Again sporting his trademark headband, Arizona guard Kerr Kriisa posted a triple-double in Fridayโ€™s win over Southern in McKale Center.

The votes are in, even if Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd wasnโ€™t interested in casting his.

Kerr Kriisa: Headband? Or no headband?

โ€œI like triple-double Kerr, whatever that looks like,โ€ Lloyd said Friday.

In that case, headband it is. The Wildcatsโ€™ Estonian junior point guard collected 14 points, 11 rebounds and 12 assists in the Wildcatsโ€™ 95-78 win over Southern on Friday while wearing the headband he had discarded four days earlier in UAโ€™s season opener.

Kriisa had ditched the headband after struggling from 3-point range earlier this fall, going 1 for 6 in the Red Blue Game and 0 for 2 in a Nov. 1 exhibition against Western Oregon.

He also kept it off during UAโ€™s 117-75 season-opening win over Nicholls, and collected nine points, seven assists to only one turnover.

Then Kriisa realized which way the public opinion winds were blowing.

โ€œThe reason I didnโ€™t really wear a headband in the last game was I felt like Iโ€™d been practicing pretty good without it,โ€ Kriisa said. โ€œBut I got really bad comments and bad messages. Then I was like, โ€˜Oh, damn, like Iโ€™m still trying to live.โ€™ So I guess I had to pull my headband back out.โ€

Kriisaโ€™s headband has become so much a part of his look that it is featured prominently on the NIL T-shirts of him that the Arizona Assist collective has been selling. But when asked where he saw or heard all those messages, Kriisa said only that โ€œsome guysโ€ told him he had to wear it.

Apparently, Lloyd was not one of those guys.

โ€œHereโ€™s the thing: I didnโ€™t even notice,โ€ Lloyd said. โ€œI donโ€™t notice those things.โ€

What Lloyd did notice was Kerr weaving the Wildcats through a Southern defense that frequently deployed full-court pressure, helping the Wildcats build enough of a cushion that they could later survive a 14-point drop in their lead down the stretch when Lloyd turned to his younger reserves.

Kriisa hit half of his six 3-pointers and had just three turnovers despite the Jaguarsโ€™ attempts to make his treks up the court miserable, validating Lloydโ€™s steadfast support of him throughout a rough preseason.

Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd tries to get guard Kerr Kriisa back to the Wildcats huddle following a skirmish with Southern late in Fridayโ€™s second half.

โ€œI think Kerrโ€™s good every day. I really do,โ€ Lloyd said. โ€œNobodyโ€™s gonna get a triple-double every night, but Kerr is just a good basketball player. Heโ€™s got such a high IQ. Heโ€™s got a great motor and heโ€™s competitive. You can coach him on a cerebral level where he understands whatโ€™s going on. Heโ€™ll look at you, heโ€™ll nod, and for the most part heโ€™ll go out and do it.โ€

While the Jaguars arenโ€™t as talented as the teams UA will likely face in the Maui Invitational over Thanksgiving week, their defense ranked second nationally in turnover percentage (25.2) last season and they forced 19 turnovers over UAโ€™s 83 possessions, a percentage of 22.8.

But Kriisa had just three turnovers over 30 minutes played, handling the ball whenever he was on the floor.

โ€œI thin Kerrโ€™s biggest strength is just his confidence. Heโ€™s not scared,โ€ Lloyd said. โ€œThereโ€™s some times heโ€™ll do some risky plays and he probably knows that coach probably isnโ€™t going to love this, but heโ€™s still not afraid, which is important.

โ€œI mean, maybe our younger guys are a little bit scared of me and making mistakes, but theyโ€™ve got to get over that. Theyโ€™ve got to grow up. But our veteran crew, I definitely know this: Hopefully they have a healthy respect for me, but theyโ€™re not scared of me. They go out and make plays and sometimes theyโ€™re a little too aggressive, but at the end it usually is a good thing for us.โ€

That sort of analysis appeared fitting after the Wildcatsโ€™ performance Friday. Not only did Kriisa lead the way through the Southern defense, but three veteran starters all put up 17 points each: Azuolas Tubelis, Pelle Larsson and Oumar Ballo.

Meanwhile, younger reserve players such as wing Adama Bal, guard Kylan Boswell and big man Henri Veesaar struggled at times but flashed promise in others. Boswell, for example, shot only 1 for 5 but recorded assists on four straight UA baskets late in the first half, when the Wildcats expanded their lead from 15 to 19 points.

The Wildcats led 49-31 at halftime and up to 29 in the second before slipping after the starters had been all pulled out of the game with five minutes left. After Lloyd pulled out his last starter, Tubelis, the Wildcats held an 89-60 lead. Less than three minutes later, UAโ€™s lead was 90-75.

Lloyd bit his lip.

โ€œItโ€™s hard. I mean, sit in my chair,โ€ Lloyd said, when asked if he considered putting his starters back in. โ€œYou probably think you have the game under control, so youโ€™re gonna get the win. But you have standards of how you want to play and those standards werenโ€™t being met. You put one of the main guys back in, and what if he gets hurt? And these seasons are long. Theyโ€™re not easy.โ€

So Lloyd rode out the last five minutes mostly with a group that included Boswell, Bal, freshman Filip Borovicanin, Veesaar and fellow freshman big man Dylan Anderson, with walk-on Matt Lang taking Balโ€™s place with 2:11 left.

UA wound up winning by 17. Not a blowout, but maybe with memories that will help in tougher games ahead.

โ€œItโ€™s kind of an eye-opener for our guys, especially some of our younger guys,โ€ Lloyd said. โ€œThey need to understand: These games you donโ€™t take for granted. Youโ€™re not in high school anymore. Youโ€™re not playing AAU basketball anymore. Youโ€™re playing all Division I players who are good players and they have pride.

โ€œSo obviously I was disappointed with how our younger group finished and weโ€™re going to learn some great lessons from that. We have standards in this program, with effort and intelligence. And they didnโ€™t meet them. Itโ€™s that simple.

โ€œThat veteran group is setting an example for them, so they need to open their eyes.โ€

McKale Center was built at the University of Arizona in the early 1970s. There have been updates through the years.


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Contact sports reporter Bruce Pascoe at bpascoe@tucson.com. On Twitter: @brucepascoe