Adia Barnes is excited to get to work.
A new season always brings hope and anticipation of what the season will bring. Yet, as Barnes enters her seventh year as Arizonaโs head coach, the excitement seems a little different than in yearsโ past.
There are plenty of reasons why.
For starters, All-Pac-12 forward Cate Reese is ahead of schedule as she returns from offseason shoulder surgery.
โItโs always going to be Cateโs team,โ Barnes said at Friday afternoonโs media day at McKale Center. โThis is Cateโs program. Cateโs been on the face of this program for so long. I rely on her.โ
Reese isnโt the only player Barnes can rely on this season. Returnees Lauren Ware, Shaina Pellington, Helena Pueyo and Madi Conner have come back focused and ready to lead the young players.
Add transfers Lauren Fields (Oklahoma State), Esmery Martinez (West Virginia) and Jade Loville (Arizona State) to the highest-rated freshman class in program history, and the Wildcats have a roster capable of making a deep postseason run.
โAdding Jade Loville, who was the second leading scorer in the Pac-12 (last season) and a really good perimeter player will add consistent 3-point shooting and toughness and size on the perimeter,โ Barnes said. โLauren Fields, a phenomenal defender from Oklahoma State who brings winning and experience. You look at as Esmery Martinez, who is a stretch four. A really good 3-point shooter, a gamer (and) one of the best offensive rebounders in the country. โฆ
โThen you add โฆ a great freshman group โฆ Iโm excited to put that together. Now on paper โฆ youโre like, โOh, we should be good.โ Well, youโve got to put the puzzles together. And thatโs the challenging part of (being a) coach. And I think thatโs the exciting part.โ
Developing the four freshmen
Barnes will focus much of her energy on developing freshmen Maya Nnaji, Paris Clark, Kailyn Gilbert and Lemyah Hylton so that can contribute in 2022-23 and beyond.
โThese freshmen are better than our freshmen were a couple years ago,โ Barnes said. โIf you look at Maya, sheโs versatile, she has potential to be a really well-rounded versatile player with three-point range. If youโd look at Lemyah โฆ is a really good athlete. Sheโs long and lean. Sheโll be a great defender and sheโs really good at slashing for the basket. If you look at Kailyn, sheโs a fierce competitor. She can shoot she can take it off the dribble. Sheโs got a really good game that sheโs got to learn how to run a team because sheโll play the one and the two. Paris will play guard but itโs just her learning the game. The game is faster than in high school. There are some pace things, but she has a great handle, sheโs getting stronger. I think theyโre going to be theyโre all going to be really good and so different. When I look at the future, they are the future.โ
Luckily, a miss
Gilbert had a rough start to the week as Hurricane Ian hit her home state of Florida. The Tampa nativeโs home was right in the path of the storm until the wind shifted.
โI was nervous because my grandma (Angela) and mom (Chantha) flew up here (Tucson), but my dad (David) and brother (Zack, who is 10 years old) stayed home,โ Gilbert said. โ(My dad) and my brother were by themselves โ I was worried about that. I was calling him a lot just asking him how he was feeling. Heโs good. So, Iโm good.โ
Gilbert has experienced hurricanes before, but nothing like Ian. She called it โkind of scaryโ to watch from afar.
โI would rather been there with them,โ she said. โIโm just a family person, so I would rather have been there with them dealing with it instead of being on my own.โ
Mid-range is Fieldsโ spot
Most players want to slash their way through traffic and score on a layup.
Not Fields.
โMy freshman year, I could beat everybody off the dribble, but when you get to college, thereโs help defense,โ Fields said. โI think that was my go-to was learning and developing a mid-range jump shot. Because once I beat the first defender, I could just pull up jumpshot and not get too deep in the paint.โ
Fields wonโt shy away from layups. The 5-foot-9-inch guard is focused on finishing at the basket.
When she first arrived in Tucson, โthe ball was coming off my hands weird when I would go up,โ she said. โJust the coaches correcting that helped a lot. And then a lot of it had to do with focus to just making sure youโre getting into the gym, doing like just simple stuff like layups and over and over again and just making sure I finish.
โBeing here I can tell that we focus a lot on skill development. I would say at my previous school, that wasnโt too big of a thing. It was more team bonding, but (UA coaches) definitely focus on individual skill as well, which I think will help overall for the team.โ
Rim shots
Loville seriously elevates when she shoots a jumper. โThis is so sexist to say, (but) itโs like a guys pull-up (jumper),โ Barnes said. โYou donโt see a lot of female basketball players that jump the way she does. You donโt see a jumpshot in womenโs basketball. Some pros like (Seattle Stormโs) Jewell Lloyd and some WNBA players (do it), but itโs rare that you can just like stop and rise up and shot. She has that. There not a lot of female players in the country that have that. Sheโs a great scorer. Sheโll be a pro. With her, sometimes sheโll settle for that jumper. When sheโs strong, she can get to the rim, too. Weโll work on her improving in both areas.โ
Barnes said she would consider having a Red-Blue game โ similar to what the menโs basketball team does โ in the future. โIf I got feedback that people would love it, I think itโd be fun,โ Barnes said.