It's just deflating to think about next year's chances as far as winning it all, going through the off-season and regular season just to get a chance. I don't mean that we won't be good. Just all of the things that could happen.
Major injuries (Iowa State, etc).
In the tournament, LSU was down double digits in the 3rd quarter to VA Tech.
They were down by 1 with 10 seconds left to Utah. LSU got up by 1 but sent Utah to the line with 4 seconds left and the girl missed them both. (I had forgotten it was them that the girl air balled the first free throw. How does she feel now that LSU won it all?)
We were ahead of Georgia by 2 with 47 seconds left.
If we play South Carolina 100 times, how many do we win? I don't know but if we don't bring our A+ game and have SC not be able to hit outside shots, we don't win many.
Angel Reese is back. Paige Bueckers is back.
One of the top teams (hopefully us?) gets top transfers/recruits and builds a dream team.
Sorry to be negative, but it just sucks to get that close and then have to start the process all over again just to hope things work out again.
I have had those thoughts myself. But you're a coach, you know how it is...you control the process, you focus on what is in front of you, and you get better day by day. Odds are, you won't be back in the championship game, only 2 out of 300+ teams get there. But odds were against them this year, and they made it happen. You can easily psych yourself out by thinking of the long-odds and the road ahead, so you go myopic and think about tomorrow's workout.
That, and you work with the sport psychologists to develop a broad sense of self. If the team goes into next season thinking championship or bust, and all their eggs are in that basket, they are going to tighten up and gack at the first sign of adversity. But if they believe they are as good as anyone, and don't fear a loss because they know it isn't the end of their lives, they play fast and free, and that is scary for any opponent.