Los Angeles Times

Last dance could be big for Cougars

As conference caves, Washington State in hunt to win Pac-12 for first time since 1941.

- By David Brandt

TEMPE, Ariz. — Coach Kyle Smith had spent much of the previous 36 hours trying to get his Washington State basketball team to refocus on the task ahead, moving on from the program’s massive road win over then-No. 4 Arizona two days earlier.

Then his phone buzzed. It was a 4 1⁄2-minute video from his wife — featuring highlights from the Cougars’ win over Arizona.

“I said, ‘What are you doing?’ ” Smith said, laughing.

To be fair, Smith understand­s why fans of No. 19 Washington State (21-7, 12-5 Pac-12) are savoring the last month of stellar basketball. The program hasn’t won a Pac-12 basketball championsh­ip since 1941, but the Cougars are right in the mix, a half-game behind firstplace Arizona entering Wednesday. The Cougars host USC on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. and UCLA on Saturday at 4 p.m.

It’s an underdog story with several layers. The most prominent is that Washington State and Oregon State will be the only Pac-12 teams remaining after this academic year. The conference is essentiall­y dissolving, with UCLA, USC, Washington and Oregon heading to the Big Ten, California and Stanford going to the Atlantic Coast Conference, and Arizona State, Arizona, Colorado and Utah leaving for the Big 12.

Washington State and Oregon State will play basketball in the West Coast Conference next year. But for one more winter, the Cougars are in the Pac-12. And much to just about everyone’s surprise, they might win it.

“I told the guys before the season ‘This is a tournament team,’ ” Smith said. “If we don’t get there, it’s on me. I tried to take the pressure off, because I thought our talent was good enough. But you still don’t know.”

Now he does. Washington State appears well on its way to the NCAA tournament — and could stick around for a few games — with a roster full of overlooked players who have blossomed under Smith’s leadership.

Jaylen Wells — who made a clutch four-point play in the final minute to lift the Cougars over Arizona — started his career at Division II Sonoma State, where he was an All-American before transferri­ng to a bigger stage. Leading scorer Isaac Jones is a junior college transfer. Starting center Oscar Cluff is from Australia, while Andrej Jakimovski is from North Macedonia.

Myles Rice, the team’s second-leading scorer, had to take a medical redshirt last season while undergoing treatments for Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He had his last chemothera­py treatment last March.

“I think we have a lot of amazing underdog stories on our team,” Wells said. “So it just fits.”

Washington State’s rise hit its crescendo last Thursday with a dramatic 77-74 win over Arizona that capped an eight-game winning streak. The Cougars were remarkably poised down the stretch, beating a Wildcats team that hadn’t lost at home all season.

Wells said that calmness comes from their life and basketball experience­s, which might be a little different than those of most highlevel Division I players.

“It comes with our stories,” Wells said. “We just have a lot of different players who came from different places where we didn’t have the resources we have here. We don’t take it for granted. We use them every day.”

Even the 54-year-old Smith has a bit of an underdog story. He was an assistant at Santa Clara before earning his first coaching job at Columbia in the Ivy League in 2010. Following a 25-win season, he took the San Francisco job in 2016 before being hired by Washington State in 2019.

Now in his fifth season in Pullman, Smith is on the verge of taking Washington State to its first Big Dance since 2008.

The Cougars know it won’t be easy. Their eightgame winning streak ended Saturday with a 73-61 loss to Arizona State. Smith said his team is trying to relish the present without forgetting that the biggest games are ahead.

“Being good is hard,” Smith said. “Being great is really hard.”

 ?? Darryl Webb Associated Press ?? ISAAC JONES, the team’s leading scorer, and the Cougars have been one of the season’s big surprises.
Darryl Webb Associated Press ISAAC JONES, the team’s leading scorer, and the Cougars have been one of the season’s big surprises.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States