‘Those two carried me’: UCLA’s Cori Close recalls bond with Bueckers, Fudd from USA Basketball

TAMPA, Fla. — Despite a looming Final Four showdown against the UConn women’s basketball team, UCLA coach Cori Close almost immediately choked up as she reminisced Thursday about working with Huskies star Azzi Fudd while coaching Team USA at the 2021 U19 World Cup.

Close’s father Don died on Aug. 2, 2021, just five days before Team USA played its first game at World Cup against Italy in Debrecen, Hungary. Close was already in Spain with U19 squad for a pre-tournament exhibition game and had to say her goodbyes on a FaceTime call with her family. It was her first time serving as a head coach with USA Basketball, and Close knew she needed to be honest with the players about what she was going through personally.

“I remember the circle. I remember sitting there and telling them, like, this is going on. I’m okay, but this is happening,” Close said. “And their response to me was just tremendous.”

Fudd and UCLA center Lauren Betts, who started her career at Stanford, were both on the World Cup roster as the No. 1 recruits in the 2021 and 2022 classes respectively, and the two stars were also Close’s biggest source of comfort and support during the tournament run. Team USA went 7-0 in Hungary, defeating Australia 70-52 in the championship game to bring home the program’s ninth U19 World Cup gold medal. After the victory, Betts remembers she and Fudd immediately ran to Close and told her, “This is for your dad.”

“Even though I wasn’t committed to (UCLA) at the time, I still have a heart and just understand how hard that was for her,” Betts said. “For her to still be there as a coach and show up and do her job, I just felt so much love for her in that moment … We were just so grateful to her for still showing up for us, and I think that just created such a huge bond between us.”

It’s been nearly four years since Close last worked with Fudd, but the UCLA coach said she has never forgotten the kindness the two teenagers showed her in her moment of vulnerability.

“Those are probably the two that, they carried me a little bit,” Close said, holding back tears. “Azzi, she just has incredible work ethic. She’s an elite player, and she has a very tender heart. I was the beneficiary of that on that trip, and I’ll be forever grateful.”

Close also got to know UConn superstar Paige Bueckers with USA Basketball while serving as an assistant coach for the 2019 U19 World Cup. Bueckers and now-Phoenix Mercury guard Celeste Taylor were Close’s next-door neighbors at the team hotel in Bangkok, Thailand, and Close said she bonded with the pair over the gospel playlist that echoed from their room before every game.

Bueckers was the MVP of the tournament, averaging 11.6 points, 5.4 assists and 4.1 rebounds plus 1.9 steals across seven games to lead Team USA to the gold medal.

“Paige has just got an incredible charisma,” Close said. “She’s an incredible, most-efficient scorer, all those things, but her elite skill in my mind that I love the most is watching her vision and passing. It’s amazing. We were in a position in the gold-medal game that she needed to make the pass for us to have a chance to send it to ...

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