Arizonaโ€™s Bennedict Mathurin (0) and Oregon Stateโ€™s Dexter Akanno fight for a rebound Sunday. Mathurin was named the Pac-12โ€™s Player of the Week for scoring 29 points in the 90-65 win by UA.

CORVALLIS, Ore. โ€” After COVID-19 issues forced Washington to back out of games with Arizona and UCLA over the weekend, the Bruins accepted an automatic victory from a forfeit, but the Wildcats did not.

Why?

Money would appear to be the obvious answer: Arizona was scheduled to host the Huskies and has booked about $400,000 in average ticket revenue per home game in recent non-COVID seasons, while UCLA was scheduled to play at Seattle and thus wasnโ€™t getting ticket revenue anyway.

But Arizona athletic director Dave Heeke said finances were not a โ€œprimary driverโ€ of the decision to agree to a Jan. 25 rescheduled game with the Huskies. He said it was more about being a good league partner and that the Jan. 25 date was โ€œthe right timeโ€ since it came during a week when UA was scheduled to face only ASU.

โ€œWe want to play the games,โ€ Heeke said Sunday at Gill Coliseum, after UA beat Oregon State 90-65. โ€œWhen all three parties came together โ€” the conference, ourselves and Washington โ€” we always wanted to try to find a way to play the game. That was our goal all along.โ€

A request seeking comment from the Pac-12 was unsuccessful.

Heeke said there were โ€œdifferent circumstancesโ€ that may have led to UCLAโ€™s decision. Last season, the Bruins were forced to make a return trip to play at Oregon after traveling there earlier in the season for a game that was eventually called off when a referee tested positive.

With the Huskies out last weekend, the Bruins moved to 2-0 in conference play and into a first-place tie with USC with the forfeit, while UA remained at 1-0 .

To get credit for beating Washington at home now, UA will have to beat the Huskies just two days after a road game at Cal. Theyโ€™ll then face an ASU team on Jan. 29 that will have three more days of rest to prepare, and UA will now have no single-game weeks after Jan. 8.

In addition, just playing the low-rated Huskies might hurt the Wildcatsโ€™ power ratings even if they win.

But thereโ€™s also this: Itโ€™s fun. For players, coaches and fans alike.

โ€œWe want to play games. I love games. Thatโ€™s why you comeโ€ here, Lloyd said. โ€œAnd weโ€™re not trying to dodge anybody. Weโ€™re excited to have an opportunity to play them. I mean, we donโ€™t want to forfeit. I donโ€™t think that does anything for anybody.โ€

Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd, who has his team at 7-0 and ranked No. 11, would rather play the games than taking the automatic victory because of a forfeit.

Last season, there would have been no choice. The Wildcats had eight opponents cancel or reschedule on them because of COVID issues, and relaxed Pac-12 rules called for a rescheduling or no-contest if a game could not be played, not a forfeit.

This season, the old rules are back in effect and cancellations can lead to forfeits unless all parties agree otherwise or Pac-12 commissioner George Kliavkoff steps in.

โ€œI think we were all hoping this COVID thing was behind us now and obviously itโ€™s not,โ€ Lloyd said. โ€œMaybe it would have been nice in hindsight if there were a couple pockets in the conference schedule were that were built in for some makeup games, but there wasnโ€™t, so now you have to get creative. Iโ€™m sure thatโ€™s itโ€™s gonna be a tough couple of weeks. But we love playing games and up for the challenge.โ€

Heeke said the Pac-12 ultimately chose the Jan. 25 date for rescheduling, which turned out to be the least imposing date on UAโ€™s remaining schedule.

The Huskies will also face slightly more of a disadvantage: While UA faces Cal in the afternoon of Jan. 23, meaning the Wildcats can return home via charter that evening, the Huskies wonโ€™t play at Oregon until 8 p.m. Arizona time the same night โ€” then have to travel straight to Tucson.

Washington will then return home to host Colorado just two days after stopping over at McKale Center.

โ€œFor the two teams involved, it provided a good opportunity,โ€ Heeke said. โ€œBoth of us are on the road, both of us come to Tucson and get one day off and then go. It was the same from that standpoint. I thought that was good for the conference, and good for both institutions. That was it first and foremost.โ€œ

Arizona at No. 3 in first NET rating

UA was placed at No. 3 in the NCAAโ€™s first NET rankings of the season, behind only No. 1 Purdue and No. 2 LSU, higher than the Wildcats stand in the major computer metrics.

The Wildcats rank No. 12 in Kenpom and ESPNโ€™s BPI, while they are No. 6 in Sagarin.

Arizona (7-0) remained at No. 11 in the AP Top 25 poll.

Mathurin takes Pac-12 honors

Arizona sophomore wing Bennedict Mathurin picked up his first Pac-12 Player of the Week award Monday after collecting 29 points and six rebounds in the Wildcatsโ€™ win at Oregon State.

Mathurin, who shot 4 of 9 from 3-point range and 11 for 18 overall, received the award over USCโ€™s Isaiah Mobley and Utah guard Both Gach.

Mobley had 21 points and 13 rebounds against Utah and hit a game-tying 3-pointer late in the Trojansโ€™ win at Washington State, while Gach averaged 23.5 points, 5.0 rebounds and 2.5 assists in the Utesโ€™ loss at USC and win over Cal at home.

Mathurin scored 31 points at OSU last season, but was edged out for those ensuing weekly awards by two Colorado players: McKinley Wright was named Pac-12 Player of the Week and Jabari Walker was Freshman of the Week.

Lloydโ€™s staff under budget

When Lloyd was hired in April, he was given a $1.05 million budget to pay three assistant coaches and $285,000 for support staff.

According to contracts obtained by the Star through a public records request, the support staff wound up being contracted for $65,000 more โ€” but his three assistant coaches are actually $155,000 under their budget.

Therefore, Heeke said it was not a problem.

โ€œItโ€™s all coming out of the same bucket,โ€ Heeke said. โ€œTommy and I make those decisions and we talk about what he needs to do staffing-wise. When you initially make an agreement with a new head coach, you generally outline the parameters by which you need about this much for an assistant pool. If we make a decision that we want to spend a little more or a little less, thatโ€™s fine.โ€

Of UAโ€™s assistant coaches, associate head coach Jack Murphy is contracted for $335,000, assistant Steve Robinson is at $285,000 and assistant Riccardo Fois is at $275,000.

Of UAโ€™s support staffers, UA has special assistant TJ Benson at $125,000, player relations director Jason Gardner at $100,000, advanced scouting director Ken Nakagawa at $75,000 and player development director Rem Bakamus at $50,000. Managers, graduate assistants and administrative assistants do not count in the support staff salary pool.


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Contact sports reporter Bruce Pascoe at 573-4146 or bpascoe@tucson.com. On Twitter @brucepascoe