Buzzer-beaters? Weβve seen a few.
Azuolas Tubelis, unguarded, banks in a layup to beat Arizona State.
Nico Mannion, sprinting full court, sinks a running hook shot to overcome Pepperdine.
Kadeem Allen, coast to coast, wins a Hawaiian luau against Michigan State.
The problem is, none of those rare (and becoming more rare) great escapes led to much. Mannion and Allen performed their heroics in November. Tubelisβ winner came against a Sun Devils team that had gone 39 days without a victory.
In Sean Millerβs 12 years on the job, a signature buzzer-beating shot has escaped Arizona. Jamelle Horne missed a 3-pointer that wouldβve sent Arizona to the 2011 Final Four. Nick Johnson, bless him, couldnβt get off a shot in a still-painful 2014 Elite Eight loss to Wisconsin.
Allonzo Trierβs win-it-all 3-ball in the final second of the 2017 Sweet 16 bounced away. Season over far too soon.
Isnβt it time? Donβt the basketball gods owe one to the Wildcats?
The pain from Saturdayβs 63-61 loss to Oregon lingers. Point guard James Akinjo slowly dribbled into a double team and, as the clock ticked away, he did not see Terrell Brown wide open on the right wing or Kerr Kriisa pop open in front of the UA bench.
The UAβs last-possession failures are like the lyrics of a Paul Simon song: The nearer your destination, the more youβre slip sliding away.
Perhaps the aforementioned basketball gods are getting back at Arizona, which between 1985-2005 won so many buzzer-beaters against big-time opponents that you could write a book about it.
Was it all Xβs and Oβs? Was it truly better coaching? Or was it, as Lute Olson once said, βbig-time players make big-time playsβ?
Here are five last-possession buzzer-beaters that helped to build Arizona into a center of elite basketball.
1986: Steve Kerr throws a 90-foot pass that is deflected and bounces to Craig McMillan, who scores at the buzzer to beat then-Pac-10 kingpin Oregon State 63-62 and change the trajectory of Arizonaβs future. Olson said the Wildcats had practiced that play β including planning for a ricochet β almost every day.
1991: Olson calls a βone pushβ play, in which the point guard actually pushes power forward Sean Rooks, which gives space to pass and for Rooks to get open. He scores at the buzzer to beat Stanford at then-wild Maples Pavilion,78-76.
1992: Khalid Reeves sprints the length of the court in 4.5 seconds, beating Stanford in Maples Pavilion, 72-70. βWeβve practiced that play,β said UA assistant coach Jim Rosborough. βWe knew Khalid could get there in under 5 seconds.β
1999: Against No. 3 Stanford, Jason Terry dribbles the last 10 seconds as four teammates hug the baseline and get out of the way. Terry doesnβt consider passing. He swishes an 8-footer to win the game, 79-78. UA fans storm the court, the last time they have done so.
2001: Against No. 1 Stanford, trailing 75-74 with 12 seconds left, Olson calls two timeouts and Stanford coach Mike Montgomery a third as both coaches shuffle Xβs and Oβs. Arizona has five appealing options: Gilbert Arenas, Jason Gardner, Loren Woods, Richard Jefferson or power forward Michael Wright. After Wright scores from 3 feet out at the buzzer to win it, Olson says: βI planned to go inside the whole way; I knew they wouldnβt get the ball out of Michaelβs hands.β
There were many others: Miles Simon beat Oregon State at the wire and Cincinnati with a 50-foot shot. No one, however, stepped up in the last ticks of the clock more than Salim Stoudamire.
In the heat of the 2005 season, Stoudamire swished three buzzer-beaters: a 3-pointer to stun UCLA 73-70; a 12-footer to crush ASUβs upset hopes, 70-68; and a 15-footer to win a tense Sweet 16 game against Oklahoma State.
βI like to have a guy who has done it all the time,β Olson said after Stoudamireβs shot beat Oklahoma State. Who wouldnβt? βSalim was taking that last shot, period,β said Rosborough.
With a Stoudamire in its lineup, Arizona probably wouldnβt have frittered away last-possession chances to beat Colorado and Oregon over eight days. Salim, a senior in 2005, embraced the pressure.
Alas, the Wildcats havenβt had anyone like Stoudamire β a pure shooter with no fear β for 15 years. As with Sean Elliott, who was the first βMr. Clutchβ of many in the Olson years, it wasnβt an X or an O as much as it was the willpower of one.
Arizona is overdue to find a latter-day Mr. Willpower.
The most famous buzzer-beater in the early years of UA basketball was authored by Howard Abbott, a senior from Tucson High. He beat national power USC on a last-second 16-footer, Dec. 19, 1931, at Bear Down Gym.
If youβve forgotten the feeling, this is what the Starβs Chuck Kinter wrote about Arizonaβs historic buzzer-beater:
βWith a thespian gesture that left the Trojans dumbfounded and a crowd of more than 1,000 in hysterics, Arizona came from behind to conquer the mighty monarchs of the Pacific Coast Conference. β¦ In the time it takes to bat an eye, the Cats turned the disadvantage into victory.β
Abbott became something of a celebrity in Tucson; after graduation, he owned the Blue Moon Ballroom and often told the story of the famous night he beat USC with a last-second jumper.
The next time Arizona wins a big-game buzzer beater at McKale, or anywhere, the school might need a ballroom to stage a long-awaited celebration.