Oumar Ballo elevates during the Wildcats’ Maui Invitational opener against Cincinnati. The Wildcats would win the tournament, with Ballo the MVP.

LAHAINA, Hawaii — Tommy Lloyd doesn’t want to say it, so we will.

The parallels between the Arizona Wildcats' first few weeks of last season and this one are striking.

To start last season, Lloyd's first as the Wildcats' head coach, Arizona raced over its three low-major opponents at McKale Center, and it still wasn’t clear who they were. Then they went to the Las Vegas Main Event, where they beat Wichita State and Michigan, and center Christian Koloko was named MVP.

Arizona vaulted into the national rankings and kept ascending all the way to the No. 2 spot while, after the season, Koloko wound up joining Bennedict Mathurin and Dalen Terry in last June’s NBA Draft.

To start this season, Arizona raced over its first three low-major opponents despite losing those three players to the NBA Draft, and it still wasn’t clear who they were. Then they went to the Maui Invitational, beat nationally ranked San Diego State and Creighton, and center Oumar Ballo was named MVP.

Now, Arizona could vault all the way into the national Top 5 on Monday and, well, let’s just say a lot of people know who Ballo is now.

Even if Lloyd isn’t looking at any sort of comparison or big picture.

"You know, I'm a day-to-day guy," Lloyd said after the Maui championship game, when asked if this season felt the same so far. "Paycheck-to-paycheck, bottleneck-to-bottleneck. We ain't getting more complicated than that. So let's just stay locked in here and keep getting better. We just wanted to win the game. I don't even know when our next game is."

The Wildcats' next game is Thursday against Utah, part of the Pac-12’s effort to stuff two conference games around the football championship game, and they have upcoming tests against No. 11 Indiana at Las Vegas (Dec. 10) and No. 23 Tennessee at McKale Center (Dec. 17).

But if Lloyd doesn’t want to look ahead too far, like all coaches, he does like to look back to learn from what just happened. And the truth is that the Wildcats did flash some subtle differences in Maui that just might stick with them the rest of the season.

Here’s three other things that defined the Wildcats in Maui, and may continue to the rest of the season:

1. They’re going inside even more

While Lloyd’s offense demands everyone touch the ball offensively, these Wildcats have found success a lot of the time going into the post.

Ballo averaged 21.0 points and 11.7 rebounds per game in Maui, while power forward Azuolas Tubelis averaged 18.7 points and 8.3 rebounds. Together, they helped the Wildcats outscore their three Maui opponents 136-71 in the paint, while holding them to a respectable 47.3% from 2-point range.

"'Zu played, obviously, outstanding this whole tournament," guard Kerr Kriisa said. "It's funny how ’Zu scores 12, but you don't even realize how he scores 12."

The bigs’ efficiency also helped the Wildcats deflate Cincinnati’s press. Over three games in Maui, Arizona averaged 63.2% shooting from two-point range and now leads the country from inside the arc at 67.4% over all its six games.

"We love attacking inside-out," Lloyd said after UA combined to outscore Cincinnati 48-24 in the paint in the first round Monday. "You could see they were pressing. So I think the best way a lot of times to attack pressure defense is go right at it. We want to play north-south and I thought our guys did a good job, for the most part.’

2 . They’re more balanced

One reason why the Wildcats’ inside players are putting up the numbers they have is that Arizona is also shooting 45.0% from 3-pont range, the fifth-best mark in Division I.

Kerr Kriisa ranks 76th nationally with a 51.4 3-point percentage while Courtney Ramey (62.5 in 16 attempts), Adama Bal (4 for 11) and Pelle Larsson 6 of 16) have also been outside threats.

Together they’re creating sort of a pick-your-poison thing that prompted Creighton coach Greg McDermott to single-cover Ballo in the Maui Invitational final. That didn’t work out too well for the Bluejays, since Ballo went off for 30 points and 13 minutes.

"You have to make some decisions when you play them because of their ability to shoot the basketball," McDermott said.

The Wildcats benefit the other way, too. After scoring 21 points on 8-for-12 shooting against San Diego State in the Maui semifinals, guard Courtney Ramey said the perimeter shooters had better shots to take because of the attention Ballo and Tubelis were drawing inside.

"I think when have you Oumar and 'Zu working down low, it kind of frees the guards up to get great looks," Ramey said. "We attacked the paint early and Oumar and 'Zu did a good job of putting points on the board early."

With both inside and outside efficiency going so far at a high level, Kriisa said it shows how "explosive" UA’s offense is.

"Obviously our guard play is getting better too," Kriisa said after the Creighton game. "I think we're just in a great spot right now."

3. They may be even more together

While Lloyd managed to work in key holdovers from the Sean Miller era in Mathurin, Terry and Koloko last season, this season's rotation is made up entirely of players he recruited — plus Baltic brothers Kriisa and Tubelis, two guys who have embraced and excelled in Lloyd’s European-influenced system.

Kriisa has never been afraid to say what he thinks, and as a junior this season, he’s asserted himself as a leader. Sitting next to Ballo on the postgame interview podium Wednesday, Kriisa used a playful tone to make sure the MVP didn't start acting like an MVP.

While Kriisa said Ballo deserved the trophy, he also credited key contributions from other players and said Ballo "doesn’t need to get his head in the clouds" because UA has more basketball coming up.

And when a media questioner asked Ballo about shooting 27 of 34 over three games in Maui, and whether it was the best three-game stretch of his life, Kriisa interrupted Ballo’s answer.

"It was the rims," Kriisa said.

Ballo smiled, and the room broke out in laughter.

"Yeah, probably," Ballo said. "The rim was really soft, so I had a lot of balls rolling in there."

So it was, a little appreciation for a good performance, but nothing too over the top, because there’s still so much to learn, so many games to play.

That’s the kind of perspective Lloyd was willing to talk about after the Wildcats took a trophy off the island.

"I learned that we're good. We're tough. We're gritty," Lloyd said. "I think there's going to be some great things for us to really double down on and some things to show our guys where we went the wrong way.

"That's what you're looking for in these things. You're looking to reinforce good things, learn from the tough things. But we needed that. We needed to come here and get tested. We got tested every game."


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