Ever since ASU knocked off Kansas a few weeks ago and Arizona woke up from its Bahamian slumber around the same time, the anticipation has kept building.
When Arizona hosts ASU Saturday at McKale Center, itβll be the first time the instate rivals have played when both are ranked since 1994-95, and a historically reverse matchup at that: ASU is the big boy at No. 3, while UA is climbing back up the polls at No. 17.
The matchup provides a glaring contrast in skillsets, too: ASU will put its βGuard Uβ aggressiveness and efficiency against Arizonaβs combination of size and power.
And the coaches? Both were highly regarded college point guards themselves: ASUβs Bobby Hurley and UAβs Sean Miller.
All this is true. So itβs big.
But there are also reasons to believe Saturdayβs game is not really that big.
Hereβs why:
1. Itβs still December
Because of how the NCAA Tournament tends to define college basketball seasons, it might be hard to say any one game held before March is truly critical. Especially one held before New Yearβs Day, when RPIs, power ratings and bracket projections still figure to change wildly.
Plus, in the case of Saturdayβs game, itβs just the Pac-12 opener for both Arizona and ASU. Both teams will likely be tested at Utah and Colorado next week and, by the time they meet again on Feb. 15, the shape of the conference race could give their rivalry a much different look.
Thereβs just too much more basketball remaining.
βWe have played other games of meaning,β UA coach Sean Miller said. βWe have to do a good job in this game just like we always have, and if our best isnβt good enough, we have 17 games and, believe it or not, weβre gonna get on the plane and go to Utah.β
And even as Miller says the Wildcatsβ respect for the Sun Devils is βimmenseβ these days, ASUβs struggles in league play during Hurleyβs first two seasons have him carrying some caution into the weeks ahead.
The Sun Devils were 5-13 in 2015-16 in Pac-12 play and 7-11 last season.
βWeβve had a couple of tough years in the Pac-12,β Hurley said at an ASU news conference Thursday. βYouβve got to reflect on that before you start this season in the Pac-12. Youβve got to remember back to two years ago, last year.β
2. Itβs not football
Unlike the football Territorial Cup, which is played only after tensions have simmered for an entire year, the Wildcats and Sun Devils will meet again in just six weeks ... and, if both confine playing well, maybe theyβll meet for a third time in the Pac-12 Tournament semifinals or finals.
It doesnβt behoove anyone to get too hot over any one game.
βWhen this game ends, unlike college football, weβre not going to take the Christmas break and wait βtil next fall,β Miller said. βThereβs a game about five days later and thereβs 17 remaining conference games.
βA year ago we lost to UCLA on Senior Night and I donβt know if anything positive was said about us. We responded by going and winning the Pac-12 Tournament and a couple of games in the NCAA Tournament.
βThat was a growth moment. Maybe on the outside it didnβt feel that way but on our own team it did. Thatβs the biggest thing about Saturday: Whoever loses can go on and be great β and whoever wins, thereβs no surefire reason to believe youβre gonna have the opportunity to win the conference.β
3. Itβs βnot an ESPN gameβ
With all due respect to the Pac-12 Networks, with its solid on-air talent and production, it doesnβt have the reach of the ESPN networks, which negotiates along with Fox which Pac-12 games it would like to pluck out of the conference schedule every season.
Neither network picked this game. ESPN didnβt pick any Pac-12 games this weekend while FS1 will show Cal against Stanford.
That could be because of football games still airing or ... because nobody saw the Sun Devilsβ success coming.
Not even UA forward Rawle Alkins.
βTo be honest, no,β Alkins said. βThatβs why the game is on Pac-12 (Networks) and not an ESPN game.β
4. The NCAA could say
it never happened
Arizonaβs actions this season have indicated it has levied sufficient punishment for breaking NCAA rules to assistant coach Mark Phelps (two games) and Keanu Pinder (one game), while the school moving to fire assistant coach Book Richardson in the wake of his federal bribery and fraud charges.
But the FBI investigation into college basketball remains ongoing, as is an independent review UA has commissioned, so thereβs still a possibility the Wildcats could face future NCAA issues.
That, in turn, could lead to any number of penalties that might include vacating games. UA last did so in 2007-08, when the Wildcats gave up 18 wins and officially went 0-14 because two players they used during that season (Jerryd Bayless and Jamelle Horne) were later ruled ineligible.
5. This is Arizona
Just like that splashy McKale Center video intro would have you believe, all Wildcat games are big in a sense. Because even lesser teams tend to play their best against UA, hoping for a marquee win that will boost their profile.
In the next few weeks, for example, Arizona will host the Sun Devils, and then attempt the high-altitude Rocky Mountain swing, where the Wildcats were swept the last time through, in 2015-16. After that, the Wildcats will return to host the Oregon schools for the first time since the Ducks snapped a 49-game homecourt win streak in 2015-16, and take a Bay Area trip the following week.
The beat goes on. And the target never comes off the Wildcatsβ backs.
βWeβre always the heavy favorite in some ways,β Miller said. βWe lost three games and itβs a big story. Weβre 10-3. We know who we are. Weβre supposed to win every game and thatβs what all of us signed up for. But in terms of giving Arizona State credit, they deserve all the credit in the world what theyβve done.β