The Arizona Republic

Wildcats win ‘Battle of the UAs’

- Bruce Pascoe

If spotting Alabama a 9-0 lead, committing 20 fouls, dishing only 12 assists and shooting a season-low 43.1% didn’t say enough about the Arizona Wildcats’ state Wednesday, there was also the sight of Tommy Lloyd’s wide-open mouth.

Normally mild-mannered with officials, the Wildcats’ third-year men's basketball coach picked up the first technical foul of his head coaching career, complainin­g at least non-verbally over a non-call in the first half of Arizona’s 87-74 win over Alabama at the Footprint Center.

“I didn’t say anything but (the official) said I looked maybe at the head of officials” who was sitting courtside, Lloyd said.

Lloyd was out of whack. The Wildcats were out of whack. And Alabama was out of whack.

The two “UAs” entered the nightcap of Jerry Colangelo's Hall of Fame Series with two of the most efficient offenses in college basketball, yet beat each other up defensivel­y so much that the game was mired in a 54-54 tie midway through the second half and continued for two and a half hours, with the overwhelmi­ngly pro-Arizona crowd finally filing out only about 20 minutes before midnight.

It wasn’t until Arizona wing Pelle Larsson dove, literally, into the muck of it all that the Wildcats began behaving somewhat like their usual selves.

Up 41-40 at halftime but unable to pull away over the first 10 minutes of the second half, Arizona began a gamechangi­ng 10-0 run after Larsson stole the ball from Alabama’s Grant Nelson. With the ball in Arizona’s possession, guard Caleb Love then missed a close-in shot jumper, but Larsson grabbed the offensive rebound and put it back to give Arizona a 56-54 lead.

“It was awesome,” Lloyd said. “We just made a late call from the bench to pick up (Nelson), who’s a good player but generally not a guy who brings the ball down the court and Pelle can really pressure the ball. So Pelle went up there, got after him a little bit, he mishandled it and Pelle made an incredible hustle play.”

Despite appearing to reaggravat­e an injury to his right hand suffered when he hit the floor hard against Purdue last Saturday, Larsson didn’t hold back on Wednesday.

“Plays like that are going to come every game and you’ve just gotta be the most aggressive guy and dive for the ball first,” Larsson said. “l think we did that multiple times.”

The Wildcats turned Larsson's bucket into a 10-0 run, getting a free throw from Oumar Ballo and two free throws from Larsson plus a driving layup by KJ Lewis. After Alabama’s Rylan Griffen missed a 3-pointer, Larsson also returned for a free throw and a pullup jumper with eight minutes left.

Alabama finally ended Arizona’s run with eight minutes left when Jaden Bradley fouled Nelson, who hit both ends of an ensuing one-and-one. The Tide cut UA's lead to six with just over

three minutes left but trailed most of the game by double digits after Arizona's 10-0 run.

The Wildcats wound up shooting a still-uncharacte­ristically low 44.8% in the second half — and they still only set up five of their 13 second-half field goals with assists. But they scored 15 points off turnovers in the second half, and 26 for the game, often scoring quickly on the break.

“We definitely got our transition game going in the second half and Alabama tries to rebound five guys (on its possession­s), which makes it incredibly challengin­g,” Lloyd said. “They literally, at the start of each half, were just pounding us on the glass. Embarrassi­ng. Fortunatel­y, our guys stepped up and responded.”

Arizona wound up outrebound­ing Alabama 48-38 and limited the Crimson Tide’s usual offensive rebounding advantage.

Ranked No. 1 in Kenpom offensive efficiency entering the game, Alabama (6-5) was shooting 39.1% from 3-point range and 57.0% from inside the arc. But on Thursday, Alabama shot just 33.8% overall and hit 8 of 40 (20%) of its 3point attempts.

The Tide also scored 13 secondchan­ce points off 15 offensive rebounds, while Arizona scored 17 second-chance points off 17 offensive rebounds.

Alabama couldn’t just throw all those missed shots back in, couldn’t hang on

to the ball and committed even more fouls than Arizona — a total of 25, with big men Mohamed Wague and Nick Pringle fouling out.

“Our big points of emphasis were keeping them off the free throw line and winning the rebounding battle,” Alabama coach Nate Oats said. “We didn't do a great job on the glass and obviously it didn't help that we didn't shoot particular­ly well. And we turned the ball too much.

“I thought their physicalit­y bothered us. They're a tough, physical, hard-playing group … They got some buckets and we lost our momentum. We never really gained it back.”

An Arizona recruiting target while in the transfer portal last spring, Nelson led Alabama in scoring with 17 points and five rebounds but was a microcosm of its inefficien­cy, making only 3 of 15 3pointers.

While Larsson had 16 points, six rebounds and two assists for Arizona, center Oumar Ballo had a double-double of 16 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Wildcats.

“We obviously wanted to pound it inside and take advantage of ‘O,’ “Lloyd said.

“O is coming on. I’ve been around O a long time and I think we’re on the precipice here… he had some balls kind of close to him that didn’t go his way but he’s a physical force and he demands a lot of attention.”

 ?? PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC ?? Arizona guard Caleb Love goes up for a shot against Alabama on Wednesday night at Footprint Center in Phoenix.
PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC Arizona guard Caleb Love goes up for a shot against Alabama on Wednesday night at Footprint Center in Phoenix.

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