Arizona Wildcats basketball: Why Shaq and son — a possible recruit — were at Friday's game
- Updated
Seen and heard at McKale Center during Arizona's 95-65 win over Sacred Heart.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
In 1991, one of the most dominant big men in the history of basketball stepped foot in McKale Center, and he brought the hype with him.
He returned to McKale for a college basketball game for the first time on Friday, to watch the Wildcats play Sacred Heart.
That would be Shaquille O’Neal, the Hall-of-Fame center and LSU alum.
There’s a real possibility that a couple years from now, Arizona fans will be seeing a whole lot of O’Neal.
The basketball legend sat behind one of the baskets at McKale Center, only sort of obscured because his blue T-shirt matched his seat. At 7-foot-1, though, he still sticks out like a big, 300-pound sore thumb. The security guards posted around him didn’t help any yearning for obscurity.
Next to him sat his son, Shareef O’Neal, maybe obscure to Arizona fans now, but not for long.
Shareef was on Arizona’s campus on a visit — the 6-9 forward/center is a top recruit in the 2018 class and an Arizona target.
He’s not quite like his father — Shareef is more of a stretch big man with shooting ability out to 3-point line than the dominant, low-post force that his father was at LSU and in the NBA.
”A lot of people say I’m a way different player than he is,” Shareef told the Star in July. “My dad calls me a stretch four or five. I need to work on my post game more, but I say my outside game is pretty solid. I can run the floor pretty well. I’m kind of an all-around player.”
Unsurprisingly, the five-star recruit already has a handful of offers, including from UCLA, USC and LSU, where Shaquille first became a star. Shareef will play at Santa Monica (California) Crossroads next year with forward Ira Lee, a 2017 Arizona signee.
It was 1991 when O’Neal came to Tucson a junior and, of course, a star. The year prior, the Wildcats traveled to Baton Rouge and lost to O’Neal and the Tigers by 10 points.
The Wildcats got their revenge in a big way one year later.
O’Neal fouled out after scoring just 10 points, and the Wildcats won 87-67, a signature regular-season win of the Lute Olson era, the 65th consecutive win at home.
O’Neal returned to McKale years later when he played for the Phoenix Suns in the latter part of his career and the organization held training camp at McKale.
He returned again on Friday.
Maybe he’ll be back again in 2018.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
0: Number of players in Friday’s game, on Arizona or Sacred Heart, alive when O’Neal last played at McKale for LSU. How long ago was it? Sean Miller was a senior point guard at Pittsburgh.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Do a quick search of Sacred Heart’s athletic department, and you’ll find a familiar name at the head of it.
Bobby Valentine.
Yes, that Bobby Valentine, the longtime MLB manager of the New York Mets, Texas Rangers and Boston Red Sox.
Valentine was fired by the Red Sox after just one season in Boston, in October of 2012, and was quietly hired as Sacred Heart’s athletic director just four months after he was let go.
He doesn’t have any noticeable connection to Sacred Heart, but Valentine does live in Stamford, Connecticut, which isn’t far from the campus in Fairfield.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Arizona became well known for its high-flying ways a few years ago when the roster was filled with talented dunkers like Aaron Gordon, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Nick Johnson and Stanley Johnson.
Last year, the Wildcats didn’t quite have the “athletic freak” quotient of past Sean Miller lineups. It didn’t seem like Arizona did this season, either, but against Sacred Heart, the Wildcats had a sort of dunking coming-out party.
First, during pregame warmups, Arizona big Chance Comanche easily slammed home a windmill dunk.
During a stretch in the first half, the Wildcats had four straight dunks.
The first and third were breakaway dunks from guard Kobi Simmons. The second was an alley-oop from Parker Jackson-Cartwright to Comanche, the fourth another alley-oop from Simmons to Keanu Pinder.
Comanche added two more dunks to his tally in the second half.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
There was a familiar voice on the call for the Pac-12 Networks during Friday’s game.
And no, we don’t mean Steve Lavin, the former UCLA coach who was the game’s color commentator.
