It may be hard to remember, but yes, there were actually some sports highlights in 2020.
Things werenโt all bad in Tucson. There were records broken and stars welcomed home, familiar faces turned national icons and local legends who only further cemented their status.
Hereโs a look at 10 of the best moments for Tucson sports in 2020:
Aari returns
When Arizona womenโs basketball superstar Aari McDonald suffered a stress fracture in her left fibula in the penultimate week of the 2019-20 regular season, angels played violins over Tucson. The 1-2 gut punch of a late-season injury and the cancellation of the college basketball postseason convinced McDonald to spurn the WNBA draft and return for her senior season. McDonaldโs bad break was Adia Barnesโ and Tucsonโs gain. Arizonaโs first preseason All-American in history, McDonald brought back some trophies with her โ Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year honors, a second-team All-American nod, the Ann Meyers Drysdale Award โ and has helped guide the Wildcats to a No. 6 national ranking.
A coaching change
While McDonaldโs return lifted Tucson, Kevin Sumlinโs jettisoning bolsters it. Is Jedd Fisch the answer as Arizonaโs football coach? Time will tell. But Sumlin was most certainly not, something Wildcats fans knew long before things bottomed out in a 70-7 loss to rival Arizona State.
Sumlin squandered Khalil Tate, recruited as if there was a pall around the Old Pueblo and never forged a bond with the community. A fresh start wasnโt just needed when Arizona fired Sumlin on Dec. 12. Things were desperate.
Tucsonโs football showcase survives
In the midst of a punishing year for the local economy, Ali Farhang and the Offerpad Arizona Bowl committee vowed to give Tucson โa winโ to end the year. Pulling off a bowl game in the middle of a pandemic โ even a stripped-down, fanless version โ was a coup. The gameโs shift from the CBS Sports Network to CBS was an added bonus.
Barnes means business
After taking a major step forward last season in her fourth season at the helm of the Arizona womenโs basketball program, Adia Barnes knew big things were to come this year. But this big? The Wildcats opened the 2020-21 campaign ranked No. 7 and have since moved up one spot, to No. 6.
Bijan blows up
Salpointe Catholic High School grad Bijan Robinson was electric in his freshman season at Texas. Robinson exploded for 113 yards on 12 carries on Nov. 7, set a new standard with nine carries for 172 yards and three scores on Dec. 5 at Kansas State, then topped that with 10 carries for 183 yards and a score in a 55-23 Alamo Bowl win. He could be a preseason All-American next year, and perhaps a Heisman candidate in Year 3.
Holthaus does it again
If you think the UA womenโs basketball team is building something special, take a gander at what Todd Holthaus has created (and maintained) at Pima College. Behind star Hallie Lawson, the Aztecs were 25-7 and coming off a NJCAA Region I title before the NJCAA Tournament was canceled.
Holthaus won District A Coach of the Year honors after the season, the sixth award of his career, his second straight and third in five seasons.
Bobby takes Boston
Former Arizona Wildcats slugger Bobby Dalbec opened his career with a bang. And then came back a few days later for the encore. On Aug. 30, Dalbec โ a Boston Red Sox rookie โ delivered a meaty offering from Washington Nationals pitcher Javy Guerra deep into right field for his first career home run in his second career at-bat.
After an 0-for-15 slump over the next four games, Dalbec started a streak of five straight games with a home run, displaying some of the power he showed at Hi Corbett Field.
Candrea takes the lead
It was just another Sunday win for Mike Candrea, the Arizona Wildcatsโ 10th in a row on March 8. But with the 6-1 victory over Indiana, Candrea became the NCAA career wins leader with 1,632, moving past Michigan coach Carol Hutchins. Heโd get just one more before the season was shut down with the Cats streaking.
โJETโ lands back homeJason Terry, one of the Arizona basketball programโs finest products, returned to the desert on May 27 when he was announced as an assistant coach on Sean Millerโs staff. The Wildcats legend took his first foray into the coaching ranks with the hire, and he could play a major role in Arizonaโs recruiting going forward.
The Cats Are Back
Call it saving the best for last, but was there a better moment than on Sept. 24, when the Pac-12 announced it would play a football season? Things might not have gone so well for the Wildcats in this abbreviated campaign, but, for a moment, it was a ray of sunshine.