A day after Colorado freshman guard McKinley Wright dropped 21 points and six assists on Iowa last month â and just five days after Indiana lost at home to Fort Wayne â a long thread started growing on the âHoosier Sports Nationâ website.
It was titled âWhy didnât Archie go after McKinley Wright?â
Itâs a question that probably haunts Archie Miller, the former UA associate head coach who was then just 7-6 in his first season with the Indiana Hoosiers âĻ and itâs a question that now also haunts his brother, Sean.
Because Wright, a Dayton signee who flipped to Colorado after Archie left for Indiana last spring, had 16 points and 10 assists while leading the Buffaloes to an 80-77 win over Arizona on Jan. 6 in Boulder.
Wright also provided some pretty instrumental glue and passion in what was the Wildcatsâ only loss in their past 14 games.
âMcKinley Wright, for such a young kid, itâs amazing, you can just see in his face how he plays,â Sean Miller said. âHeâs just that special player who can make his teammates better. Usually you say that about an older guy, but for such a young player, thatâs a great characteristic. You can really feel that when you play Colorado.â
Sean Miller said this week only that he didnât âknow the dynamics of it allâ regarding Wrightâs decision to play for Colorado, but the bottom line was that Wright was supposed to be in his brotherâs care this season, far away from his Wildcats.
If he wanted to, Sean Miller could blame it on Archie for leaving Dayton, or even for the longer deadline college players were given in 2016 to decide whether or not they want to turn pro.
When Archie Miller took over Indiana, he inherited a crowded roster with no departing seniors and three incoming signees. He persuaded all of the signees to stay with Indiana, and the Hoosiers had four players who had stuck their toes into the NBA draft pool.
That meant there would be room for Wright if they all left for good, and Wright told a Minneapolis reporter in late March he had a spot at Indiana if he wanted one.
Eventually, all of the Hoosiers on the fence did leave for pro ball. But the new rule gave them until late May to decide, and Wright said he didnât want to wait that long.
Meanwhile, his stock was rising after winning Minnesotaâs Mr. Basketball award as a high school senior in Minneapolis. Some 15 schools were in his ear, and Coloradoâs Tad Boyle had a particularly compelling pitch: The Buffs had just helped develop Derrick White into the No. 29 pick of the 2017 NBA draft and needed a new point guard, badly.
At Indiana, even if roster spots opened up, guaranteed playing time might not.
Colorado could virtually guarantee both.
âItâs not that I didnât want to go there,â Wright said of Indiana. âThey had (guard) James Blackmon and (center) Thomas Bryant enter the draft, but they didnât sign with an agent, and they were eligible to come back. And I didnât want to miss out on an opportunity like this, so I just took the best opportunity.â
He took it and ran. Wrightâs Dec. 6 performance was only one data point: He also had 19 points, five assists and two steals in the Buffsâ Dec. 4 win over ASU, and the two performances earned him the Jan. 8 Pac-12 Player of the Week award.
Overall in Pac-12 games so far, Wright is No. 2 in assists (6.1) behind only USCâs Jordan McLaughlin, while heâs also averaging 12.1 points.
âHeâs been a great addition to Colorado and the Pac-12,â Miller said.
Boyle was counting on it happening, especially after seeing the way Wright played and behaved during an exhibition trip to Italy last summer.
He told the Star in August that Wright was âgoing to be a big, big part of this yearâs team,â and that he could be one of Coloradoâs best-ever guards.
A day before Colorado beat Arizona earlier this month, before CU wing George King began accelerating his production, Boyle was leaning particularly hard on Wright for that role.
He was not disappointed.
âHeâs better than expected,â Boyle said then. âHis intangibles. âĻ itâs just all the little things. He can pass, he can dribble, he can shoot. Heâs still learning the game obviously, but I wouldnât trade him for anybody.
âHe is our engine. Our guys feed off him, and when heâs not good, weâre not good. Now, it shouldnât be that way.
âThatâs a lot of stuff to put on a freshmanâs shoulders, but he embraces it, he accepts it. He understands it.â
Immediately, he did. King and guard Dom Collier, the Buffsâ senior combo guard, made his role clear when Wright visited Boulder during his re-opened recruitment last spring.
âGeorge and Dom and those guys told me if I came here, the ballâs gonna be in my hands,â Wright said in Boulder on Jan. 5. âThey said they were gonna trust me, that Iâm the point guard. Those guys believed in me from Day 1, and that just made my confidence go from 50 to 100.â
At the time, Wright was also considering Tennessee, Butler, Western Kentucky and a few other schools, but he didnât bother to visit any of them.
He was sold.
âIt was a very fast recruitment,â Wright said. âI didnât really get a chance to get to know (Boyle), but he told me I had a chance to make an impact as a freshman. So I put my trust in him, and heâs put his trust in me so far. Itâs what I expected from his word from the first day I met him.â
Wright doesnât have any complaints off the court, either. Sure, itâs cold in Boulder sometimes, but Wright is from Minnesota, after all.
âThese people here are very friendly, theyâre loving, and the cityâs amazing,â Wright said. âYou get to wake up to the mounts every day. Itâs a beautiful sight. Iâm very happy I made the decision to come to Colorado.â
The Miller brothers will just have to deal with the consequences.



