A big reason why analytics site Kenpom.com is popular among college basketball coaches and geeks alike is that an opposing team’s desired pace is adjusted out of most statistics, so you can get an accurate measure of production even in a low-scoring game.
It also helps when things go the other way, like they did Monday in Arizonaâs 117-75 season opening blowout of Nicholls at McKale Center.
Under second-year coach Tommy Lloyd, the Wildcats have shown they love to go fast. And the Colonels do, too, trying to wreak havoc by gambling for steals with their smaller lineup.
Which meant, basically, Nicholls spread lighter fluid all over McKale Center on Monday. The Wildcats wound up scoring their most points yet under Lloyd while shooting a school-record 71.7% from the field. The Wildcats also turned the ball over 24 times.
âI just watched (former coach) Paul Westheadâs Loyola Marymount deal and weâre gonna score 130 a game,â Lloyd said jokingly, before adding: âNot at all. I think our opponent had a lot to do with that today. They wanted to get up and down.â
The wild pace of Mondayâs game actually made a lot of numbers look pretty extreme. Hereâs some of them:
117: Arizonaâs total pointsThe Wildcats scored their most since Lloyd was hired before last season and the most overall since beating ASU 127-99 on Jan. 5, 1998, in a game that still stands as UAâs McKale Center scoring record. UAâs overall scoring record came in a 133-78 win over Duquesne in the 1987-88 Great Alaska Shootout in Anchorage.
But it was clear this sort of thing was coming. In Lloydâs first season as a head coach in 2021-22, the Wildcats scored 90 or more 12 times, including three games in triple digits. Arizona scored 105 on Sacramento State, 104 on Texas-Rio Grande Valley and 101 on Northern Colorado.
In Kenpom.com terms, the Wildcats ran at the ninth-highest adjusted tempo last season while Nicholls ranked No. 51.
âHonestly, I didnât expect that,â UA center Oumar Ballo said after Mondayâs game. Defensively, the Colonels âgo crazy and we give a lot of credit for them. They have a unique style of defense but if you play small against us, you just gonna pay the price for that.â
71.7: Arizonaâs shooting percentage
The Wildcats barely beat their old shooting percentage record of 71.4 set on Feb. 24, 1985 against Oregon State. But Arizona took only 35 shots in that game, hitting 25, while the Wildcats hit 38 of 53 on Monday against Nicholls.
The Wildcats also hit 30 of 40 from the free throw line.
âAwesome,â Lloyd said. âBut letâs not couple that with 24 turnovers. We work on finishing every single day. To shoot 71% and also attempt 40 free throws, I think that also means weâre for the most part executing our game plan because we wanted to attack more.â
Last season, Arizona averaged 49.6% from the field, surpassing the 60% mark only twice, both at home: Against Texas-Rio Grande Valley (60.7) and against California (62.5).
24: Arizonaâs turnovers
While Lloydâs fretting over this was understandable â the Wildcats never gave up more than 22 turnovers last season and averaged 13.4 â that, too, was pace-dependent.
Arizona’s 24 turnovers Monday actually meant the Wildcats turned the ball over on 27.6% of their possessions, which is comparable to the 27.2% the Wildcats averaged last season. That number ranked only 224th nationally in Kenpom.com’s calculations, but is also a function of UA’s style of play.
Still, Lloyd argued, itâs a style of play that can use a little cleaning up.
âFor me, (scoring 117 points) is really going to reinforce that when we play with fundamentals and do things the right way, we can be really, really good,â Lloyd said. âBut when we get a little bit loose and arenât quite tough enough with the ball, we are susceptible.â
30: Arizonaâs assists
The Wildcats also set a Lloyd-era high by recording 30 assists, a number that still stands out even when the number of possessions isnât considered. Those 30 assists came on 38 made baskets Monday for a ratio of 78.1-1 that is well above the 65.0 ratio of assists to made field goals the Wildcats recorded last season.
But while the assist equation wasnât pace-dependent, it was style-dependent.
âWhen you play a team like that, you literally just have to get to kind of break through the pane of glass thatâs out there on the perimeter, the pressure,â Lloyd said. âOnce you break through youâre gonna have number of advantages â three on two, two on ones.
âItâs not maybe how you normally see us move the ball. Normally weâll move it side to side and connect passes. In a game like that, itâs hard because you throw one pass and the next oneâs denied. So eventually youâve got to go north-south.
âObviously, we love attacking high-low and playing inside. I think some of our turnovers tonight were in our high-low actions, and we could probably get a little more patient â look at that, figure out where the helpâs coming from and skip to the open guy.â
23-7-6: Azuolas Tubelisâ points, rebounds and assists
The Wildcatsâ junior forward became the first Arizona player to have as many as 23 points, seven rebounds and six assists in a game since Ivan Radenovic had 37 points, nine rebounds and seven assist against Stanford on March 3, 2007.
