A girl draws a peace symbol on the street as a tribute to the victims of an August 2017 terrorist attack on the historic street of Las Ramblas, in Barcelona, Spain. The Arizona men’s basketball team, in Spain for exhibition matchups, were just a few blocks away during the attack.

Located less than 50 miles north of the Arizona Wildcats’ Jerusalem hotel, the city of Jenin has flared up again with deadly Israeli-Palestinian conflicts this summer.

Not far to the north, there remains tension over the disputed border of Lebanon and Israel. To the south, in Gaza, thousands recently protested against Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that controls the territory.

And in Tel Aviv, where Arizona will play the first game of its Middle East exhibition tour on Monday, protests continue over a move to limit the power of Israel’s Supreme Court.

There will be tension all around the Wildcats.

But in 2017, the last time they took a foreign exhibition tour, they ventured into an area known for culture, architecture and good times β€” and came frighteningly close to a deadly attack.

People stand next to candles and flowers placed on the ground on Aug. 24, 2017, in memory of the victims of a fatal terrorist attack in Barcelona, Spain. just days earlier.

Just four blocks away from the Wildcats’ hotel in Barcelona, a terrorist drove a van down the Ramblas, Barcelona’s famed boulevard, hopped a curb and weaved through throngs of pedestrians and cyclists. Thirteen people were killed and more than 130 injured.

The Wildcats could have been among them. They had just finished a tour of FC Barcelona facilities and were free to wander from their hotel at that point, increasing the possibility they could have been among those at risk.

Having players scattered all over town increased the tension for then-coach Sean Miller and his staff, who had to wait anxiously to find out if everyone in the team traveling party was OK. Since many players did not have international calling and data plans at the time, they could not all be easily reached.

β€œIf they weren’t on Wi-Fi, there wasn’t a way to get a hold of them,” said Ryan Reynolds, then UA’s director of basketball operations. β€œYou’re at the mercy of when everybody returned to the hotel.”

At a memorial to victims of a terrorist attack on Las Ramblas in Barcelona, Spain, a policeman hugs a boy and his family that he helped after the August 2017 attacks.

Clemson, Oregon State and Tulane β€” each also in the Barcelona area on exhibition trips β€” announced quickly that their traveling parties were safe. Arizona remained quiet.

Finally, the mother of UA guard Brandon Randolph later tweeted that everyone was accounted for, and the school followed up with its official declaration that its traveling party was safe.

Upon returning to Tucson, Milller said a few players β€œexperienced the flow of people running” from the scene of the attack, but that everyone was fine.

β€œIt was very frightening,” Miller said. β€œWhen something like that happens, at first you worry about everybody. Hopefully you get through that first phase where everybody’s OK, and once you do, there’s so much going on that it’s almost as if you don’t completely recognize and realize what is happening.”

The Wildcats were scheduled to play their third exhibition game the following day, but canceled it.

β€œYeah it’s time to go,” then-guard Allonzo Trier tweeted, adding that he was β€œpraying for the world, we need so much help right now.”

However, the Wildcats weren’t able to change their flight planes home, so they stuck around Barcelona’s Hotel Majestic for the next 36 hours. Staffers had to make sure there was enough food while they waited, since many restaurants were closed in the wake of the attack.

It made for a grim and empty end to the Wildcats’ 10-day trip to Spain, a trip that included two wins and a number of sightseeing tours in Valencia and Barcelona.

β€œIt was a fun trip,” Miller said. β€œIt was a trip where I think our guys got a lot of value in their own lives being able to see a country they might not ever see, taking tours that people might look at being once in a lifetime experience.”

This time, third-year Arizona head coach Tommy Lloyd says, the Wildcats are also in for a once-in-a-lifetime sort of experience. They are expected to visit many historic and cultural sites around Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and take a bob in the salty Dead Sea.

But they’re also taking measures. UA has been cautious about releasing specifically where it will be in Israel and the team’s 50-person traveling party will have security detail everywhere it goes in Israel. (Abu Dhabi, the Wildcats’ other tour stop, is annually considered one of the safest cities in the world.)

β€œObviously you want to have your eyes open and I don’t think we’re going to be venturing to the parts of Israel that might have some of the issues with security,” Lloyd said. β€œSo we’ll be safe. We’ll be well taken care of.”

The Arizona Wildcats basketball program will spend part of the summer abroad in Israel and Abu Dhabi. Arizona head coach Tommy Lloyd said "the more you travel, the better, more well-rounded people you become.” Video by Justin Spears/Arizona Daily Star (July 24, 2023)

Arizona guard Caleb Love, who transferred from North Carolina this season, spoke to reporters at McKale Center on Wednesday about his summer in Tucson, his role in the Wildcats' backcourt, and his experience playing against Duke from his days at UNC.


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