Play-by-play man Daron Sutton called the game. Sutton was previously the voice of the Arizona Diamondbacks from 2006 until 2012. He lives in Scottsdale.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
In 1991, one of the most dominant big men in the history of basketball stepped foot in McKale Center, and he brought the hype with him.
He returned to McKale for a college basketball game for the first time on Friday, to watch the Wildcats play Sacred Heart.
That would be Shaquille O’Neal, the Hall-of-Fame center and LSU alum.
There’s a real possibility that a couple years from now, Arizona fans will be seeing a whole lot of O’Neal.
The basketball legend sat behind one of the baskets at McKale Center, only sort of obscured because his blue T-shirt matched his seat. At 7-foot-1, though, he still sticks out like a big, 300-pound sore thumb. The security guards posted around him didn’t help any yearning for obscurity.
Next to him sat his son, Shareef O’Neal, maybe obscure to Arizona fans now, but not for long.
Shareef was on Arizona’s campus on a visit — the 6-9 forward/center is a top recruit in the 2018 class and an Arizona target.
He’s not quite like his father — Shareef is more of a stretch big man with shooting ability out to 3-point line than the dominant, low-post force that his father was at LSU and in the NBA.
”A lot of people say I’m a way different player than he is,” Shareef told the Star in July. “My dad calls me a stretch four or five. I need to work on my post game more, but I say my outside game is pretty solid. I can run the floor pretty well. I’m kind of an all-around player.”
Unsurprisingly, the five-star recruit already has a handful of offers, including from UCLA, USC and LSU, where Shaquille first became a star. Shareef will play at Santa Monica (California) Crossroads next year with forward Ira Lee, a 2017 Arizona signee.
It was 1991 when O’Neal came to Tucson a junior and, of course, a star. The year prior, the Wildcats traveled to Baton Rouge and lost to O’Neal and the Tigers by 10 points.
The Wildcats got their revenge in a big way one year later.
O’Neal fouled out after scoring just 10 points, and the Wildcats won 87-67, a signature regular-season win of the Lute Olson era, the 65th consecutive win at home.
O’Neal returned to McKale years later when he played for the Phoenix Suns in the latter part of his career and the organization held training camp at McKale.
He returned again on Friday.
Maybe he’ll be back again in 2018.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
Do a quick search of Sacred Heart’s athletic department, and you’ll find a familiar name at the head of it.
Bobby Valentine.
Yes, that Bobby Valentine, the longtime MLB manager of the New York Mets, Texas Rangers and Boston Red Sox.
Valentine was fired by the Red Sox after just one season in Boston, in October of 2012, and was quietly hired as Sacred Heart’s athletic director just four months after he was let go.
He doesn’t have any noticeable connection to Sacred Heart, but Valentine does live in Stamford, Connecticut, which isn’t far from the campus in Fairfield.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
Arizona became well known for its high-flying ways a few years ago when the roster was filled with talented dunkers like Aaron Gordon, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Nick Johnson and Stanley Johnson.
Last year, the Wildcats didn’t quite have the “athletic freak” quotient of past Sean Miller lineups. It didn’t seem like Arizona did this season, either, but against Sacred Heart, the Wildcats had a sort of dunking coming-out party.
First, during pregame warmups, Arizona big Chance Comanche easily slammed home a windmill dunk.
During a stretch in the first half, the Wildcats had four straight dunks.
The first and third were breakaway dunks from guard Kobi Simmons. The second was an alley-oop from Parker Jackson-Cartwright to Comanche, the fourth another alley-oop from Simmons to Keanu Pinder.
Comanche added two more dunks to his tally in the second half.
- Zack Rosenblatt Arizona Daily Star
There was a familiar voice on the call for the Pac-12 Networks during Friday’s game.
And no, we don’t mean Steve Lavin, the former UCLA coach who was the game’s color commentator.
Play-by-play man Daron Sutton called the game. Sutton was previously the voice of the Arizona Diamondbacks from 2006 until 2012. He lives in Scottsdale.
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Dusan Ristic had nine points and nine rebounds in the first half.
Arizona made only 3 of 19 three-pointers against Sacred Heart.
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