Clemson guard Chase Hunter picks a pass right out of the hands of Arizona guard Caleb Love in the first half of the Wildcats’ Sweet 16 matchup with the Tigers on Thursday in Los Angeles.

LOS ANGELES β€” Some NCAA Tournament storylines feel almost too perfect, like a rejuvenated transfer facing his former team with a berth in the Final Four at stake.

But as 2023-24 Pac-12 Player of the Year and All-American Caleb Love and his current, Arizona teammates exited the Crypto.com Arena floor on Thursday in Los Angeles, moments before Love’s old team, North Carolina, began warm-ups, the one constant theme that makes March mad denied the West Regional a readymade drama.

On this one day, Clemson was the better team than UA. And all any team needs is to be better for one 40-minute stretch.

ClichΓ©, maybe, but Tigers coach Brad Brownell summarized it best: β€œIt’s anything that can happen in these tournaments.”

The song is not called β€œBest-of-Seven Shining Moment,” after all.

Caught up in his own team’s moment β€” a 77-72 Sweet 16 win over the favored Wildcats β€” and the heroics of guard Chase Hunter, Clemson big man PJ Hall made a bold proclamation.

Arizona guard Caleb Love (2) goes face-to-face with Clemson guard Chase Hunter (1) on a drive toward the bucket in the second half of the teams' Sweet 16 matchup Thursday at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.

β€œChase Hunter is the best two-way guard in America now,” Hall said. β€œYou need to figure that out.”

Hunter came into the NCAA Tournament having reached the 20-point threshold once all season β€” scoring exactly 20 in a Valentine’s Day win over Miami β€” and posting 18 points or more four times in total.

Hunter’s three 18-point games were against Alcorn State and twice against Atlantic Coast Conference cellar-dwelling Georgia Tech.

In his three tournament games, however, Hunter went for 21 points in an opening-round defeat of New Mexico and 20 in the second round against Baylor.

With his successfully converted and-one play with 25.7 seconds remaining in the Sweet 16, which effectively sealed Clemson’s win, Hunter reached 18 points.

The Tigers guard shot 8 of 15 from the floor β€” 8 of 10 inside the 3-point arc β€” grabbed seven rebounds and dished five assists. He was the player Clemson leaned on in the clutch, much like UA leaned on Love throughout the season.

Arizona guard Caleb Love (2) charges past Clemson center PJ Hall (24) to get to the basket in the first half of the Wildcats' Sweet 16 loss to the Tigers on Thursday in Los Angeles.

As Hunter’s confidence brimmed, he suggested Love’s was affected after a poor start that eventually progressed into a 0-of-9 performance from 3-point range.

β€œI was just missing shots. A lot of them were open,” Love told the Daily Star. β€œI was getting downhill. When I did get downhill, good things happened.”

Love scored nine of his 13 points in the second half, and in getting to the free-throw line for three free-throw attempts, helped draw personal fouls on Hall and Ian Schieffelin.

β€œThey were just putting their head down and driving and trying to get fouls,” Brownell said of UA rallying in the second half. β€œAnd our frontline was falling apart with fouls.”

The Clemson coach responded by pulling his defense to zone, which resulted in open looks from deep that fell almost 37% of the time for the season.

Only 17.9% fell in the Sweet 16.

β€œI probably should have did that a lot more today,” Love added of attacking the rim. β€œI just put it on me. I felt like the shots were good shots, but obviously, they didn’t go for me.”

Arizona guard Caleb Love stretches out to pressure Clemson forward Jack Clark in the second half Thursday in Los Angeles.

For much of the season, Love’s shots did go. He earned his All-American selection and goes down as the final Pac-12 Player of the Year in history with the conference’s disintegration having averaged 18.1 points per game.

He scored 20-plus points 14 times in the regular season, peaking with 36 against Oregon.

And, for the first two games of the NCAA Tournament, Love was right around his season-long production with 18 points in the first round against Long Beach State; and 19 points against Dayton.

The two double-digit-point wins reflected a usual, season-long trend for UA: As Love went, so went the Wildcats.

In winning 27 games and the last Pac-12 championship, and being – as coach Tommy Lloyd deemed it β€” a team capable of reaching the Final Four, going the way of Love typically had positive results.

The opposite also proved true on a few occasions, Thursday’s marking the third in the month of March after Love shot a combined 1 of 13 from 3-point distance in losses to USC and Oregon.

Had the Wildcats moved on and faced that readymade drama with UNC, it was going to do so with Love as the main character.

β€œThey’re incredible guys,” Lloyd said of Love and fellow grad transfer Keshad Johnson, who grabbed 11 rebounds in the Sweet 16 loss. β€œI’m so thankful that they took a chance on coming to Arizona and playing for our staff. It was an incredible experience, all offseason and season long.”

Clemson held off Arizona in the second half to advance to the Elite Eight of the 2024 men’s NCAA tournament. Watch the extended highlights from the Tiger’s Sweet 16 win here. (March Madness YouTube)


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