The eighth-ranked Arizona Wildcats won their sixth consecutive game at McKale Center Saturday, dispatching Colorado, 78-68.
Here are five takeaways from the UAโs latest triumph:
1. Notable visitors
When Arizona head coach Tommy Lloyd walked into the teamโs locker room after the game, former Wildcats Bennedict Mathurin, Dalen Terry, Christian Koloko and Justin Kier were gathered and talking to their former teammates.
โIt was great,โ said Arizona center Oumar Ballo. โThose are my brothers for life and Iโm glad they have a couple days off and get time to come see us. It means a lot for us, it means a lot for the program and Iโm super happy theyโre here.โ
The four departures that led Arizona to a Sweet 16 in Lloydโs first season last year trekked to Tucson during the NBA All-Star break.
โIt feels like they should still be playing for us because theyโre obviously young enough to play for us,โ Lloyd said. โWe had so much fun with them and theyโre so easy to be around.โ
Mathurin (Indiana Pacers), Terry (Chicago Bulls) and Koloko (Toronto Raptors) are close to wrapping up their first season in the NBA, while Kier has impressed with the G Leagueโs Austin Spurs; he posted his first triple-double earlier this month.
Mathurin, Koloko and Kier donned designer eyewear while sitting courtside Saturday.
โโMan, the lights at McKale must be pretty bright for all these sunglasses Iโm seeing,โโ Lloyd joked.
NBA players and former Wildcats Josh Green and Zeke Nnaji were also in Tucson this week for their Ring of Honor inductions. Other recognizable visitors include U.S. Olympic gold medalist Kerri Strug, ex-NBA player and Gonzaga standout Ronny Turiaf, Dallas Mavericks forwards Dwight Powell and Maxi Kleber and former UA walk-on Kory Jones, whoโs now a basketball operations assistant with the Brooklyn Nets.
2. Turnovers, points in the paint
Itโs rare for any team to out-score the Wildcats in the paint this season, but in Arizonaโs loss last weekend to Stanford, the Cardinal had a 42-24 advantage over in paint points.
On the flip side, in the home stand against Utah and Colorado, Arizona outscored the Pac-12โs mountain schools by a combined 78-34 in the paint.
โThe biggest thing is that weโre setting our screens harder and our guards are starting to be more aggressive,โ Arizona forward Cedric Henderson said.
Before Henderson could finish his statement, Ballo jokingly interrupted him.
โCome on, man. Itโs because our bigs are finishing. Come on,โ Ballo said with a smile.
Then Henderson added how โthe Stanford loss showed us that when our bigs arenโt in, or even when they are, we need to drive to the rim.
โWe canโt just rely on throwing the ball over the top every time in the post. We have to figure out ways to play around them and figure out ways to help them out,โ Henderson added. โPelle (Larsson) just coming in and driving hard once or twice and getting a foul just makes the defense different and we get different looks.โ
Arizonaโs outing on Saturday was also bookended by several turnovers, including five in the first five minutes, which allowed Colorado to jump out to a 18-6 lead, and three in the last three minutes. Arizona, which has the best assists per turnover mark (1.46) in the Pac-12, committed 14 turnovers that led to 24 CU points.
โThe early ones that seem crazy to me,โ Lloyd said. โI donโt know what you attribute them to. Casualness, maybe. Weโll take a look at them and weโll evaluate them. We had some turnovers early; we had some turnovers late. And not that you ever want to turn the ball over, but I think you definitely donโt want to turn it over early and you donโt want to turn it over late.โ
3. Henderson โmore comfortableโ in starting role
Henderson shouldered the responsibility of providing a scoring punch to Arizonaโs sloppy start on Saturday. Hendersonโs 15 points on 6-for-8 shooting is the most heโs scored in a game since Arizonaโs win over Montana State in December.
Henderson and Ballo led the team with 11 points each at halftime.
โHonestly, I was just getting mad. We turned the ball over five times. We werenโt locked in โ clearly โ to start the game off,โ Henderson said. โSomething had to give. Someone had to give a spark and I thought maybe I could try it, so I tried it. Then after that, we all got locked in and picked it up.โ
Since Henderson was bumped to the starting lineup 10 games ago, heโs averaging 8.8 points and 4.7 rebounds, while former starter Larsson is posting 10.6 points and 3.1 assists per game as the Wildcatsโ sixth man. Larsson has tallied five straight double-figure scoring games. Against Colorado, Larsson finished with 11 points on just two field-goal attempts; he was 9-for-11 from the free-throw line.
Said Henderson of the lineup change: โActually it felt more comfortable, because Iโve started everywhere Iโve been in college, so it was more difficult for me to come off the bench and have the same energy.โ
4. Mild play from Azuolas Tubelis could tighten up Pac-12 POY race
Arizona star forward Azuolas Tubelis has asserted himself as the favorite to receive Pac-12 Player of the Year honors this season, but itโs not guaranteed like some would think.
Tubelis, who normally plays closer to 30 minutes per contest, has only played an average of 19.7 minutes the last three games, mostly due to foul trouble. Tubelis also committed seven turnovers against Colorado and Utah, the most heโs had during a true Pac-12 series this season.
Tubelis sitting in games is โnot a part of the plan,โ according to Lloyd.
โPart of it is maybe bad luck, the other part is some self-inflicted wounds by him,โ Lloyd said. โHeโs gotta be smarter and heโs gotta play better. And heโs had an amazing year; I think heโs the conference MVP, but thatโll be determined. Weโre still trying to fight out the season. โฆ Hopefully heโll figure it out moving forward.โ
As for the Pac-12 Player of the Year race, UCLAโs Jaime Jaquez Jr. is averaging 16.8 points and 8.1 rebounds, while Tubelis is averaging 19.6 points and 9.1 rebounds. The last three games, Jaquez is averaging 23.6 points and 9.6 rebounds per game; Tubelis is averaging 9.3 points and 4.3 rebounds.
5. Ignoring bracketology
Lloyd eschews the buzz around โbracketologyโ now that the regular season is in the final stretch. He even said bracket predictions are โkinda meaningless.โ
So, Lloyd wasnโt tuned into the NCAA Selection Committeeโs bracket reveal show on Saturday, when Arizona was named as the would-be sixth overall seed and the second-seeded team in the West Region (based on the Wildcatsโ current resume). Arizona athletic director Dave Heeke and his predecessor, Greg Byrne, are on the selection committee this year.
โI didnโt feel like we played like (a No. 2 seed) tonight, so we obviously have to play better,โ Lloyd said.
โAt the end of the day, itโs about getting better. If you stub your toe, youโre going to be quick to fall. Letโs hope we can learn from some of these games and continue to get better, and come Selection Sunday weโll see where we end up.โ