Bobbi Olson talks with her husband Lute before he was formally announced as the new head coach of men's basketball at University of Arizona during a press conference at McKale Center in 1983. The basketball court was named in Bobbi's honor after her death in 2001.

As McKale Center celebrates its 50th birthday, we continue our countdown of its 50 most memorable moments with Nos. 20-11:

20. Olson’s first game at McKale since wife’s death

Date: Jan. 4, 2001

What happened: Bobbi Olson, Lute Olson’s wife, died from her ovarian cancer on New Year’s Day during the 2000-01 season. Three days later, the Wildcats beat Cal 78-75 at McKale Center. The court at McKale was officially renamed β€œLute and Bobbi Olson Court” during her memorial service on Jan. 7.

19. McDonald lifts Arizona over No. 4 Stanford

Date: Feb. 28, 2020

What happened: Among Aari McDonald’s many games at Arizona, arguably her best one was when she scored 13 points in the final 15 minutes against No. 4 Stanford to give the Wildcats their first win over a top-five opponent in program history. McDonald hit a game-winning shot with eight seconds left in overtime.

Arizona guard Aari McDonald works her way into the lane against Stanford forward Francesca Belibi at McKale Center on February 28, 2020. McDonald hit the game-winning shot in overtime.

18. Wildcats win final Pac-10 title

Date: March 5, 2011

What happened: Just before the conference added Colorado and Utah to the Pac-10 to create the Pac-12, Derrick Williams and Arizona clobbered Oregon to win the last Pac-10 regular-season championship. (The league could become the Pac-10 again if it doesn't expand following the departures of UCLA and USC in 2024.)

17. First fan-less game during pandemic

Date: Nov. 27, 2020

What happened: Cardboard cutouts in seats, artificial crowd noise pumped in, coaches in masks and not a single person wearing a striped, red-and-white pep-band shirt in sight. Arizona’s win over Grambling wasn’t just the first game of the truncated, pandemic-influenced season, it was also the Wildcats’ first contest of the season that included a self-imposed postseason ban for the program’s infractions case.

University of Arizona Athletics Director Dave Heeke and President Robert Robbins (center of third row from bottom) sit among cardboard cutouts of former players during a pandemic-era game against Cal State Bakersfield at McKale Center on Dec. 9, 2020. Arizona won 85-60.

16. Arizona hosts first round of NCAAs

Date: March 19, 2022

What happened: The UA women’s basketball team would’ve likely hosted the first rounds of the NCAA Tournament in 2020 and β€˜21, but you know, there was a pandemic and all. Arizona finally hosted an NCAA Tournament site and beat UNLV, a game featuring UA wing Sam Thomas against her sister, Jade.

15. Olson’s introductory news conference

Date: March 29, 1983

What happened: Arizona wooed Lute Olson away from Final Four participant Iowa to take over the UA basketball programΒ β€” arguably the most significant hire in UA sports history.Β 

14. Beating the Fab Five

Date: Dec. 30, 1993

What happened: Khalid Reeves scored a career-high 40 points to lead No. 12 Arizona past seventh-ranked Michigan and the Wolverines’ β€œFab Five.” Reeves was 13 for 14 from the field.

Fans swarm the court after University of Arizona (still in the Western Athletic Conference) defeated basketball powerhouse UCLA (then #1 in the nation), 70-69, at McKale Center on Jan. 18, 1979.

13. Arizona takes down UCLA, USC

Date: Jan. 18-22, 1979

What happened: Arizona beat UCLA and USC by a combined three points in a weekend β€” one of the best of the Fred Snowden era. Fans stormed the court following the win over USC.

12. Lyons’ game-winner caps historic day

Date: Dec. 15, 2012

What happened: Hours after the UA football team stormed back in thrilling fashion to win the New Mexico Bowl, the eighth-ranked Wildcats men’s basketball team knocked off No. 5 Florida. Arizona point guard Mark Lyons made the game-winning layup with 7.1 seconds left. The day is also widely known as β€œ12-15-12.”

11. UA beats Duke in 1991 Fiesta Bowl Classic

Date: Feb. 24, 1991

What happened: The last time Duke played at McKale Center, the Wildcats took down the Blue Devils β€” and Christian Laettner and Bobby Hurley β€” in double overtime to win the Fiesta Bowl Classic 103-96.

The University of Arizona once had a live "Wildcat" mascot; however, the current mascot ─ with a few changes that include wife, Wilma, along the way ─ Wilbur the Wildcat has been a favorite around Tucson for more than 60 years.


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Contact sports producer Justin Spears at jspears@tucson.com. On Twitter: @JustinESports