LAS VEGAS β Unscathed in Las Vegas once again.
No. 2 seed Arizona took down top-seeded UCLA 61-59 on Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena to win its second straight Pac-12 Tournament championship. The Wildcats are 9-0 in Las Vegas under Tommy Lloyd β 10-0 overall going back to 2020. Lloyd is the only coach in Pac-12 history to have a 6-0 record in the conference tournament.
Arizona also extended its conference-best Pac-12 Tournament championship total to seven, and the Wildcats did it by avenging previous losses to UCLA, Arizona State and Stanford β a revenge tour, if you will.
As the Wildcats shift their attention to the NCAA Tournament, here are five takeaways from their championship weekend in Sin City:
1. Injuries hit at inopportune timeArizona center Oumar Ballo will enter the NCAA Tournament with a broken hand. Ballo, who was named to the All-Pac-12 Tournament team after averaging 17 points and eight rebounds in three games, revealed that he broke his left hand during the Wildcatsβ semifinal win over Arizona State on Friday.
βI dunked the ball and felt so much pain in my hand,β Ballo told the Star in Arizonaβs locker room late Saturday.
Ballo, the Pac-12 Most Improved Player, has been playing with red tape on his right hand for a thumb injury he suffered in early February. Ballo played against UCLA on Saturday with black tape on his left hand. Ballo told the Star he plans to play in the NCAA Tournament.
βIβm good,β he said. βJust a collision, but Iβll be fine for next week.β
In a since-deleted tweet, Ballo posted a screenshot of an X-ray that showed an injury at the base of the ring finger on his left hand, with the caption: βBroke a hand against ASU yesterday and got a ring for it tonight.β
Playing with both hands taped up was a challenge for Ballo, especially against the Bruins.
βMan, itβs hard. Playing against UCLA, they swipe every time we touch the ball,β Ballo said. βWe just had to keep it high and avoid contact.β
Fellow Arizona starter Kerr Kriisa enters March Madness with a right shoulder injury he suffered in Thursdayβs win over Stanford.
βEverybodyβs banged up this time of year,β Lloyd said. βItβs really, really, really hard to play three games in three days. And I think all us coaches, if we had our druthers, we would get together and find a way to lighten the load on our players in these tournaments.
βIn college basketball at the highest level, itβs hard to have great depth anymore because thereβs so much parity. To ask six or seven or eight guys, whatever it is, to go play high-level basketball three straight nights is a lot, and so I think youβre going to see more and more of these teams across the country getting guys banged up.
βSo hopefully thereβs a way we can kind of all rally around and get together and figure out a way to kind of lessen the impact on the players so teams can be closer to 100% come tournament time.β
2. One teamβs loss is Arizonaβs gain
The Wildcats werenβt the only team in the Pac-12 Tournament dealing with injuries.
UCLA forward and Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year Jaylen Clark reportedly is out for the season with a Achillesβ injury, and Bruins center and Pac-12 Freshman of the Year Adem Bona suffered a shoulder injury in Fridayβs win over Oregon. Bona, who was questionable for Saturday, was held out. He donned a gray UCLA jumpsuit and kept his left hand tucked into the front pocket of his hoodie during the game.
UCLA forwards Mac Etienne and Kenneth Nwuba fouled out and combined for three points and 10 rebounds in 33 minutes, which left Bruins forward and Pac-12 Player of the Year Jaime Jaquez Jr., who is 6-7, defending the 7-foot Ballo in the final minutes.
βWe compete. Itβs five on five,β UCLA coach Mick Cronin said. βWe donβt accept that somebody was out so youβre supposed to lose. We donβt roll like that.β
3. Bench production
In the days leading into the Pac-12 Tournament, Lloyd was asked if he would consider extending Arizonaβs bench beyond Pelle Larsson and Kylan Boswell. Lloydβs response: βWeβre going to go game to game. Weβll see. β¦ I think we have some guys ready to help if needed.β
Arizona played its usual seven-man rotation in the first two games of the Pac-12 Tournament before deploying wing Adama Bal, who hit two 3-pointers in the Pac-12 Tournament final against the Bruins last season, and freshman forward Henri Veesaar in the first half vs. UCLA; together, they played five minutes and had two rebounds.
Lloyd said the decision to install Bal and Veesaar was because of βfoul issues and three games in three days.β
βI love Adama and Henri, and theyβre going to be great players at Arizona, but weβre just unfortunately not able to use βem quite enough now,β Lloyd said.
βBut I love our seven guys. I feel really good about our seven guys, about what we can do on the offensive end, what we can do at the defensive end, the versatility we can play with, the different lineups we can play with. I think itβs a pretty impressive seven dudes.β
4. βBuilt to play a lot of stylesβ
In a way, the Pac-12 Tournament was a microcosm of how the Wildcats have won several games this season. On Thursday, Arizona scored 95 points on 64% shooting in a win over Stanford, the third-most points scored by the program in a Pac-12 Tournament game. Then on Saturday, Arizona beat the Bruins in a game akin to the Wildcatsβ 58-52 βrock fightβ win over UCLA in January.
The Wildcats didnβt score their first points until the 16:27 mark in the first half, when Azuolas Tubelis made two free throws. Arizona didnβt make its first field goal until the 14:56 mark. The two teams started the contest shooting a combined 1 for 13 from the field; the Wildcats and Bruins ended up shooting 37% on Saturday.
Arizona guard Courtney Ramey was 1 for 5 from 3-point range, but the one make was the most crucial field goal of the games: a go-ahead 3 to put the UA ahead 60-58.
βI kept telling myself the next shot was going in,β Ramey said. β(Tubelis) found me, and my job was to make a play. So I was grateful for the shot to go in.β
Lloyd said βitβs hard to get in an up-and-down game with UCLA because theyβre perfectly comfortable walking the ball up the floor and dictating the tempo.β
βAnd then theyβre just so good defensively itβs hard to score on βem quick,β Lloyd said.
Lloyd added Arizona is βbuilt to play a lot of styles,β a trait that bodes well heading into the NCAA Tournament.
βI think it says that we have a group thatβs built to play in this tournament weβre about to start in,β Lloyd said. βThereβs no guarantees and you canβt make any assumptions, but I like our ability to win game to game.β
5. Learning from last go-around
Itβs officially win or go home for Arizona.
If thereβs anything the Wildcats learned from their Sweet 16 loss to Houston in Lloydβs first season at the helm last year itβs βrebounding and physicality.β The Wildcats were outrebounded and outscored in the paint by the Cougars. Tubelis had only two points and shot 0 for 8 from the field to go along with four turnovers and five rebounds.
βThat game was so physical, man. It was hard, and we learned,β Ballo said. βMe personally, I learned a lot from that. I need to be ready for that kind of game; rebound the ball and match their physicality and just keep the energy up.
βWe were there last year, so we know how it feels. We know the feeling of winning and losing. We have to do everything we possibly can to stay winning.β