LAS VEGAS â Arizonaâs transition into a college basketball power in the late 1980s happened long before Edward Turner was born, but he talks about it as if he were there.
Thatâs because heâs seen his father keep popping up in videos from that happy Wildcat era.
âArizona is where I first picked up basketball,â Turner said. âI used to like watching my dad play back in college.â
Joe Turner was a popular reserve player who joined Lute Olsonâs second Arizona team and helped the Wildcats reach the NCAA Tournament each season, including the 1988 Final Four.
But it wasnât just the success that Edward picked up on.
âThe biggest thing that jumped out at me was the atmosphere and the relationship with his teammates,â Edward said after a game with the Las Vegas Prospects at the Las Vegas Classic. âIt was a really cool to see him in that era.â
Edward says heâs met key players from Olsonâs early Arizona teams â Steve Kerr, Craig McMillan and Matt Muehlebach among them â and even Olson himself.
Joe Turner, father of three-star 2019 prospect Edward Turner, shares a hug with former UA teammate Steve Kerr.
Edward has a sister, Jade, who played three seasons with the Arizona volleyball team before transferring to Cal State Bakersfield for the upcoming season.
Itâs all been cool enough that Edward has a pretty clear goal for his own college basketball career.
âEver since I was little, Iâve always wanted to play for them,â he said.
Itâs not out of the question.
After a breakout season for Bakersfieldâs Foothill High School, where he nearly averaged a triple-double, Turner has surfaced as a three-star combo forward who is collecting mid-major offers around the West.
Although Arizona has not offered Turner a scholarship, the Wildcats have kept an eye on him.
Arizona assistant coach Mark Phelps watched a Thursday night game involving the Las Vegas Prospects â a prominent AAU team that has several other UA targets â and Turner said heâs heard from Phelps, too.
âTheyâve been talking to me a little bit, yeah,â Turner said. âArizona would be my No. 1 choice if I got an offer from them.â
Otherwise, Turner said heâs heard a lot from Santa Clara, UC Irvine, San Diego State and San Francisco, among others, as the summer has progressed.
Nicknamed âsquidâ for his long and lanky frame, Turner is 6-foot-8 and about 190 pounds with a wingspan is 7-foot-4, according to 247 Sports.
The class of 2019 star can do a lot of things on the floor.
For that versatility, he can thank not only his fatherâs bloodlines but also his advice. After a pro career in Australia, New Zealand and Europe, Joe Turner is now a teacher at Bakersfield Adult School â and a coach of sorts for his son.
âActually, he has a lot of input,â Edward Turner said, smiling.
âHe used to teach me how to be a guard, so when I grew up, I stuck with it.
âI see myself as an all-around player: I can dish the ball, block shots, score and play defense.â



