Of all the good things Arizona coach Sean Miller saw in Fridayβs Red-Blue Game, there was one really lousy part.
Thatβs when Brandon Williams walked on the floor in street clothes.
βHe got introduced tonight, and was it just hard for me to watch him walk out there,β Miller said. βHeβs a really talented player, one of the most talented guards that we've recruited, and just to see him lose this year.β
After leading the Wildcats in scoring during Pac-12 games last season while playing both guard spots, Williams will miss this season with a congenital knee issue that has bothered him since his junior season of high school.
Williams sat out 10 months between his junior and senior seasons at Crespi High School after an initial surgery and then missed four weeks last season, having surgery again after it was over.
UA announced last month that Williams would miss all season and his future remains unclear after that.
βIβve got my fingers crossed, and his rehab continues to go well, and one day heβll be healthy to play," Miller said. "But we miss him. It's a big loss for us. And, you know, thankfully, we have a number of guys that I think can step up and hopefully fill in for him, but to have him out there with the group that you just saw, would take us up even another notch, for sure.β
Williamsβ plight is so tough that, when asked if Williams was mentoring Nico Mannion and other players, Miller turned it around.
βIn fairness to him, they should be mentoring him a little bit,β Miller said. βThey get to play and he doesn't.β
Miller said the ACL tears that forced Ray Smithβ retirement was the βultimateβ example of losing a career. Smith retired in November 2016 before he played a single regular season game for the Wildcats, having torn an ACL for the third time in an exhibition game.
βIt's not easy on those young guys to take that one thing away,β Miller said. βAnd the thing thatβs hard for Brandon is he missed a whole year of high school and he missed part of last year.
βBut we love him and his family. They came to our program at a very difficult time and trusted us and I'm anxious to kind of repay that trust with making sure that he gets healthy and takes care of his academics
βIt's maybe easier on him now. It'll get harder as the year grows, for sure. But he's off crutches and making progress. So that's I think that's his game every day to improve.β
Miller moved up the Red-Blue Game two weeks from its traditional spot to help bring in recruits earlier, but said he still worried the early date would affect the crowd response.
It didnβt. UA announced a capacity crowd of 14,600 and had about 13,000 in the seats, with only darkened seats near the top open. While piped-in acoustics drowned out the crowd during introductions, the fan noise was otherwise strong.
βYou worry, you have it on a Friday evening, and it's September β will we still have the same crowd, pageantry that we've enjoyed here for really last 10 years with this game?" Miller said. βObviously tonight we had it again, so I canβt thank our fans enough.β
Miller also added another message to super fan George Kalil, who died in July after more than four decades of avidly following the Wildcats to home and road games.
βI think George has a special place in everybody's heart that knows Tucson, Arizona, the university, but especially our basketball program,β Miller said. βHe's been a fixture for decades, just seeing him in that same seat over and over again. You know, we lost him this summer, and it was a big, big loss. But I'm glad that we had an opportunity to least acknowledge who he was still is and how much he meant to our program here before tonight's game.β
Arizona didnβt have Chase Jeter available for Fridayβs Red-Blue Game because of a strained groin, but the frontcourt was still pretty productive on both sides without him, with a legitimate seven players on each side, counting walk-ons Kory Jones, Jake DesJardins and Matt Weyand.
Thatβs a luxury that could continue to help the Wildcats this season.
βFor a long time, we've had a really good practice environment, we've had depth, we've had players competing against each other every day,β Miller said. βA year ago, we didn't have that. We just didn't have the depth at certain places, maybe the talent, certainly the size. And you saw, the longer that our season went, the harder it was for us. We did the best we could In practice, but we didn't have those big bodies competing against each other.
βFor example, if Chase wasn't able to play in last year's Red-Blue Game, the game would have really looked funny. I mean, we would have ran out of people almost. But this year, he didn't play and we had four or five guys in there competing. So it's up to us to use that as our advantage, like where does that show up rebounding margin, being able to play through fouls, injuries, being harder to score against around the basket. Maybe being a team that can get second shots more easily."
