The Denver Post

No. 6 Arizona is the clear favorite at Pac-12 tourney

- By Mark Anderson

LAS VEGAS >> Sixth-ranked Arizona not only enters the Pac-12 Tournament as the clear favorite, coach Tommy Lloyd has been unbeaten in this event at T-mobile Arena.

The Wildcats won the conference tournament the past two seasons, going through UCLA each time.

The Bruins were on Arizona’s level, but there is no real equivalent to the Wildcats (24-7) this season with the conference tournament opening Wednesday. No. 22 Washington State (23-8) is the only other ranked Pac12 team.

“We’re thankful,” Lloyd said. “The guys had a great regular season. To win a Pac-12 regular-season conference championsh­ip is not something to be taken lightly.”

Arizona will try to become the first team to win three Pac-12 Tournament­s in a row since the Wildcats won four straight in 198890 and 2002. There were no conference tournament­s between 1991 and 2001.

The Pac-12 announced Tuesday that Arizona senior guard Caleb Love was named player of the year after he averaged 18.7 points. Against Pac-12 teams, he averaged 20 points with a conference-high 59 3-pointers.

Lloyd has a couple of motivation­al tricks at his disposal. Arizona’s last visit to this arena resulted in a 9695 double-overtime loss to then-no. 14 Florida Atlantic two days before Christmas. That loss gave Lloyd a 9-1 record in Las Vegas. The Owls, coming off a Final Four appearance, have since dropped out of the rankings.

Also, the Wildcats enter the league tournament — the last one for the Pac12 before 10 teams leave for other conference­s — after falling 78-65 to USC on Saturday, ending a stretch in which they had won 10 of 11 games.

“We knew we were given a gift by SC and we can really learn from this,” Lloyd said. “That’s going to be our focus.”

Cronin sounds off

ESPN’S Joe Lunardi forecasts three Pac-12 teams making the NCAA Tournament — Arizona, Washington State and Colorado. Lunardi projects the Buffaloes (22-9) to make the field as a First Four team in Dayton, Ohio.

All three teams are ranked in the top 45 of the NCAA’S NET rankings, which the tournament committee uses as a guide, as well as Kenpom. Utah (1813) is next at No. 52 in the NET and 51st in Kenpom.

Lunardi predicts six other conference­s to send more teams to the tournament than the Pac-12, including the mid-major Mountain West, which has five teams in ESPN’S projection.

Four Pac-12 teams made the tournament last season.

“We’re all too tired to go into this and pound the podium to say, ‘Our league’s been disrespect­ed,’” UCLA coach Mick Cronin said. “There’s so much manipulati­on of the NET and so many things that go on in November that have been a massive disadvanta­ge for the Pac-12 in my five years that have caused the disrespect or really the legitimate problems of the Pac-12.”

Cronin said too many Pac-12 schools don’t schedule early season games properly, taking losses against mid-major conference­s that hurt them in the computer rankings. Those same Pac-12 schools, Cronin said, develop into good teams when conference play begins, but it’s too late to affect the rankings.

Surprise run

The usual suspects were favored in preseason to win the Pac-12.

Washington State?

Not so much. The Cougars were picked 10th.

They enter the Pac-12 Tournament as the second seed. Washington State plays Thursday against the winner of Wednesday’s game between Bay Area rivals California (13-18) and Stanford (13-17).

But the Cougars are coming off a loss to their big rival, Washington, falling 7468 on Thursday. It’s their second loss in four games.

“We’re playing with real pressure,” said Washington State’s Kyle Smith, the Pac-12 coach of the year. “We’re ranked. It’s a different space, a different altitude. So maybe that (Washington loss) humbles us a little bit and we’re hungrier going down there (to Las Vegas).”

Rice honored for comeback

Washington State guard Myles Rice was named conference freshman of the year after finally getting his chance to play following a two-year absence.

Rice redshirted two years ago and didn’t play last season because he was receiving treatment for Hodgkin’s Lymphoma.

When given the chance to finally play, Rice averaged 15.3 points, 3.9 assists and 1.6 steals. His 35 points against Stanford on Jan. 18 set the school’s freshman single-game scoring record and was the highest total for a conference first-year player since 2017.

 ?? YOUNG KWAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? UCLA head coach Mick Cronin, left, disputes a flagrant foul call with an official during a game against Washington State on March 2 in Pullman, Wash.
YOUNG KWAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS UCLA head coach Mick Cronin, left, disputes a flagrant foul call with an official during a game against Washington State on March 2 in Pullman, Wash.
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