Arizona coach Sean Miller says thereβs no stress reaction and no re-fracture in Rawle Alkinsβ foot, while the school said it was βminor sorenessβ that kept him out Thursday against Colorado.
But whatever is happening, the fact is that Alkins has had to sit out games in two straight weeks, feeling pain again after playing 34 minutes against Stanford.
Thatβs not the kind of trend you want to see in a key player as you dig into the second half of the season.
When asked if he imagines having to deal with the injury in a similar way even in, say, late February, Miller said simply βI donβt know.β
What Miller says he does know is that complete rest is the best medicine Alkins can get at this point, having decided to shut him down all week (though Miller says he might play Saturday against Utah).
Hereβs the complete remarks Miller had about Alkins after UA's win over Colorado on Thursday:
βItβs foot soreness. He doesnβt have a stress reaction. He doesnβt have a further break. He doesnβt have anything else going on. All thatβs been ruled out, and with rest, a complete shutdown, he experiences a lot more comfort.
βWe only shut him down for a couple days last week. If youβd watched him in the Stanford game, you wouldnβt have known anything was wrong. And it wasnβt like he couldnβt walk the next day; he just had a little bit more soreness. So when you have more soreness on a foot like his thatβs been surgically repaired, you have to take note and do the necessary things to protect him. Thatβs what we did this week.
βHe played against Stanford on Saturday. Todayβs Thursday and heβs done nothing. I think if you talk to him heβs gone from maybe a pain threshold, if you pressed on it, of maybe level six, five, to maybe one or zero. Prior to the Cal game, he was at level zero. It wasnβt aching him. It was a single incident or maybe one time in a practice leading up to that game that he just felt different.
βItβs up to him to communicate, which he did. Believe me, he wants to be out there but itβs in his best interest and our teamβs best interests to manage this the best way. I donβt have a vote. Itβs up to the doctor, Justin (Kokoskie, UA athletic trainer) and Rawle. When all three of those guys agree that itβs safe for him to return he will, and if thereβs a minute restriction weβll do that as well. But tomorrow is another day. He might play against Utah; he might not. But if he does play it will be because he has a zero pain threshold -- no number.β
Even though Deandre Ayton played 37 minutes Thursday, Miller said he was also less than healthy after battling strep throat this week. He said the fact that Ayton was 4 for 10 from the field and had no offensive rebounds was evidence of that.
βHe didnβt get an offensive rebound for 37 minutes and thatβs unlike him,β Miller said.
Miller said Ayton basically missed a βday and a halfβ earlier this week and is hoping heβs 100 percent for UAβs game against Utah on Saturday.
βItβs like anybody you miss practice, you have a step throat, I donβt think he felt completely 100 percent. My hope is that in the next couple of days he will.β
Dusan Ristic not only made a spin move to the basket that fired up his teammates, but he also took the ball almost completely downcourt on one possession when he initially had nobody to pass to.
When Miller was jokingly asked if Ristic would become his point guard, he answered:
βThatβs that deal when you watch one dribbler. You watch three (dribbles). You watch five. And then you just say: 'He better make sure he hands the ball off.'
βBut Dusan has a lot of confidence and, on a serious note, you guys (media) have watched a lot of players come through Arizona, and very few have come as far on the spectrum of who he was when he got here and who he is today, and itβs great to see a kid have that kind of confidence.
βSeniors are a throwback in college basketball. We have three but especially Parker (Jackson-Cartwright) and Dusan, theyβve played their heart and soul for us and itβs great to see both guys be at the forefront of what weβre doing.β
Allonzo Trier had another one of those nights that heβs had so often that it's almost become easy to overlook how impactful they are. (Greg Hansen put Trier's impact in his column, which is attached below).
Miller said Trier was an βall-American type of playerβ on Thursday with 23 points on 8-for-13 shooting and 5-for-5 free-throw shooting.
βOne of the best games heβs played at Arizona when you look at the points he scored, 23, and not one turnover,β Trier said. βThey trapped him on every pick-and-roll that he utilized and he was very, very efficient. Eight for 13 from the floor, 2 for 6 from 3, 5 for 5 from the line."
Dylan Smith has taken advantage of two starts in Alkinsβ place this month: He had 14 points on 5-for-5 shooting at Cal on Jan. 17 and had 13 points on 4-for-8 shooting with 3-for-6 3-point shooting on Thursday against Colorado.
βFor two games Dylan has really filled in and done a nice job,β Miller said.
When asked if starting helped his game, Smith said:
βNot really. Iβm just out there playing. I get a better rhythm but Iβm out there just trying to play hard.β
The officials that sent Arizona to the free-throw line 15 more times than Colorado βhave a hard job,β Miller said.
βI thought Deandre going to the line 12 times tonight was right,β Miller said. βThereβs a lot of contact and if I were playing against him I would try to be physical as well.
βThatβs something we talk a lot about. The more we get the ball inside a lot to Dusan the more fouls happen, you get more offensive rebounds.
βItβs the analogy of the running game in college football. May not work in the first quarter but all of a sudden midway through that second half you see the toll that it takes. Getting the ball close to the basket for our team does that. Thatβs why these zones are trying to prevent that from happening and on our best attempt we have to (try to get the ball inside) regardless of any defense they try to play on us. Thatβs our strength.β
When answering a question about his pass that led to the βSend It In, Jerome!β moment (addressed in our seen-and-heard notebook), Miller said with a smile that history helps keep former athletes such as himself credible.
Then he playfully (but wrongfully) suggested former UA guard Matt Muehlebach was trying to stay relevant, too, by lobbying to stay in a tie with Kaleb Tarczewski as having played in the most UA wins (110) ever.
βWhen Dusan passes (Muehlebach) here in the next couple of weeks and he tries to petition for that extra win, like he did the last time, weβre not going to let him get away with it this time,β Miller said. βFor those of you that donβt know what Iβm talking about, Kaleb, I think, beat the record, won the most games ever at Arizona. Ten days went by and the next thing you know it was a tie. I donβt know how that happened.
"So Iβm worried for Dusan. We donβt know how many games he has to win to actually break the record but weβre prepared to go above and beyond what Muehlebach has. Itβs records like that that guys like him and I hold on to.β
Actually, Muehlebach had nothing to do with the change. Star copy editor Dave Ord researched UAβs initial claim he had just 109 and discovered he had actually played in 110. UA then re-researched the total at the Star's request and confirmed not long before the 2016 NCAA Tournament that Muehlebach had indeed played in 110.
It turned out that Arizona couldnβt break that tie, because the Wildcats lost to Wichita State in their NCAA Tournament opener, so the record is still at 110, with both Muehlebach and Tarczewski listed together at the top. (This was also explained in the note entitled "Zeus actually needs this one" near the end of this March 2016 story)
However, Ristic already has now played in 105 wins while Parker Jackson-Cartwright has 100. The Wildcats have at least 12 more games left, suggesting Ristic and possibly even PJC will make this all a moot point before long...
Utah's Sedrick Barefield hit a 3-pointer to beat ASU in overtime on Thursday.
And Purdue's impressive play may be making Arizona feel a little better about its 24-point loss in the Bahamas.