“I don’t have his cell number. We don’t talk”: When Pat Summitt dismissed any off-court camaraderie with Geno Auriemma

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Former Tennessee coach Pat Summitt dominated college basketball with the Volunteers winning eight national championships during her 38-year tenure at the helm of the program. In the mid-1990s, Summitt's dominance was challenged by UConn Huskies coach Geno Auriemma and the pair battled for supremacy in college basketball.

The start of Auriemma's dynasty in Storrs began when he beat Summitt's Vols in the national championship game in 1995. The pair had a famously intense rivalry and during a news conference before they played each other in the 2004 Final Four, the charismatic Summitt revealed that she did not have a warm relationship with Auriemma.

"We don't have a relationship. We coach against each other," Pat Summitt said. "As I said before, I don't have his cell number. We don't talk. We speak before and after the games, that's it. But that's the relationship that Geno worked very hard to create. At one time, I thought we had a pretty good relationship. So I don't know why it went south, but that's the way it is."

When Pat Summitt and Geno Auriemma's relationship broke

After defeating Pat Summitt in the 1995 national championship game, Geno Auriemma dominated the encounters between the two sides, winning five of their six Final Four matchups. In 2007, Summitt and the Tennessee Volunteers made a complaint to the SEC about the UConn Huskies' recruitment practices.

Their annual regular season game was subsequently canceled and in her book titled "Sum It Up," the legendary coach revealed a tense phone call between herself and Auriemma after the announcement was made.

"My home phone rang," Pat Summitt wrote. "It was Geno. In retrospect, that was the moment when friendship and alliance should have prevailed. Each of us should have said, 'Let's talk this through and solve this. What are your concerns?' But we had long passed the point of being able to talk that way. Instead, it was hostile and defensive from the start. "Geno made an opening remark. 'Geno, you and I both know we aren't playing by the same rules,' I said. The conversation only lasted a minute or so more. It mainly consisted of him saying that he hoped to see us in the NCAA Tournament, so 'I can kick your ass.' But we never played again."

Pat Summitt retired in 2012 as the most successful women's college basketball coach with eight national championships, but since then, Geno Auriemma has added five titles to his resume with his latest coming in April after a nine-year drought.

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About the author

Cabral Opiyo

Cabral Opiyo is a journalist who covers college sports at Sportskeeda. With work experience spanning over 10 years, Cabral is an avid follower of college football and basketball and what goes into making the perfect elite prospect. He brings the news as it happens and analyzes football games to a high degree of accuracy.

As a writer, he loves bringing to life historical and iconic moments with his writing, fueled by extensive and verifiable research, creating an image in the reader's eyes.

Cabral has been known to sneak away from a high-profile NBA game to catch an obscure college basketball game and is an avid re-watcher of Tim Duncan and San Antonio Spurs games from the 2000s.

UConn winning its first national title under Dan Hurley remains his best college sports moment. Cabral rates A'ja Wilson and Caitlin Clark as his favorite players due to their productivity and the Alabama Crimson Tide as his favorite college team.

In addition, Cabral follows football and is a huge Italian and Brazilian football fan. He has written about football for a decade and held a byline with Outside of the Boot Football.

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