BOULDER, Colo. — Arizona tends to draw four-figure crowds for weekend games in major metro areas where it often has a sizable alumni base, and the Wildcats can also just be a magnet wherever they go.

Witness four of the better-geared-out UA fans who sat in the upper rows of the CU Events Center on Saturday: William Murphy is from Tucson, Art Loya is from Dallas, while George and Wendy Mendoza are from Chandler. All became friends in Tucson, with Murphy and Loya going back to kindergarten.

Arizona fans George and Wendy Mendoza (in red, from left) of Chandler met up with Art Loya of Dallas and William Murphy of Tucson to watch Arizona play Colorado in Boulder, Colo., on Saturday, March 7, 2026.

While the four have been to other games this season, they opted to meet in Boulder for the last game of the regular season.

“I think we just threw a dart on the calendar,” Loya said.

UA fans represent

Even an hour before the game, it was evident once again that Arizona would be well-represented at the CU Events Center. At that point, there was more red and navy in the building than fans wearing CU gear.

Many stood in the lower seats and watched the Wildcats warm up and, by gametime, roughly a third of the fans inside the CU Events Center appeared to be rooting for UA.

Moment of silence

Colorado held a moment of silence before Saturday’s game for Buffaloes quarterback Dominiq Ponder, who died nearly a week earlier in a car crash just outside of Boulder, just a day before spring football practices started.

Colorado football coach Deion Sanders left the team to decide whether to practice, according to Buffzone.com, but the Buffaloes forged on.

“We decided as a team Dom wouldn’t miss a day,” senior safety Ben Finneseth told BuffZone. “He would have said, ‘Life’s gotta move on, we got championships to win, and we still have goals and the clocks are still rolling, the world’s still going to spin.’

“Obviously there was a lot of emotions (Sunday) and a lot of guys breaking down and tearing up, but we gotta keep working. That was the biggest thing. We gotta be there for each other, gotta keep working.”

Colorado held a moment of silence for football player Dominiq Ponder, who was killed in a car crash a week before the UA-CU basketball game.

During a news conference Friday, Sanders said, “it’s my understanding as a father, that when we send our kids to college, we send our kids to college to mature, progress, to learn who he or she is. We don’t send kids to college not to come back, and that’s the most painful thing that I’m dealing with."

Although Ponder was a reserve walk-on, Sanders indicated he made a significant impact.

“This is a walk-on kid that was a bona fide leader. Bona fide leader,” Sanders said. “Ran our quarterback room up until his passing. We’re going to appreciate it. We’re going to celebrate it. And focus on the positive things that he brought to us.”

Lone Buff senior

Colorado honored only one senior Saturday, and it was a surprise in some respects.

Because Elijah Malone graduated ... two years ago, with a degree in marketing… from Grace College, an NAIA school in Indiana.

But after becoming the small-college player of the year in 2023-24, Malone took advantage of his COVID exception to play at Colorado last season.

He finished last season on a high note, with 14 points in Colorado’s upset over West Virginia in the Big 12 Tournament, and had a double-double of 17 points and 10 rebounds against Villlanova in the Crown event at Las Vegas.

This season, he took advantage of a legal ruling allowing a blanket extra year for athletes playing below Division I to spend a second season with the Buffs. However, a shoulder issue has limited him for most of this season. He averaged just 4.2 points and 2.7 rebounds this season

Colorado center Elijah Malone, right, looks to shoot as Arizona center Motiejus Krivas defends in the second half, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Boulder, Colo. 

“He’s given us everything he’s had. His work ethic has been great,” Colorado coach Tad Boyle told Buffzone. “He hasn’t had the kind of senior year I think that he wanted or expected, or maybe that we wanted or expected. But it’s not because he’s not a good kid. You’re not going to have a higher-character kid in your program than Elijah Malone.”

High praise

Before Saturday’s game, Boyle went a step or two beyond the usual praise opposing coaches give a team before facing them.

“In my mind, it’s the best Arizona team in 15 years I’ve competed against them,” Boyle told Buffzone. “Thirteen years in the Pac-12, this is the second year now in the Big 12, the best Arizona (team). And we’ve played against some really good Arizona teams.”

Boyle also gave a shout-out to UA forward Tobe Awaka, whom he coached on the USA’s U19 team in 2023, saying he’s the “epitome” of the Wildcats.

“The role he’s accepted and played, and what he’s done for that team, the sacrifice, it just tells you what kind of group they’ve got,” Boyle said. “He could start for any team in the Big 12.”

Rancik out

While Arizona was back at full strength again Saturday, the Buffaloes were playing a second straight game without starting big man Sebastian Rancik.

Colorado instead started Malone, while the Buffs also relied on Alon Michaeli off the bench.

Buffzone wrote that Rancik has drawn comparisons to former CU standout Tristan da Silva, a 2024 NBA first-round draft pick who boasted a similar blend of size and skill set.

“You look at the numbers side-by-side as sophomores, Seby’s ahead of the game,” Boyle said. “He’s not behind Tristan. He’s ahead of Tristan. Now, will he continue to develop and work on his game? That’s yet to be seen. But there’s no question he can get there.”

There’s still Coors

Known as the Coors Events Center from 1990 to 2018 because of a $5 million donation from the Adolph Coors Foundation, CU’s Events Center no longer includes the name of the nearby brewing giant, a fact that appeared to surprise UA coach Tommy Lloyd on his radio show.

Local brewer Coors is still well-represented at the CU Events Center.

But there’s still plenty of Coors and Coors Light available for sale inside the building, next to other options such as canned wine, alcoholic seltzers, along with other beers that include Modelo, Shock Top Belgian white and Breckenridge Brewery’s Juice Drop Hazy IPA.

Cheap drinks for students

While regular fans were asked to pay $13-$14 for a large can of beer or other drink, CU students were offered smaller cans of alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks for just $2.99.

While regular fans paid betwen $13-$14 for big beer cans at the CU Events Center, students were offered smaller cans for $2.99 before tipoff.

The catch was that the discounted drinks were only sold at a small stand above the student section — and only up until tipoff.

Lloyd show grows

When Lloyd held his last weekly radio show Thursday, diners spilled all over the courtyard at St. Philips Plaza, in contrast to the shows he held earlier in his UA career inside the adjacent Union Public House.

The show has been mostly held outside for the last two years, switching from Mondays to Thursdays last season because of the Wildcats’ move from the Pac-12 to the Big 12 and resulting change in scheduling rhythm.

“We're getting a little more traction with just being consistent doing the show outside, and on a consistent night,” Lloyd said. “It’s been moved around a little bit. But I hope we keep growing the show. It’s not about me. It’s about getting people together. It’s been great.”

The show will be held a final time on March 15, Selection Sunday, just before the picks are announced.

Quotable 

"That's a hell of a team. ... I'm not saying it's the most talented team that they've ever had, but I think it might be the best team they've ever had." -- Colorado coach Tad Boyle on Arizona.

The big number

29 — Arizona wins during the regular season, a program record. (The Wildcats won 28 in 1987-88, 2013-14, 2014-15 and 2021-22)


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