BRIDGEPORT, CONN. – Wes Moore doesn't remember the exact year, but as coach of the Tennessee-Chattanooga women's basketball team in the 2000s, he called and asked UConn's Geno Auriemma if he could visit him and observe his program for a weekend during fall break.
Auriemma said yes, and Moore watched practices and picked the legendary coach's brain over meals for several days.
"He's built something special," Moore recalled Sunday, "and the rest of us are trying to get there."
One bit of wisdom Auriemma might have shared with Moore is something he often preaches and did so again now that UConn has arrived in a familiar place: Auriemma believes the Elite Eight is the most challenging game of the NCAA women's basketball tournament, which sounds somewhat absurd coming from a guy who has won 13 consecutive Elite Eight games.
That's 13 Final Four appearances in a row.
No player on Moore's current team, North Carolina State, was even alive the only time their program made it to the Final Four in 1998.
With a trip to Minneapolis for the Final Four at stake Monday, the Wolfpack will have to contend with UConn's unrivaled history, its five-star roster and the fact that this is essentially a home game for the Huskies, given that Total Mortgage Arena is roughly 80 miles from their campus.
N.C. State earned the No. 1 seed in the region after finishing No. 2 nationally in NET rankings (behind only South Carolina), but still drew the unenviable task of having to dethrone the Huskies in their own backyard.