LOS ANGELES â For weeks even before he took his team into Pauley Pavilion for one of the biggest upsets of his UA career, Sean Miller has said UCLA has a chance to win the national championship.
He said that again while closing up his postgame interview Saturday, too.
âUCLA is a great team,â Miller said. âI think they have a chance to win the whole thing. I really do. Theyâre great on offense, for sure.â
Um, well âĻ Arizona just beat the Bruins 85-96 on their home floor.
So that must mean the Wildcats might have a chance to win it all, too, right?
Miller grinned when presented with that logic.
âWeâll see,â Miller said.
If nothing else, though, the Wildcats are bound not only to vault well into the Top 10 of the major polls on Monday but also into the basketball consciousness. Arizona has played under the national radar really all season, with few national media of any sort talking much about them except for the odd Allonzo Trier reference.
Now, attention is probably unavoidable. Arizona is 18-2, just beat the third-ranked team â which won at Kentucky â on its home floor.
Thatâs the kind of success that can gain attention in every time zone.
âLike I told our guys, when you come to a place like UCLA or L.A., itâs not really what you say or think, itâs what you do,â Miller said. âYou earn respect through performance and today Iâm sure we earned the respect of a lot of people because of how we played against a great team.â
Kobi Simmons said UA is trying to earn respect every game.
âWe knew we had to gain respect and every game weâve kept grinding and grinding, and we came up with another road sweep,â he said.
About that: UAâs sweep in Los Angeles was only its second of the Miller era in seven tries (The Wildcats did not play in L.A. in 2014-15 because of the unbalanced Pac-12 schedule), and first since 2013-14.
Moreover, the Wildcatsâ four-game road sweep of California in league play is its first such sweep since 2002-03, when the Jason Gardner-Luke Walton Wildcats were ranked No. 1 for most of the season.
One of the few things about Trier that Miller did say before Trierâs PED-related suspension was lifted Friday was that Trier has practiced with the Wildcats all season.
âThe one thing weâve always done is treated him as if he could play the next game,â Miller said. âSo (picking up) our offense, and the repetitions, heâs been getting those. But when you donât play 19 games, itâs not easy to get there.â
Not only that but, according to a UA spokesman, the Wildcats practiced Friday still not knowing that Trier would be cleared to play Saturday.
Yet Lauri Markkanen, for one, found Trierâs presence a smooth transition.
âI think it was easier than I thought,â Markkanen said. âHe hasnât played a game since what, last March or something? Itâs a little bit tough but I think moving forward every game is easier. It was a little bit different than practice.â
One thing about Trier that Miller appeared most excited about, on top of his obvious statistical contributions: His presence gave the Wildcats an additional quality talent to ease the pressure on his other players, keeping them fresher as the game wore on.
This especially applied to guard Kadeem Allen, because he needs all the energy he can get as the teamâs top perimeter defender.
Miller indicated Trierâs presence for that reason helped UA fend off the Bruins after UCLA trimmed UAâs lead from 14 points to four in the second half.
âWeâve had a tendency this year to not be as good in the second half as weâve been,â Miller said. âBut todayâs a reminder that to be good late in the game and the second half, you need depth, and part of what weâve run into is weâve given great effort and we run out of gas.
âToday we didnât do that. Kadeem is great example. He played only 30 minutes and at the end of the game he was a lot fresher. Especially in the Pac-12 (thatâs important) because (in the second game of the weekend) youâre coming off the heels of another game, too.â
It was only two days earlier at USC that Miller fretted repeatedly about his teamâs lethargic late-game efforts, even suggesting that he might bench underperforming players to send a message â when in fact he had only three bench players at the time.
Now he has four, including Trier. That gives Miller a legitimate hook to threaten players with.
âDuring the long course of a season, you have injuries, you have foul trouble, you have players who maybe arenât playing well,â Miller said. âThe biggest thing from a coaching perspective is if you don't play with effort, youâre not going to play. That right there is worth a lot."
Now "that wonât be compromised because the answer is easy. Youâll just get subbed out. So you have a chance to have even greater effort level.â
The downside of having nine players all of a sudden is that chemistry could suffer if a player gets too upset over having minutes and/or shots cut. Miller said he isnât concerned, though, because âwe have an unselfish group of guys for sure,â even as he said everyoneâs role will get tweaked a little.
âWeâre gonna have to sacrifice,â he said. âWeâve had great team chemistry and itâs our job to continue to have that great team chemistry. Really, everyone will play a little bit less but hopefully we can accomplish more as a group.â
Hereâs how Miller carved 27 minutes on to Trierâs plate Thursday:
Rawle Alkins played just 17, which is 14 fewer than his average in previous Pac-12 games.
Parker Jackson-Cartwright played 18, down from 23.
Keanu Pinder played four, down from 10.
Dusan Ristic played 22, down from 26.
However, Kobi Simmons was up to 33, three over his Pac-12 average, and Markkanan was up three to 32.
Allenâs 30 minutes was actually only a minute less than heâs averaged in conference play, as was Chance Comancheâs 17 minutes.
Our full coverage is attached to this post, as our the box score and updated stats.



