If Louisville coach Chris Mack wanted to blame someone for missing out on this seasonâs NCAA Tournament, he could turn toward his old boss at Xavier, Sean Miller.
Or maybe his old bossâ bosses.
Because Arizonaâs administrators chose to self-impose a postseason ban, Millerâs Wildcats did not play in last weekâs Pac-12 Tournament. With only 11 teams in Las Vegas, Oregon State â the No. 5 seed â had a first-round bye.
The Beavers took full advantage of the extra rest by winning three games to capture the Pac-12 Tournament title Saturday night and becoming the final âbid stealerâ â earning an automatic bid when they had no chance of an at-large berth. OSU took a spot away from Louisville, which was determined to be the first team out.
Of course, had Arizona allowed its team to play in March, the Wildcats had the credentials to suggest theyâd take a fifth and final spot from the Pac-12. In a parallel universe, Millerâs guys could have effectively bounced Mackâs team out of tourney spot anyway.
Thatâs only one of the ways the Wildcats are intertwined with the NCAA Tournament even though they arenât in the field, including the site itself: Indianapolis, site of UAâs 1997 NCAA title.
On almost every seed line, the Wildcats are connected to somebody in the tournament, even three of the four No. 1s. As listed by seed, that includes:
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Grand Canyon. Making their first appearance ever, the Antelopes are the only representative from the state of Arizona in the field, still having an odd, armâs length relationship with the Wildcats. GCU has played UA only once in the past 40 years, with the Wildcats winning by 10 at McKale Center during the 2016-17 season.
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Eastern Washington. EWU and the UA met Dec. 5 in what was just the second game of the Wildcatsâ season. The Eagles led by eight points with less than nine minutes to play. But that was also the game when freshman forward Azuolas Tubelis began to emerge, collecting eight rebounds and hitting a 14-foot baseline jumper in the second half to help UA pull out a victory.
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UC Santa Barbara. Gauchos coach Joe Pasternack worked under Miller at the UA from 2011-12 to 2016-17, being promoted to associate head coach in 2013 after James Whitford was hired as Ball Stateâs head coach. In 2017, Pasternack left Arizona for UCSB and reached his first NCAA Tournament as a head coach when the Gauchos beat UC Irvine last Saturday to capture the Big West Tournament title.
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Oregon State. Arizona beat the Beavers by a combined 43 points over two regular-season games before handing OSU a gift for the Pac-12 Tournament.
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UCLA. The Bruins beat Arizona twice during the regular season but didnât do enough otherwise to justify more than an unusually blue-blooded First Four date with Michigan State. The Wildcats would have likely met UCLA in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament if they had been eligible and beaten No. 12 Cal in the first round.
Former UA player and coach Josh Pastner led Georgia Tech to the ACC Tournament championship last weekend, punctuating the run with a dismantling of Florida State in the final.
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Georgia Tech. Starting his Arizona career as a walk-on who shagged balls for Mike Bibby in 1996-97, Josh Pastner went on to serve a variety of administrative and coaching roles for the Wildcats until leaving for Memphis in 2008 to work under John Calipari. A year later, Calipari headed to Kentucky and Pastner took over as head coach. He spent seven seasons there before taking over the Yellow Jackets in 2016. This is his first tournament appearance as Georgia Techâs head coach.
7
Oregon. Chances are you already know more than you want to about the Ducks, who have beaten Arizona seven straight times.
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USC. There may be nobody in the field the Wildcats want to see do better than the Trojans, since UA upset them on Feb. 20 at Los Angeles in the Wildcatsâ biggest win of the season.
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BYU. Struggling to find playing time on a 17-15 Arizona team in 2018-19, averaging just 3.3 points and 9.6 minutes, Alex Barcello has morphed into an AP honorable mention All-American this season for the Cougars. Heâs averaging 15.9 points and 4.5 assists per game and shooting 52.2% from the field. His 48.6% shooting from 3-point range would lead the country if he had made the minimum of 2.5 3s per game (heâs made 51 in 26 games).
5
Colorado. The Wildcats and Buffaloes each held serve on their home courts this season and often play with similar basketball philosophies.
2
Alabama. Former Arizona athletic director Greg Byrne had to scramble as Alabamaâs AD to hire Nate Oats just three days after handing Avery Johnson a $5.5 million buyout in 2019. Byrne didnât really have to look far; Oatsâ profile soared after he led Buffalo to a stunning 21-point upset win over Arizona in the 2018 NCAA Tournament.
1
Illinois. It really wasnât that long ago that Arizona beat up Ayo Dosunmu, Kofi Cockburn and the rest of the Illini 90-69 at McKale Center in the second game of the 2019-20 season. The teams were scheduled to play again in Champaign, Illinois, but the game was mutually rescheduled to Dec. 11 of this year.
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Gonzaga. As with Illinois, Arizona also mutually agreed to move a return game at Spokane, Washington, set for December 2020. Both the Illini and Zags had played at McKale Center and didnât want to waste a chance to face the Wildcats without their own fans, while Arizona also benefited by not playing having to play either of them at a time when they were restructuring. A makeup date is not yet set.
1
Baylor. Nobody may be less surprised than the Wildcats to see the Bearsâ emergence as a dominant force in college basketball. It was Baylor, after all, that swept both ends of a home-and-home series with UA over the previous two seasons. Baylor snapped Arizonaâs 52-game nonconference home winning streak in 2018-19 by outrebounding the Wildcats by 31 in a 58-49 win. Then on Dec. 7, 2019, Baylor handed UA its first loss of the season, holding the Wildcats to just 2-for-18 3-point shooting in a 62-58 loss.
Photos: Arizona Women's basketball celebrate their No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
While watching the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection show, the Arizona Wildcats cheer as their name is called during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 4 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
The Arizona Wildcats watch ESPN's coverage of the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
While watching the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection show, the Arizona Wildcats cheer as their name is called during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 4 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
Guard Aari McDonald smiles while taking a selfie video with her fellow teammates for social media during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
Guard Shaina Pellington, left, takes a video during the Arizona Wildcats NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
While watching ESPN's coverage of the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection, forward Trinity Baptiste, front, and head coach Adia Barnes cheer as the Arizona Wildcats name is called during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
While watching ESPN's coverage of the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection, guard Aari McDonald, center, holds her mask while laughing with her teammates as the Arizona Wildcats name is called during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
While watching the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection show, the Arizona Wildcats wave towards the jumbotron during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
While watching ESPN's coverage of the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection, forward Sam Thomas, far right, records a video with her teammates for social media during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.
NCAA Tournament selection show watch party
Updated
While watching the NCAA Tournament's women's basketball selection show, Arizona Wildcats women's basketball staff member, far right, records a video of the Wildcats during their NCAA tournament watch party at McKale Center, 1721 E. Enke Dr., in Tucson, Ariz. on March 15, 2021. No. 3 seed Arizona Wildcats will play No. 14 Stony Brooke for round 1 of the NCAA Women's basketball Tournament.



