Star columnist Greg Hansen checks in with the latest in Southern Arizona sports, from UA basketball, to prep sports news, to a 43-year old Wildcat making the U.S. Olympic team.ย
Sometime this week at the Pac-12 womenโs basketball tournament in Las Vegas, Arizona coachย Adia Barnesย will learn she has been selected the leagueโs coach of the year.
Itโs not that there isnโt a deserving contender; Oregonโsย Kelly Gravesย has a crazy-talented team that could win the national championship. But, cโmon, what Barnes has done at Arizona this season is once-in-a-life worthy.
Two years ago, Arizona finished 6-24. Now the Wildcats are 23-5. They have beaten three top 10 teams in the last four weeks. They are averaging 6,014 fans at McKale Center, unthinkable on this date last year.
Hereโs a comparison that should clinch it: The single greatest turnaround in Pac-10/12 history โ menโs and womenโs basketball โ wasย Lute Olsonย taking a 4-24 Arizona team in 1983-84 and producing a Pac-10 championship in Year 3.
Now Lute has company in the turnaround business.
When Barnes becomes the leagueโs coach of the year, it will be historic. She will become the first in league basketball history, menโs or womenโs, to become the Pac-12โs Freshman of the Year (1994), Player of the Year (1998) and Coach of the Year (2020).
Talk about a Triple Crown.
What is so irresistible about Barnes is that her Iโm-having-fun personality is genuine. Yes, she knows when to get tough and make Xโs and Oโs a priority, but in an era increasingly taken over by irritable and unapproachable mega-millionaire coaches, Barnes hasnโt lost touch with the purity of the game.
After chopping down No. 4 Stanford on Friday, Barnesโ coach from San Diegoโs Mission Bay High School,ย Larry Irmer, and his wife,ย Chris, stood at the back of the media room and beamed. They all embraced, tears fell. Irmer and his wife even traveled to Seattle this year to watch the Wildcats beat Washington. Talk about a bond that has lasted the test of time.
But what has stayed with me most about Barnesโ remarkable reclamation project at McKale Center is that her stepfather,ย Bruce McRae, often steps quietly into the back of the media room at McKale to watch Adia politely and informatively answer every question, top to bottom.
McRae married Barnesโ mother,ย Patricia, when Adia was 3. She knows him as dad. He has stuck with her every step of the way.
When Barnes played for coach Irmer at Mission Bay, she struggled the first two years, sometimes hanging with the wrong crowd, sometimes failing to make academics a priority. Irmer and McRae persisted, helping the young Adia Barnes get her priorities in order.
As a senior, Barnes had a 3.6 GPA. When she arrived at Arizona in the fall of 1994, she was cleared for takeoff.
Now she and her basketball program are in orbit.
Expect to pay more to see UA in NCAAs
Arizona seems like a sure-thing to play host to the first and second rounds of the womenโs NCAA Tournament, held between March 20-23. One thing to remember: The NCAA establishes ticket prices and they will not be as consumer friendly as Arizonaโs regular-season tickets. When Oregon State played host to the NCAA Tournament last year in Corvallis, an all-session pass for both days was $32 for adults and $24 for seniors. Single-game tickets were $24 for adults and $16 for seniors. At Friday nightโs regular-season game against Stanford, tickets were $5 for seniors and $8 for adults.
Jason Harris remains locked in with Colorado coaching staff
Any chance that four-star outside linebackerย Jason Harrisย would opt out of his letter-of-intent to play football at Colorado ended last week when new CU coachย Karl Dorrellย retainedย Brian Michalowski, the linebackers coach fromย Mel Tuckerโs staff who successfully recruited Harris. The son of former Desert Swarm linebackerย Sean Harris, a Tucson High grad, and the brother of UA junior linebackerย Jalen Harris, Jason wouldโve probably been viewed as the top recruit in Arizonaโs Class of 2020.
Kevin Sumlin lacks connection with Tucson community
Arizona opens spring football drills this week and itโs almost like an underground operation, given the lack of local interest and connection from coachย Kevin Sumlinย and his staff. By comparison, ASU coachย Herm Edwardsย had a high-profile visit in spring training last week, speaking to the San Francisco Giants at their Phoenix-area facility and spending time in the Arizona Diamondbacks clubhouse. Arizona had a chance to help Sumlinโs profile the last two months. Why not send him to a โLove of Readingโ class at a Tucson elementary school? That wouldโve been on all the local newscasts. It wouldโve resonated.
Randolphโs revamp, UAโs move to golf course seem to be gaining steamย
A possible move toward establishing the Randolph Golf Complex as the home of Arizonaโs menโs and womenโs golf programs appears to be gaining traction. UA presidentย Bobby Robbins, athletic directorย Dave Heeke, golf course architectย Ken Kavanaughย and representatives of Tucson City golf examined the property nine days ago, going over architectural plans on site, and discussing what could lead to not only one of the top golf facilities in the NCAA but perhaps the future home of the Cologuard Classic. As always, a financing plan โ costing perhaps as much as $12 million โ would be the last item to fall into place, not to mention political input.ย
UA women's golf team faces tough challenge in Florida
Coachย Laura Ianelloโs UA womenโs team plays in the Miami Invitational in Florida this week with the new No. 1-ranked golfer in the NCAA: freshmanย Vivian Hou. Impressively, her sister, Arizona juniorย Yu-Sang Hou, has moved to No. 6 in the college rankings.