Meanwhile, 7-footer Oumar Ballo added 18 points and nine rebounds against the smaller Colonels.
âZu was âZu,â junior guard Pelle Larsson said. âThatâs the type of player is he. Whenever a team plays smaller, (Ballo) and âZu are going to punish that. I think (Tubelis) didnât get out and run as much as heâs used to with the fast-break dunks and everything but I think he played very mature.â
Guard Adama Bal finished Monday's opener with 14 points while hitting 3 of his 4 3-point attempts.
14: Adama Balâs points
The sophomore wing from France spent much of last season quietly on the bench, breaking out mostly in the Pac-12 Tournament after Kerr Kriisa sprained an ankle. But he has been expected to play a bigger role this season as he did Monday, hitting 3 of 4 3-pointers while converting one of them into a four-point play. His stats came despite Bal missing several minutes after hurting his shoulder.
Prodded by Lloyd to alter his shot during the offseason, Bal also had 15 points and six rebounds in UAâs Nov. 1 exhibition against Western Oregon. Lloyd said Bal also played well late in the Wildcatsâ closed scrimmage against Saint Maryâs on Oct. 23.
âHeâs really coming on,â Lloyd said. âIâve got to give that kid credit.â
10: Larssonâs rebounds
Combined with 16 points, Larsson posted his first career double-double. While the high number of possessions helped him get there, the fact is that Larsson sat down on the bench for good with 9:03 remaining in the game, playing 28 minutes total.
âPelleâs been great all fall,â Lloyd said. âHeâs relentless.â
23: Kylan Boswellâs minutes
Guard Courtney Ramey was the only other of Arizonaâs 19 players not to play Monday since he was serving the first game of a three-game NCAA suspension for playing in a non-NCAA-certified event last spring. Because of Rameyâs absence, and because Kriisa ran into foul trouble in the first half Monday, Lloyd wound up giving starterâs minutes to Boswell, his 17-year-old freshman point guard.
Boswell responded with eight points, one rebound, five assists and four turnovers. He hit 2 of 3 field goals and all three free throws he took.
âHe knows how to hoop,â Larsson said of Boswell. âEspecially him coming a year early, itâs really impressive how well heâs adapting.â
17: Total players used by Arizona
The Wildcats have seven walk-ons this season. Every one of them hit the floor Monday except Luke Champion, a Division II transfer who is sitting out the season as a second-time transfer.
Photos: No. 17 Arizona clobbers Nicholls in season opener
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats forward Azuolas Tubelis (10) makes the pass as he's defended by Nicholls State Colonels forward Manny Littles (22) and Nicholls State Colonels guard Latrell Jones (11) in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Pelle Larsson (3) grabs the rebound over Nicholls State Colonels forward Manny Littles (22) in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Kerr Kriisa (25) runs with the ball as he's defended by Nicholls State Colonels forward Marek Nelson (0) in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Kylan Boswell (4) and Arizona Wildcats guard Cedric Henderson Jr. (45) are all smiles as they watch a free throw in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats head coach Tommy Lloyd has some words with a referee in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Pelle Larsson (3) is defended by Nicholls State Colonels guard Pierce Spencer (5) in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Adama Bal (2) flashes a sign after sinking a three-pointer in the first half during the season opener game against Nicholls State at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Adama Bal (2) makes a break to get away from Nicholls State Colonels guard Pierce Spencer (5) and Nicholls State Colonels forward Manny Littles (22) in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Nicholls State Colonels forward Marek Nelson (0) grabs the rebound over Arizona Wildcats center Oumar Ballo (11) in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats forward Henri Veesaar (13) is defended by Nicholls State Colonels guard Pierce Spencer (5) in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Pelle Larsson (3) looks to pass the ball in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Kylan Boswell (4) reacts to a foul call by a referee in the first half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats head coach Tommy Lloyd talks with Arizona Wildcats guard Pelle Larsson (3) in the second half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022. Arizona won 117-75.
Nicholls State at No. 17 Arizona, Men's Basketball
Updated
Arizona Wildcats guard Cedric Henderson Jr. (45) makes a drive past Nicholls State Colonels guard Caleb Huffman (4) in the second half during the season opener game at McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. on November 7, 2022. Arizona won 117-75.
No. 17 Arizona thumped Nicholls 117-75 Monday night for the Wildcats' season opener at McKale Center. Pelle Larsson recorded his first-career double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds. Azuolas Tubelis led the Wildcats with 23 points, seven rebounds and six assists.



