The Arizona Republic

UA’s Tubelis unsure of plans after 1st-round tourney exit

- Bruce Pascoe

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Since the Arizona Wildcats are usually not available for comment after the season, the questions roll in immediatel­y after their final game.

This year, it was Azuolas Tubelis’ turn to answer them. After he led the Pac-12 in scoring and rebounding, being named a second-team AP All-American, Tubelis was asked about his plans for the future following Arizona’s first-round loss to Princeton in the NCAA Tournament.

Which is another way of asking, basically, if he planned to declare for the NBA draft.

“My thoughts are now just to get better, take some time off and get back in the gym,” Tubelis said. “I have no idea when I’m going to play, what I want to play, what to do. We just lost a tough game, so you can’t really expect an answer right now. I don’t know.”

Dalen Terry, Christian Koloko and Bennedict Mathurin faced the same question a year ago after the Wildcats lost to Houston in the Sweet 16.

“We’re not thinking about that right now. We just lost a game,” Terry said at that postgame interview podium. “We’re just going to get back to Tucson and relax for a little bit and get back in the gym.”

All three players left for the pros and were taken in the 2022 NBA draft. This year, ESPN doesn’t have Tubelis in its current two-round mock draft but ranks him No. 69 out of 100 top prospects. NBADraft.net has Tubelis going No. 34.

All of UA’s European players also are always a threat to leave for either the U.S. or European pro leagues, though guard Kerr Kriisa said it was too early to discuss what he will do.

History repeats

After playing a role as a player in Princeton’s 1996 NCAA Tournament upset of defending national champion UCLA under legendary former Tigers coach Pete Carril, Princeton coach Mitch Henderson was quite aware of the parallels that could be drawn to Thursday’s game.

So even before questions were taken at his postgame news conference, Henderson tried to shoot them down.

“There’s going to be some comparison­s from some of you, I’m sure, to coach Carril,” Henderson said. “I want to be really clear that this group did this. That was a really long time ago. This group did something special for its university, for the fans, for the former players and for one another. Very similar way that you see in the tournament, they just came together and did it.

“We were down the whole game and just made big plays. That’s a really good team. We outrebound­ed them. We had more points in the paint. I thought we’d have to have five turnovers to get it done. We had 11. It’s a heck of a win, and I’m so proud of them.”

Maybe Carril’s spirit was somewhere in the Golden 1 Center. After leaving Princeton, after all, Carril served as a Kings assistant coach from 1996-2002, 2003-06 and 2008-11.

Carril died in August 2022 at age 92. Henderson was asked what Carril might have told him had he seen Thursday’s game.

“He would be very proud of the group,” Henderson said. “He wouldn’t want any attention to be brought other than what these guys did. They played to win. We knew we had to keep the game low possession­s. They had eight fastbreak points, mostly off of our turnovers. But that’s really good.”

With “coach (Tommy) Lloyd, (Arizona is) such an unbelievab­ly wellcoache­d team,” Henderson added. “I think we just knocked off a terrific basketball team. I’m just really proud of our guys.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Arizona’s Azuolas Tubelis shoots against Princeton’s Caden Pierce during an NCAA Tournament game on Thursday in Sacramento, Calif.
GETTY IMAGES Arizona’s Azuolas Tubelis shoots against Princeton’s Caden Pierce during an NCAA Tournament game on Thursday in Sacramento, Calif.

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