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The Strong, silent type: UConn’s standout is making basketball stardom look easy

about 9 hours ago
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Sarah Strong has the most jump-off-the-page talent in the women’s game since Caitlin Clark, and UConn greats say she could be the best of themFormer WNBA All-Star turned Boston Celtics executive Allison Feaster was recently asked about the differences between high-level female and male hoopers.“This is a very basic example,” the Celtics’ vice-president of team operations and organizational growth told the Far From the Tree podcast.“But most of the women have had exposure to different types of leadership.Most of the professionals have four-year degrees and even advanced degrees.Many of the professional women have lived outside of the US.

Some of them are parents who are the primary caregiver.That is a very general observation, but I venture to say that’s not the same with the NBA players.”Feaster should know.In addition to setting several Ivy League records that still stand and helping No 16 seed Harvard stun No 1 Stanford in the 1998 NCAA Tournament, she earned a degree in economics.She also spent more than 10 years playing professionally in the WNBA and throughout Europe.

It was during a stint in Spain that Feaster gave birth to Sarah Strong, now arguably the top player in women’s college basketball,Still only a sophomore, the 6ft 2in UConn forward is chasing her second championship in as many years,This time, it’s with an undefeated squad that hasn’t lost in 52 games dating back to last year,As a freshman, Strong thrived defensively in the 2025 NCAA tournament, while scoring the most points by a freshman in tournament history with 114,In her second season, Strong has been even more dominant.

Her impact on both sides of the ball is so deep that she was named the Big East Player of the Year and the Big East Defensive Player of the Year.She’s the favorite to win the National Player of the Year award next month.This season Strong averaged 18.4 points, 7.5 rebounds, 4.

1 assists and 3.3 steals all while shooting 60.0% from the field.“What makes her unique is her ability to play like a guard and play like a big guy,” UConn coach Geno Auriemma said.“There are players who can get 20 points a game and get 20 rebounds a game but I’m not sure there’s a player other than Sarah who can do both.

”Unlike the last collegiate women’s player with this much jump-off-the-page talent, Caitlin Clark, there is nothing flashy about Strong.Where Clark played with swagger, Strong plays with certainty.And unlike teammate and fellow first-team All-American selection Azzi Fudd, she isn’t a fashionista with her own slogan (“Fudd Around and Find Out”).Strong’s media commitments are certainly increasing (she just appeared on Good Morning America), but the lengths of her answers are not.Strong typically gives one-sentence responses, maybe two.

She’s probably not gunning for a cameo on Saturday Night Live any time soon.It’s clear she’s more comfortable letting her game do the talking.Also, she’s only 20.Her presence, while rooted in poise, calm and an off-the-charts IQ, has produced results impossible to ignore.So much of the grace she exhibits and respect for the game were instilled by her parents.

As if Feaster’s DNA wasn’t enough, her father happens to be Danny Strong, the former North Carolina State forward who played 15 years in Europe.Because of their varied basketball commitments, Strong’s parents, who were high school sweethearts, didn’t live together in Europe and have since split.Strong lived with Feaster, who had reservations raising her daughter in a foreign land away from family as she pursued an unstable career.Not to mention the risk of later having a language barrier.Catalan was the primary language spoken at one of Strong’s early schools in Spain.

Basketball was the primary language spoken at home.“We would play in the morning, and they would have a game at night and [I remember] just being there the whole day and watching them practice and trying to do the drills they were doing,” Strong told ESPN in 2024.Eventually Strong excelled at those drills.But upon moving to the States, she didn’t immediately excel in school.She was behind in all things English, and her mother felt guilty.

The detail-oriented Feaster quickly noticed her daughter’s struggles with grammar and handwriting.So Strong moved to a school with smaller classes and more attention.And thanks to all that early experience adapting to new locales in Europe, she was equipped with the tools to thrive in new situations.In North Carolina, where the family moved after Feaster’s playing career ended, Strong embraced the youth basketball scene.She had the benefit of two elite coaches by her side, even once Feaster joined the Celtics in 2019.

Despite the heavy dose of basketball, Strong’s parents made a concerted effort to keep her well-rounded, even signing her for club soccer to mix the activities.Feaster readily accepts that basketball is common denominator which she has utilized for family values.“We tried to emphasize the importance of family time and silliness,” she said.“Basketball is the thing that allows us to be together, but the sport is just the side dish.”UConn assistant Jamelle Elliott quietly scouted Strong in ninth grade before the hype arrived and she became the country’s top recruit.

Auriemma agreed with Elliott’s assessment.“All you saw was this young kid who had a knack for doing the things that people have to learn to do - and she already had them,” he said.“The way she saw the floor, how she finished around the basket, her non-rushed, casual approach to the game where all the great players have the ability to slow the game down somewhat.”Meanwhile, Strong, who would play most of her high school career at Grace Christian School in Sanford, North Carolina, focused on having fun with her friends and not getting wrapped up in the recruiting web.“I didn’t compare myself to other players until getting toward the end of high school,” Strong said.

Auriemma, who compares players for a living, only became more enamored with Strong as she developed.“During her junior year, it became, ‘If we get Sarah to come into our program, we will significantly change the trajectory of our program,’” he said.Wait a minute: this is UConn.To say one player can change the trajectory of a program that has reached 24 Final Fours and won 12 national championships? That’d be the highest compliment.When Strong committed to UConn in 2024, it was clear the admiration was mutual.

“Everyone gets better here,” Strong said,The storied names hailing for Storrs – including Diana Taurasi, Sue Bird, Maya Moore, Swin Cash, Rebecca Lobo, and Breanna Stewart - are basketball royalty,UConn has produced more WNBA players than any school,Six players, including Paige Bueckers in the most recent draft, have been selected No 1 overall,And Taurasi, the 2004 top pick, thinks Strong could be the best of them all.

