Adia Barnes is walking a tightrope.
The eighth-year Arizona womenβs basketball coach doesnβt want too many players on her roster. Sheβs been there and didnβt like that. In 2021-22, for instance, she had 15.
βBefore the season, I was like, βOh, 15 players would be great for practice.β At the end of the year, I was like, βNever again,β β Barnes said. βItβs a lot to manage, and thereβs like 10 people miserable.
βBut now Iβm on the other end. Weβre never happy, right?β
The Wildcats enter the 2023-24 season, which begins Monday night at New Mexico State, with a maximum of 10 available players. Barnes thought she had hit the sweet spot of 12, but transfer Fanta Gassama left the team and freshman Montaya Dew suffered a season-ending torn ACL.
Barnes never has played more than 10 players for more than 10 minutes per game as head coach of the Cats. But the current setup leaves Arizona with little margin for error should additional injuries occur.
βWe canβt afford to have more injuries,β said Barnes, who barely had enough players for Arizonaβs second exhibition game because of injuries. βIβve never had such a short bench.
βThe good thing is, you probably wonβt see a lot of transfers because everybodyβs gonna play. We probably wonβt lose five people.β
If thereβs an upside to having a smaller roster, thatβs it. Everyone will get a chance to contribute β including freshmen.
That was Barnesβ plan for this season anyway, even if the roster hadnβt shrunk. Dew β the highest-rated recruit in school history β would have played βa lot,β Barnes said. Breya Cunningham and Jada Williams, two Top 25 prospects per ESPNβs HoopGurlz, will have significant roles. Skylar Jones (No. 97) likely will too.
If/when that happens, itβll represent a departure from recent seasons. No UA freshman averaged 15 minutes per game the past two years, and only one (Lauren Ware) hit that mark in 2020-21.
You have to go back to 2019-20 to find a freshman who eclipsed 20 minutes per game (Helena Pueyo). Barnes never has given more than two freshmen 20-plus minutes in the same season. The only time that happened was 2017-18, and one of them was Sam Thomas.
But the landscape of college sports has changed during Barnesβ tenure in Tucson. Her newfound willingness to play freshmen is an acknowledgment of that.
Fresh perspective
When Barnes became Arizonaβs coach in 2016, the transfer portal didnβt exist. It has changed the way coaches in several sports approach roster construction.
Players transfer for any number of reasons, from personal to financial. Barnes believes that about 90% of the time itβs about playing time, or lack thereof.
Twelve players have transferred from Arizona to other schools over the past two offseasons β hardly an uncommon occurrence in college basketball these days. Five left after their freshman campaigns.
βThe reality is, if you get really talented freshmen and they donβt play or they donβt play as much as they want to play, theyβre going to transfer,β Barnes said. βI think thatβs just the nature of every top program in the country.
βWeβre dealing with 17- to 22-year-olds that arenβt always rational. The standards and expectations are very high. Every person that enters ... a top program, they all want to play 30 minutes. You want to play the most, you want to score the most. You want it to be how it was in high school, and the reality is, itβs not like that.
βIf youβre playing 10-15 minutes, thatβs a lot for a freshman. The expectations arenβt always the reality of where youβre at.β
Arizona had four freshmen last season. They averaged between 8.1 and 13.2 minutes per game.
Two elected to transfer: Paris Clark (13.2) and Lemyah Hylton (8.1). Maya Nnaji (13.0) and Kailyn Gilbert (10.6) are back, although Gilbert briefly entered the portal before electing to return.
Nnaji, whose brother Zeke preceded her at the UA, said her future is βset in stone here.β She plans to spend her entire career as a Wildcat.
βSome people think the grass is greener on the other side,β Nnaji said. βI think the grass is greener where you water it. So Iβm watering my grass in Tucson, and itβs gonna grow.β
Nnajiβs loyalty and level-headedness are rare, and Barnes is well aware of that. She approached the portal judiciously this past offseason, seeking role players with multiple years of eligibility β as opposed to fifth-year players looking to make a splash before turning pro.
βIf you bring in a fifth-year averaging 20 points a game,β Barnes said, βsheβll play in front of a freshman.β
Barnes wants her freshmen to play this year to end, or at least slow, the transfer cycle. She also wants to build something with long-term potential β even if it causes short-term angst.
βIn it for the long haulβ
Barnes is planning to test her own patience this season. Sheβs willing to let the freshmen learn on the job. The growing pains that come along with that are just part of the process.
βTheyβre gonna get opportunities,β Barnes said. βSometimes that might mean theyβll make mistakes, but theyβre gonna learn stuff. Theyβre gonna be thrown into the fire, which will pay dividends later. It might cost us some games early, but Iβm in it for the long haul.
βHopefully theyβll learn fast. ... Theyβre all smart.
βSome players struggle with different things on the court; none of them do. Theyβre all very smart players. So I think that their ability to absorb and learn is going to show.
βI think youβll see big jumps every month.β
All the 2023 freshmen possess traits that Barnes seeks in veterans.
Williams is a pure point guard and natural leader. Sheβs been a vocal presence since she arrived on campus. βIβve never seen that from a freshman,β said Pueyo, now a fifth-year senior.
Cunningham is an old-school center who has no problem doing the dirty work in the paint. βBreya is the only post in America that wants to be a post,β Barnes said. βAll the other fives, they want to be fours and threes.β
Jones βhas that Chicago edgeβ β she attended Whitney Young High School in the Windy City β and a physical profile that reminds Barnes of someone she used to coach. βI love lefty wings,β she said.
Itβs unlikely any of the freshmen will be as accomplished as Thomas, though. She tied for the team lead in minutes (36.8) as a rookie in 2017-18.
For most players, trust and playing time are earned. Nothing is given, even with a shorthanded roster and the looming threat of the transfer portal. The current crop of freshmen understands that.
βRight now Iβm just focused on getting better and getting used to the system,β Cunningham said. βI know Iβm gonna have to work for playing time. Iβm not expecting to just come in and start immediately. ... Thatβs not realistic.β