in the history of women's basketball."