“She’s so smooth out there that one piece that’s overlooked her grit and desire to win.She will do anything to win.She’s the nicest kid,” Taurasi told Yahoo Sports.Strong’s star is growing rapidly.She’s already inked NIL deals with Jordan Brand, Unrivaled and Madison Reed.

She had 18 points in each game as UConn rolled to first- and second-round wins last week, setting up Friday’s Sweet 16 matchup with North Carolina.Who knows what could be next if she leads UConn to back-to-back championships.Or maybe even a three-peat – the WNBA’s rules mean she won’t be draft-eligible until 2028.Maybe she’ll get comfortable on camera and even pop in on SNL some day.For now, the only certainty is that Strong, overflowing with talent and grounded by the values that shaped her long before the spotlight, is making this basketball superstar thing look awfully easy.

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Chess: iconic Reykjavik Open sparks memory of Bobby Fischer from 1973

The nine-round Reykjavik Open, which began on Wednesday afternoon at the Harpa Conference Centre and which continued with two rounds on Thursday, is an iconic event. It was first played as an all-play-all in 1964, when Mikhail Tal won, and is close to the Hotel Reykjavik Natura, formerly the Hotel Loftleidir, which featured prominently in the epic Bobby Fischer v Boris Spassky match of 1972.The top seed in the capacity entry of 422 players is Iran’s Amin Tabatabaei, the only 2700-rated player in the field, with Romania’s Bogdan-Daniel Deac (2655) next, and the veteran Ukrainian Vasyl Ivanchuk (2624) the fourth seed.England has a large contingent of more than 20, although most of them are low-rated amateurs. GM Matthew Wadsworth (2522) is the 21st seed, and GM Simon Williams (2443) the 39th, while WIM Bodhana Sivanandan, 11, is targeting her second WGM norm

about 10 hours ago
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Buttler looks for form as IPL returns with riches, political rancour and aftermath of tragedy

Former England captain seeks inspiration from the pioneering Kevin Pietersen as he heads a 12-strong contingent of compatriots in 2026’s tournament“I will always be grateful for what the IPL gave me,” Kevin Pietersen tells Jos Buttler. “It gave me a lot of controversy, I earned a lot of money, but it also saved my career because I made trusting relationships that I was able to call upon to give longevity to my career.”The conversation is on Buttler’s podcast, For The Love Of Cricket, released on Tuesday, with the pair hailing their experiences of playing in the Indian Premier League. (For the love of content, they also discuss Pietersen’s new career as a YouTuber.) The 45-year-old was there in the early years, rebelling against English cricket’s uneasy relationship with a revolutionary startup, exhilarated to call Rahul Dravid and Jacques Kallis his teammates

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Aryna Sabalenka sinks Rybakina to set up Miami Open final showdown with Gauff

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about 13 hours ago
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Human rights experts raise concerns over Olympics transgender women athlete ban

Over 100 human rights, sports and scientific groups have criticised the International Olympic Committee’s new gender eligibility guidelines as “a blunt and discriminatory response that is not supported by science and violates international human rights law”.The IOC’s new guidelines, announced on Friday, mandate genetic sex tests for all athletes competing in its women’s categories, as well as blanket bans of people who identify as transgender, intersex or with sex differences.Athletes in these categories have been allowed to compete in Olympic events since the IOC scrapped mandatory sex testing in 1999, which was deemed arbitrary, inaccurate, expensive and discriminatory.New IOC president Kirsty Coventry reversed the organisation’s position and backflipped on its own 2021 Framework on Fairness, Inclusion, and Non-Discrimination, a policy informed by extensive consultation and research which recognised the need for evidence-based, sport-specific and rights-respecting rules.“Mandatory genetic sex testing and rigid biological criteria as a condition for participation in the women’s category violates fundamental and universal human rights … including the right to equality, non-discrimination, dignity, privacy, and bodily autonomy,” said Professor Paula Gerber, an international human rights lawyer at Monash University

about 15 hours ago
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AFL scratching its head on decline in Indigenous participation as weight of history takes toll | Sean Gorman

I write this having come from the funeral of the West Perth and Buffaloes great Bill Dempsey. I mention this because Dempsey is the first Northern Territory player to play on the MCG. He was a trailblazer that set the scene so many other Territorians like Long, Rioli, Burgoyne, White and McLeod could follow. Demspey’s legacy came about by chance, as he was the support act for the talented Darwin recruit Jimmy Anderson when they both came down to Melbourne in the late 1950s. Anderson lasted a few weeks

about 17 hours ago
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Castleford’s sensational spell blows Bradford away to kick off birthday celebrations

It is fair to assume neither Castleford Tigers nor Bradford Bulls will be in title contention later this year, not least based on what we saw here from both teams. However, in terms of an appetiser to set the scene for Super League’s 30th anniversary weekend, this West Yorkshire derby was about as entertaining as you could have hoped for if you were a neutral.The beauty of early-season games like these is that narratives that have been formed can be quickly dismantled in the blink of an eye and, given defensive displays they have put in so far, it was hard not to feel that was perhaps the case on this occasion.With three wins from their opening five since promotion, Bradford have rightly been heralded as a major positive of 2026. In contrast, Castleford have won only once and arrived at this game off the back of a 72-6 defeat at Warrington, one of their heaviest in the Super League era

about 20 hours ago
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Can Adam Freier’s California Legion solve America’s rugby problem?

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The Strong, silent type: UConn’s standout is making basketball stardom look easy

about 9 hours ago