Rome News-Tribune

Arizona No. 1 seed at Pac-12 tourney after tumultuous year

- By John Marshall AP Basketball Writer

LAS VEGAS — Arizona’s season started under a dark cloud following the arrest of assistant coach Emanuel Richardson as part of a federal probe into shady recruiting practices.

Wildcats coach Sean Miller found himself in the crosshairs late in the season when an ESPN report alleged he was caught on an FBI wiretap discussing a $100,000 payment to lure top recruit Deandre Ayton to the school.

Oh, and preseason All-American guard Allonzo Trier had to miss two games for testing positive for the same banned substance that cost him 19 games last season.

Through all the tumult, the 15th-ranked Wildcats stayed steady on the court.

“A lot lesser programs, teams, universiti­es would have crumbled and we didn’t,” Miller said. “That says something about us and our future.”

Arizona’s immediate future is the Pac-12 tournament in Las Vegas this week. The Wildcats (24-7, 14-4) are the top seed and one of four teams to get a bye into Thursday’s quarterfin­als. They will play the winner between No. 9 seed Arizona State and No. 8 Colorado.

Arizona closed the season with four wins in five games, its only loss on the road to Oregon without Miller, who was held out a day after the ESPN report. Miller missed three practices before vehemently denying the report in a statement last Thursday. Less than three hours later, university President Robert C. Robbins said Miller would remain as coach.

The Wildcats beat Stanford that night and overcame an emotional senior day on Saturday to pull away from Colorado late for their fifth Pac-12 title in six seasons.

“Lot of emotions, an emotional week, a lot of things flying around,” Arizona point guard Parker Jackson-Cartwright said. “Everybody was just drained mentally and physically.”

A few more things to look for from the Pac12 tournament, which starts Wednesday at T-Mobile Arena:

Trojans’ bubble

Southern California had a chance to move itself away from the NCAA Tournament bubble in its regularsea­son finale against rival UCLA. An 83-72 loss keeps the Trojans (21-10, 12-6) bubbling.

USC has few marquee wins, but did finish second in the Pac-12 behind Arizona.

“Sometimes common sense has to prevail, right?” USC coach Andy Enfield said.

The Trojans open the conference tournament on Thursday, against the winner between Oregon State and Washington.

Sun Devils bubbling

Unlike USC, Arizona State does have marquee wins on its resume. The Sun Devils beat Kansas at Allen Fieldhouse and Xavier on a neutral court, giving them arguably the two biggest wins of any team in the country. They also went 12-0 in nonconfere­nce. But Arizona State (20-10, 8-10) was inconsiste­nt through the Pac-12 season, finishing tied for eighth with Colorado.

The Sun Devils had 15 conference games decided by single digits, most since 1996-97, according to STATS/Pac12 Network.

“Even though there are some that might want to say that that part of the season was so long ago that it shouldn’t count, it does count,” Arizona State coach Bobby Hurley said after an 84-83 loss to Stanford on Saturday.

“This is a season. There’s a Pac-12 season and then there’s an entire season,” he said. “All the close games just prove you’re going to have to bring a very good game to the table to beat our team.”

 ?? File, Rick Scuteri / AP ?? Arizona head coach Sean Miller and the Wildcats will enter the Pac-12 tournament as the No. 1 seed after beating California.
File, Rick Scuteri / AP Arizona head coach Sean Miller and the Wildcats will enter the Pac-12 tournament as the No. 1 seed after beating California.

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