As an opposing player and coach, Lorenzo Romar has been walking in and out of McKale Center since 1979.
Heβs known Allonzo Trier since UAβs leading scorer was about 8 years old. And heβs plotted against the Wildcats for years as Washingtonβs head coach.
But there were still things about the Arizona program Romar couldnβt see until he slipped on the inside, starting work as UAβs new associate head coach this week. He picked up some UA gear, including a βWildcat basketball never stopsβ T-shirt he called βpretty sweet,β worked some guys out and dug into film study.
βWe had to scout them (at UW), so I had an idea of what they do, but it was why. Why are you doing that? How you gonna teach it and all that stuff?β Romar said Thursday at his introductory news conference in McKale Center. βIβve been watching film, asking questions, trying to get acclimated in that regard.β
Romar has already had a chance to work in one of the two-hour small group drills allowed in the offseason, working with Trier and other UA guards and saying the Wildcatsβ fundamentals jumped out at him.
βItβs just how sound Arizona is,β Romar said. βYou watch film, and you watch them defensively, you watch what they do offensively, theyβre just very fundamentally sound without making a whole lot of mistakes.β
During his 20-minute media appearance Thursday, Romar said repeatedly that he is around to absorb that framework and help within it, not impose unsolicited beliefs.
Even if he is 10 years older than UA coach Sean Miller and has been a head coach for 21 years, the last 15 at Washington.
βIβm not here to run things,β Romar said. βThereβs someone here who does a fantastic job of running them here in Sean Miller. So Iβm here to help. On the bench, Iβm sure there will be times I want to jump up but I know my role. I know my place.β
UA center Dusan Ristic, having faced Romar four times in Arizona-Washington matchups, was glad to see him jump aboard.
βIβve heard all the best things about Coach Romar,β Ristic said Wednesday night at UAβs awards ceremony. βI met him two days ago and heβs one of the nicest guys Iβve ever met in my life. Heβs going to help not only me, but the rest of the team. He was head coach at Washington, but he accepted this role and I think itβs a great thing for us.β
Romar, 58, said he was interested in being a head coach in the future but wasnβt focused on that now. He said he has seen many assistants, especially those who havenβt been head coaches, get so anxious to take a head coaching job that theyβll grab one that may not be a great situation.
βI am not coming here thinking, βOK, Iβll put up with this for a few months so that I can ... No. Thatβs not my train of thought. Iβm here and locked in and weβll just go and see what happens. Iβm not in a hurry to get away from this situation.β
Romar declined to detail how his role will break down, or if Miller might absorb any of his coaching philosophies. He said heβs the one who plans to absorb the most, that βthereβs no doubtβ he will learn from Miller and his other staffers.
While Romar is expected to play a heavy role in UAβs West Coast recruiting efforts, he wouldnβt go that far, either. Especially when it came to his old backyard.
βIt was never communicated to me by Coach Miller that, βweβre bringing you in because we want you to get the Seattle kids,ββ Romar said.
Eventually, he may anyway. Romar said it will be a βdifferent experienceβ if he is recruiting top Seattle-area players for Arizona β potentially against his old employer β but that βanybody would understand weβre all trying to be the best we can be.β
Romar has already experienced some difficulty in recruiting β that is, each time he called the members of his heralded 2017 recruiting class β most of which dissipated after his firing last month.
βNone of those were fun conversations,β Romar said. βI talked to all of them. I tried to encourage them that they had something special going. I would try to get a feel for what they were thinking at the time.β
Romar will begin recruiting on the road this weekend for Arizona and, of course, that process will never stop.
In between, heβll likely spend much of the spring and summer working with the returning and incoming Wildcats, learning more of the secrets behind the UA program and why McKale Center can be a pretty tough place to play.
From the outside, Romar knows that maybe better than anyone. When playing his first game in McKale, for UCLA back in January of 1979, Romar was on the losing end. He also lost in 11 of the 14 games he coached the Huskies in Tucson.
Now, heβs hoping to help inflict that sort of trouble on somebody else.
βWhen you get of the bus, and you see all the red and blue, just kind of the buzz among people that are going to the game, you know right then β the tone is set and youβre about to go on a big stage here,β Romar said of McKale Center. βThereβs just a feel and a sense that this is a pretty special place to play. So now to be on this side and understand what the other side is going through should be a lot of fun.β