Saskatoon StarPhoenix

ARIZONA LOSS A WIN FOR NCAA

Cloud hanging over the Wildcats lifted from tournament, writes Tim Bontemps.

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There’s little doubt that somewhere early Friday morning, NCAA president Mark Emmert was breathing a huge sigh of relief.

Not only did 13th-seeded Buffalo’s stunning 89-68 rout of fourth-seeded Arizona at Taco Bell Arena cap the NCAA tournament’s opening day with the kind of unforgetta­ble upset it’s known for, it also removed the NCAA’s biggest headache from its signature event.

From the moment the field was unveiled Sunday night, it was hard not to look at how the tournament’s selection committee handled Arizona, giving the Wildcats an incredibly difficult draw, and three other teams caught up in scandal this season — Oklahoma State, Louisville and Southern California, all of whom were bubble teams left out of the field of 68 — and think the NCAA was doing its best to eliminate continued discussion about the FBI investigat­ion hanging over the sport.

Whether it did or not, it succeeded.

With arguably the best player in the tournament — centre DeAndre Ayton, the potential No. 1 pick in this year’s NBA draft — on its roster, Arizona not only had the potential to make a deep tournament run, but make it all the way to the Final Four in San Antonio. Anyone watching the Wildcats play Buffalo on Thursday night, however, would have had a hard time believing that.

“We knew we had a very tough draw,” Arizona coach Sean Miller said. “We knew we were playing an excellent basketball team — and a team, quite frankly, that we didn’t necessaril­y match up well with.

“We prepared hard, but we ran into a team that played well on a night where we didn’t. They certainly had a lot to do with that.”

Sure, Buffalo played great, getting a combined 67 points from three guards while shooting 54.8 per cent from the field and 50 per cent (15 for 30) from three-point range.

But while there will be plenty of talk about the boisterous Bulls leading into Saturday’s game against fifth-seeded Kentucky, the immediate focus was on the complete capitulati­on of the Pac12 regular-season and tournament champions.

Did all that happened this year take a toll on Arizona? Ever since Miller’s longtime assistant, Emanuel “Book” Richardson, was arrested in September by the FBI in its investigat­ion into bribery and corruption in college basketball, Arizona’s future has been in question.

It was then thrown into complete chaos last month when ESPN reported Miller was overheard on a wiretap discussing a potential payment of US$100,000 to secure Ayton’s commitment. And Allonzo Trier was suspended for testing positive for a performanc­e-enhancing substance.

Miller stepped away from the team for one game before returning for the season finale and professing his innocence, while Trier was also reinstated after it was determined the substance in his system was the reappearan­ce of a trace amount of the same substance that caused him to be suspended for 19 games the previous season.

It all clearly wore on the program, which has spent all season answering questions.

“I’ve made my statement,” Miller said Wednesday, when asked a broad question about the impact the investigat­ion had on the sport.

With Arizona’s season having reached a shockingly early end, there are far more questions than answers ahead about the status of the program. Ayton is leaving for the NBA draft, as are Trier and Rawle Alkins. The other two members of Arizona’s starting five, Dusan Ristic and Parker Jackson-Cartwright, are graduating seniors.

The Wildcats have only six players on scholarshi­p for next season — and have no recruiting commitment­s. When the report about Miller surfaced last month, Shareef O’Neal — son of Shaquille O’Neal — de-committed, only to commit to UCLA.

And Miller’s status, given everything that has happened, is tenuous. It remains to be seen what else will come out about the FBI’s investigat­ion, and whether Miller can survive it.

If he can’t, this off-season could see two of the premier programs in college basketball — Arizona and Louisville — both looking for new coaches to lead them back from basketball purgatory.

But that will be a discussion for another day — a discussion that will happen outside the purview of college basketball’s signature event.

For the NCAA’s leadership, there couldn’t have been a better outcome.

We prepared hard, but we ran into a team that played well on a night where we didn’t. They certainly had a lot to do with that.

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