Miller said again after Fridayβs scrimmage that center Christian Koloko has been better than expected so far. The 7-footer from Cameroon had eight points and three rebounds in 16 minutes.
βWee knew he had a great year last year at Sierra Canyon and he developed a lot,β Miller said. βI just think that what he came from that winning environment, with what he learned there, and (even though) he hasn't played basketball for very long, he's further along in his development than maybe we thought he was.
βEverythingβs on the table for us (as far as) who's going to play. But to have somebody at seven feet, it can protect the rim. He's still a work in progress offensively, but he can make plays, he can catch the ball. He's pretty good free-throw shooter. And mostly, I love his work ethic. He works at the game, even though he's seven feet tall. So weβre really thrilled to have him.β
Miller defended Nico Mannion, the Wildcatsβ most highly touted freshman and a projected lottery pick next June, after Mannion shot 2 for 7 and had four turnovers to three assists.
βYou know, I'm going to be his biggest fan here early on because it's just almost unfair, the high expectations that are placed on him,β Miller said. βI mean, he's a really good player, and he's only going to get better. But he's not going to be able to do it alone. He's going to have his bumps in the road. He's seeing things for the first time.
βTonight was his first-ever moment in McKale. He's going to be that much better moving ahead, you're going to see Nico play against the zone for the first time. He's gonna have to guard different styles. So that's why you go to college and I have no doubt that, like, really all of our freshmen, they'll continue to develop and grow. But we're counting on Nico. But β¦ heβs going to miss a few shots. He's not going to be perfect every night. But he's going to get there. There's no doubt about it.β
Miller said Mannionβs ability to score and distribute at a high level make him unique.
βHe's so skilled shooting and usually you don't say that about a point guard who can also make his teammates better,β Miller said. βBeing able to do both is hard to do. The third part of it is to defend and that's with all of our freshmen, the biggest jump they have to make is being able to play college defense. And, and we're working at that every day.β
Josh Green had seven points and a rebound with three turnovers but had two steals after having expressed a desire to excel defensively, something Miller has said he can do. Miller has frequently compared Green to former UA guard Nick Johnson, who became the Pac-12 Player of the Year in 2014 in large part because of his defensive ability.
βThat's where his talent lies immediately,β Miller said. βThere are things about Josh's game that he'll work on and improve, But right out of the gates where he's blessed is his athleticism and his physicality. It would be great for him to embrace that role.
βWhen Nick really embraced that defensive role, that's when everything happened, good for both him and the team. I think Josh can have a lot to do with that.β
Miller said Dylan Smith was similar, still not getting enough credit for his defense.
βDylan gets you now with experience,β Miller said. βHe's been through so many situations that he knows what to do and how to do it. You think about those two guys. They're both 6-5, 6-6, and Josh has longer arms. Hopefully, those two can really help us on the defensive end.β
Offensively, Smith was only 1 for 6 from 3-point range, after hitting 40 percent in Pac-12 games last season.
βPart of being a good player is not trying to do everything,β Miller said. βVery few basketball players are good at everything. Itβs those that stick with what they do well, stay away from what they don't know their role, that you really admire. Sometimes it takes a little bit longer figure that out.
βBut what does Dylan do? He can hit 40% of his 3-point shots, especially when he takes good ones. Heβs an excellent defensive player, and with his experience, if he could bring those two things to the table on a daily basis for our team this year, man, he will help us win a lot of games.β
Since itβs only September, Jeterβs injury is hardly a worry at this point, though he has missed other workouts prior to the Red Blue Game. The Wildcats donβt play St. Maryβs for their closed scrimmage until the weekend of Oct. 19 and wonβt open the regular season until Nov. 6 against NAU.
βI think he'll be fine,β Miller said.