• Loading stock data...
Saturday, March 7, 2026

Hurley: UConn Would Be Powerhouse Even Without a Return to the Big East

  • In many ways, the team’s rebirth aligned its return to its conference of yore.
  • The Huskies would have come to dominate the men’s game whether they were duking it out in the Big East or still languishing in the AAC.
Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

By the time UConn announced it would rejoin the Big East for the 2020–21 season, the program had fallen into a period of irrelevance. The Huskies, toiling in the American Athletic Conference, hadn’t won a national championship since 2014, and hadn’t even reached the NCAA tournament since 2016. 

In many ways, the team’s rebirth aligns with the return to its conference of yore. (After all, programs move away from conferences for two reasons: to get rich and, by proxy, get better.) When the realignment announcement came in the summer of 2019, Dan Hurley (above, right) had just finished his first season as the head coach in Storrs. In 2021, their first year back in the Big East, the Huskies made their first NCAA tournament in half a decade. In 2023, they won the national title, and are going for the repeat in Phoenix on Monday night—a feat accomplished by only seven other men’s teams in history. 

But when Front Office Sports asked whether his program would have reached this level of dominance if it hadn’t rejoined the Big East, he leaned forward into the microphone and said, “Absolutely.” 

“We would be where we were regardless.” 

Hurley acknowledged that the move “certainly helped,” and he’s made plenty of comments suggesting he’s much happier with UConn in its current conference than its former one. The Big East’s intense competition really kept the team sharp—Hurley likened the Huskies’ journey to that of Kelvin Sampson and Houston, who moved from the AAC to the Big 12 just this year and led the Cougars to a conference title and Sweet 16 berth. (Hurley has spent most of the postseason reiterating how he believed the conference deserved at least three more bids than it received.)

But the 2024 Naismith National Coach of the Year said that by the time ’20 rolled around, the program was already recruiting “at a very, very high level.” He also said they had the “best staff in the country” at the time. 

From a financial standpoint, UConn isn’t getting rich in the Big East, either. In the AAC, the school could expect somewhere between $8 million and $10 million in annual revenue distributions, according to recent tax filings. In its new conference, the athletic department receives no more than $5 million. (The Big East is in the midst of negotiating a new, and potentially more lucrative, media-rights deal, and talks are going well, commissioner Val Ackerman told reporters during the conference’s tournament.) The school has, however, been able to cut down a multimillion-dollar budget deficit in its new home. 

Ultimately, the conference should be thanking them, he said. “We’ve also had a big impact on the Big East.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

White House Trump college sports roundtable

Trump Says He’ll Issue Second Executive Order on College Sports

“The executive order is going to let colleges survive and players survive.”
Dec 18, 2011; Orchard Park, NY, USA; Miami Dolphins running back Reggie Bush (22) runs for a touchdown against the Buffalo Bills during the second half at Ralph Wilson Stadium.

Reggie Bush Says NIL Era Wouldn’t Have Happened Without His Saga

The former USC running back had his Heisman Trophy revoked for 14 years.
Jan 18, 2026; Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Michael Zheng of United States in action against Sebastian Korda of United States in the first round of the men’s singles at the Australian Open at Kia Arena in Melbourne Park. Mandatory Credit:

Columbia Tennis Star Says He Claimed $150K from Australian Open

It was unclear if he could do so under NCAA rules.
Mar 3, 2026; Charlottesville, Virginia, USA; Virginia Cavaliers guard Malik Thomas (1) drives to the basket as Wake Forest Demon Deacons forward Juke Harris (2) defends in the second half at John Paul Jones Arena.

Men’s College Basketball Was Kalshi’s Most Bet-On Sport in February

The NCAA is once again asking Kalshi to stop using the term “March Madness.”

Featured Today

March 5, 2026

Mark DeRosa Is Still Baseball’s Swiss Army Knife

DeRosa is the sport’s utility player both on the field and off.
Nicole Silveira
March 3, 2026

The Tattoo Marking Membership in the Most Exclusive Club in Sports

For athletes, the Olympic rings tattoo is “about everything it took.”
Dec 25, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets forward Spencer Jones (21) reacts against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the second half at Ball Arena.
March 1, 2026

Young Athletes Have Entered Their LinkedIn Era

Athletes can’t play forever. Some are laying the groundwork for Act 2.
Former Auburn Tigers head coach Bruce Pearl talks with fans before Auburn Tigers take on the Houston Cougars at Legacy Arena in Birmingham, Ala. on Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025.

Miami (Ohio) AD: Bruce Pearl Auburn Bias Not ‘Appropriate for an Analyst’

David Sayler called the ex-Auburn coach’s comments “disrespectful.”
March 5, 2026

March Madness Payouts Drive Mid-Majors to New Tourney Formats

Stepladder-style tournament formats are rising in popularity.
Jan 1, 2026; New Orleans, LA, USA; Mississippi Rebels quarterback Trinidad Chambliss (6) is interviewed after the 2026 Sugar Bowl and quarterfinal game of the College Football Playoff against the Georgia Bulldogs at Caesars Superdome.
March 5, 2026

NCAA Challenges Ole Miss Quarterback Trinidad Chambliss Eligibility Decision

The NCAA wrote the injunction causes “irreparable harm.”
Sponsored

From USWNT Star to NWSL Franchise Founder

Leslie Osborne, former USWNT midfielder, shares how athletes are moving from the pitch to the ownership table.
Big 12
March 5, 2026

Players Say Big 12 Basketball Tournament’s LED Court Is Slick and Slippery

ASB GlassFloor’s technology is making its U.S. debut in Kansas City.
March 4, 2026

Mick Cronin Floats College Basketball Bird Rights

The idea would let schools go over the $20.5 million cap.
March 3, 2026

How a Small Town in Georgia Got the ACC Women’s Tournament

Greensboro has typically been the tournament’s host.
Mar 2, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Duke Blue Devils forward Cameron Boozer (12) lays the ball up against NC State Wolfpack forward Darrion Williams (1) during the second half at Lenovo Center. Mandatory Credit: Zachary Taft-Imagn Images
March 3, 2026

Why a College Basketball Game Organizer Is Fighting With Photo Services

One of this season’s top games had no photos from major wire services.