UA sophomoreย Ya Chun Changย is No. 18 overall. Records of the rankings of previous UA golfers are incomplete, but itโs unlikely even in theย Annika Sorenstamย andย Lorena Ochoaย years that Arizona had three golfers ranked in the top 20 at a given time. The UA plays host to its lone home meet of the year at the Arizona Wildcat Invitational next week.
Local high school golfer swings with the prosย
Catalina Foothills High School state champion golferย Maya Benita, who has signed to play at Arizona, played in the pro-am of the ongoing Cologuard Classic with 1993 Tucson Open championย Larry Mizeย on Wednesday. Benita was in the zone; she had six birdies. Similarly, Salpointe Catholic High School juniorย Max Kruegerย was on the pro-am team withย Ernie Els. Talk about valuable experiences. Itโs intriguing to see who plays in pro-ams in pro golf. Last week in Tucson, former Chicago Cubs pitcherย Lance Dickson, an Arizona grad, and former Sahuaro High School and ASU and NFL receiverย John Mistlerย played, as didย Jerry Myerscoughย โ Ianelloโs father.
Tucsonan leads Cochise College basketball to ACCAC titleย
Tucson nativeย Jerry Carrillo, a Salpointe Catholic High School and UA grad, coached Cochise Collegeโs menโs basketball team to the ACCAC championship for the ninth time last week. Given Cochiseโs remote location near the Mexican border, placed against Phoenix schools every year, that goes beyond impressive. The Apaches went 17-5 in ACCAC, and are 37-7 the last two seasons. Carrillo lost all five starters last season, which makes winning title No. 9 even more impressive.
Sunnyside soccer coach goes down in history books
Sunnyside High School boys soccer coachย Casey OโBrien, whose team finished second in the state finals last week, has gone 48-2-2 the last two seasons, winning the 2019 state championship. How good is that? The most prolific two-year boys prep soccer record in Tucson history is Salpointe Catholic coachย Wolfgang Weberโs 51-4-1 combo in 2012-13, with one state title and one runner-up finish. Weber also coached Salpointe to 34-1 record in 1986-87 with two state championships.
Joan Bonvicini buries emotions during Arizona broadcastsย
Former UA womenโs basketball coachย Joan Bonviciniย was the analyst for the Pac-12 Network on Friday when Arizona stunned No. 4 Stanford. Bonvicini doesnโt see a conflict in calling games for her old school. โBeing an analyst is my basketball fix,โ she said. โPeople ask all the time if I have a problem being neutral when calling Arizona games and, honestly, not at all. I just call what I see. I donโt feel emotional when calling a game.โ Bonvicini wonโt be calling Pac-12 Tournament games, but instead will be in Las Vegas in her role as a New York Life agent, sponsoring a women-in-sports seminar, and also giving a clinic to Las Vegas-area Boys and Girls clubs at the Mandalay Events Center.
Abdi Abdirahman makes fifth Olympic team
At the induction ceremony for the Pima County Sports Hall of Fame last fall,ย Abdi Abdirahmanย told me he planned to make the USAโs 2020 Olympic team in the marathon.
I asked him if he was serious. He is 43 years old.
โTrust me,โ he said.
Saturday in Atlanta, the UA and Pima College grad had the performance of a runnerโs lifetime, finishing third with a lifetime-best 2 hours 10 minutes 3 seconds. It will be his fifth consecutive berth on the USA Olympic team. He previously ran the 10,000 meters in the Olympics.
Tucsonanย Bernard Lagatย finished 18th overall, in 2:14.23. He was attempting to make his fifth Olympic team, too.ย Nico Montanez, a St. Augustine High School grad and an All-American at BYU, finished 20th, which was outstanding. Montanez, 26, had only run two previous marathons. He told me he plans to run for the Olympic teams in 2024 and 2028.
My two cents:ย Girls state basketball needs Open Division
One thing that canโt happen soon enough for girls high school basketball in Arizona is an Open Division, similar to that established in football last year, a haven for superpowers during the open enrollment era.
That was never more apparent than in Saturdayโs Class 4A state championship game, when Seton Catholicโs girls team overpowered perhaps the top girls team in Sahuaroโs 50-year history, 70-40.
Put it this way: Sahuaro coachย Steve Botkinย went 218-67 the last decade and 28-2 this season. Butย Karen Selfโs Seton Catholic team went 288-44 and won seven state championships in the last decade.
This was Botkinโs first game in the state finals, even though he has been Tucsonโs leading girls prep basketball coach for almost 20 years. Seton Catholic played in 10 of the last 11 state title games.
Sahuaro and Seton Catholic are playing with fully different resources yet are in the same division. It just doesnโt seem to be the right thing to do.