The Mercury News Weekend

Arizona decides to keep Miller as coach

- By The Associated Press

When Arizona hastily called a news conference on Thursday afternoon, it appeared Coach Sean Miller’s tenure in Tucson could be coming to an end.

Instead, the coach vehemently denied a report claiming he discussed a six-figure payment to a recruit. Less than three hours later, the school president announced Miller will remain as the 19th-ranked Wildcats’ coach.

“We have no reason to believe Miller violated NCAA rules or the law,” university President Robert C. Robbins said after an Arizona Board of Regents meeting Thursday. “We will continue to pursue every avenue of inquiry available to us during this active and federal investigat­ion to fully understand the facts.”

ESPN reported last Friday, using anonymous sources, that the FBI had Miller on a wiretap discussing a $100,000 payment to Wildcats freshman Deandre Ayton to attend the school. Miller made a statement to the media inside Arizona’s McKale Center on Thursday, denying the report and saying he looked forward to shifting his focus back to basketball.

“There was no such conversati­on,” Miller said. “These statements have damaged me, my family, the university, Deandre Ayton and his incredible family.”

Robbins said he and athletic director Dave Heeke decided to keep Miller on after having face-to-face discussion­s with the coach and going over investigat­ions conducted by the school and federal authoritie­s.

“Coach Miller is our coach,” Robbins said. “He has a contract and we’ll be moving forward.”

In its report, ESPN said Miller was caught on the FBI wiretap discussing the payment for Ayton with Christian Dawkins, a run- ner for ex-NBA agent Andy Miller.

Ayton and his family denied receiving any money from Dawkins, and Miller issued a statement Saturday saying hewas confident he would be vindicated. He took it a step further on Thursday.

“I cannot remain silent on media reports that have impugned the reputation of me, the university and sullied the name of a tremendous young man, Deandre Ayton,” Miller said. “Letme be very, very clear: I have never discussed with Christian Dawkins paying Deandre Ayton to attend the University of Arizona. In fact, I never spoke to or met Christian Dawkins until after Deandre publicly announced he was coming to our school. Any reporting to the contrary is inaccurate, false and defamatory.”

ESPN said its stands by its reporting on Miller and the FBI investigat­ion. NO. 1 VIRGINIA 67, LOUISVILLE 66 » De’Andre Hunter’s 3-pointer as time expired gave Virginia a victory over Louisville in awild finish thatmade the Cavaliers the first ACC teamto go 9-0 on the road in league play. The Cavaliers (27-2, 16-1) overcame a five-point deficit in the finalminut­e. Louisville (19-11, 9-8) led 66-64 and tried to inbounds with .9 seconds left, but Virginia got the ball after Deng Adel was called for traveling on the baseline. After a timeout, Hunter got the ball and sank a long 3 that banked in at the horn. NO. 11 WICHITA STATE 75, CENTRAL FLORIDA 71 (OT) » Shaquille Morris scored 19 points as Wichita State (24-5, 14-3 American) beat UCF (17-12, 8-9) in overtime in Orlando, Fla. NO. 15 MICHIGAN 77, IOWA 71 (OT) » Duncan Robinson made Michigan’s only field goal in overtime, a goahead 3-pointer with 2:15 left, and the Wolverines (257) advanced to the Big Ten quarterfin­als in New York.

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