Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Arizona in the NBA Finals: Andre Iguodala hits milestones but Lakers rout Heat in Game 1

2020 NBA Finals - Miami Heat v Los Angeles Lakers Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

Andre Iguodala became the 10th player in NBA history to appear in six straight Finals on Wednesday, though you could argue the Miami Heat never really showed up. The Los Angeles Lakers cruised to a 116-98 victory in Orlando to open the best-of-seven series.

The Heat jumped out to an early 13-point lead, but it was all Lakers from there. They led by 17 at the half and saw their lead grow to as many as 32 before the Heat chipped away in the fourth quarter. Since this is an Arizona Wildcats website, we’re going to give the credit to Lakers assistants Miles Simon and Quinton Crawford for making the necessary adjustments. Try to stop us.

Iguodala filled up the stat sheet with seven points, six assists, five rebounds and a block on a LeBron James layup in 25 minutes off the bench. Iguodala passed Cliff Hagan for 79th on the all-time playoffs rebounds list with 745, passed Julius Erving for 42nd on the all-time playoffs assists list with 595, and tied John Starks for 29th on the all-time playoffs 3-pointers list with 176.

Iggy, who shot 3 for 7 with one triple, also had this tip slam to fuel the Heat’s hot start:

Solomon Hill had four points and three rebounds in 18 minutes off the bench.

To make matters worse for Miami, they saw a few key players sustain injuries. First it was Jimmy Butler turning his ankle late in the first half. Then it was Goran Dragic injuring his left foot and Bam Adebayo straining his shoulder. Butler was the only one to return to the game.

So it looks like Iggy’s quest for a fourth ring will be the most difficult one yet.

What’s next

Game 2 is scheduled for Friday, Oct. 2 at 6 p.m. PT on ABC.

What they’re saying about Arizona’s guys on social media



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OL Donovan Laie returns to Arizona, one day after announcing transfer

donovan-laie-Arizona-Wildcats-ncaa-transfer-portal-withdraw-college-football-2020 Photo by Kevin Abele/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Finally, some good transfer news for the Arizona Wildcats.

A day after putting his name into the NCAA transfer portal, junior offensive lineman Donovan Laie has reversed course and will remain with the program.

Laie has started all 24 games the past two seasons, 22 at left tackle, and is expected to be quarterback Grant Gunnell's main blind side protector this fall when the UA begins a shortened 6-game schedule in November.

Had he gone thru with transferring he would have been the fifth multi-year starter to leave the team this offseason. Senior linebacker Tony Fields II and senior safety Scottie Young Jr. transferred to West Virginia and senior linebacker Colin Schooler ended up at Texas Tech, while senior DE/LB Kylan Wilborn is still looking for a landing spot after announcing his transfer last week.

Laie's return still leaves Arizona with only 79 scholarship players on the roster, six short of the FBS limit.



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Arizona QB Kevin Doyle opts back in for 2020 season, per report

arizona-wildcats-kevin-doyle-2020-football-opt-in-coronavirus-sophomore-pac12-college Photo courtesy Arizona Athletics

It appears Kevin Doyle has had a change of heart.

Michael Lev of the Arizona Daily Star is reporting that Doyle, a redshirt sophomore quarterback for the Arizona Wildcats, is opting back in for the 2020 season.

Doyle announced on Aug. 1 he was opting out over concerns about COVID-19, a decision that came 10 days before the Pac-12 canceled all sports for the rest of the Year. With the conference bringing back football last week, though, Doyle’s worries appear to have abated.

While redshirt freshman Grant Gunnell is firmly entrenched as Arizona’s starting QB, the No. 2 spot is wide open. Before Doyle opted back in it looked to be a competition between redshirt junior Rhett Rodriguez—the only other passer on the roster who has played in college—and true freshman Will Plummer.

Doyle has yet to see the field in two seasons with Arizona, a preseason injury holding him back in 2019.

Arizona is expected to begin preseason practice sometime next week in the leadup to the start of a 6-game regular season that will begin Nov. 6-7.



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Arizona women’s basketball’s 2021 recruiting class ranked in top 20

2020 NBA All-Star - BWB Camp Anna Gret Asi | Photo by Nicole Sweet/NBAE via Getty Images

Practicing in the gym. Having a start date. Eventually getting a schedule. Those are some of the things that make any impending college basketball season feel real. These days, being in early rankings and talking about highly-rated recruiting classes are also part of the mix for Arizona women’s basketball.

After showing up at No. 8 in ESPN’s Way-Too-Early Top 25 ranking on Monday, the Wildcats showed up in the Worldwide Leader’s Top 25 recruiting classes for 2021 on Tuesday, checking in at No. 15.

With signing day just over a month away, Arizona fans can take comfort in the fact that Adia Barnes and her staff are preparing for the day when Aari McDonald and Sam Thomas move on.

All three of Arizona’s recruits earned at least four stars from the recruiting service. Madison Conner, who will come to Tucson from the Phoenix area, is Arizona’s highest-ranked recruit at No. 71.

Shane Laflin writes, “Conner is a fundamental shooter with extreme confidence on the floor. Aaronette Vonleh (No. 100) is a powerful post player whose brother is Denver Nuggets forward Noah Vonleh. Arizona continues to be successful in landing international recruits, and that is evident in Anna Gret Asi, a 4.5-star point guard from Estonia who can run the show.”

As expected, Arizona isn’t the only Pac-12 team expected to sign a talented group in November. Their No. 15 ranking places them fourth in the Pac-12. The Wildcats were joined by Stanford (No. 6), USC (No. 7), Oregon State (No. 8), Washington (No. 16) and ASU (No. 23).

The Wildcats have the possibility of climbing even higher if uncommitted point guard Kyndall Hunter joins the fray. Arizona joins fellow Pac-12 programs USC and ASU in the No. 24 recruit’s top 10. Barnes has also offered uncommitted guard Khylee Pepe who is ranked 83rd.

Barnes said earlier in the offseason that she is hoping to add one more player to the class, despite the recruiting challenges that exist because of the coronavirus crisis.



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D’Marco Dunn commits to North Carolina over Arizona, others

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As expected, 4-star guard D’Marco Dunn committed to the North Carolina Tar Heels on Wednesday.

He was also considering Vanderbilt, Arizona, Georgia, Louisville, Texas and Clemson, but virtually every expert in the industry predicted he would pick UNC.

Dunn is the No. 79 player and No. 16 shooting guard in the 2021 class, per 247Sports composite rankings.

The 6-foot-4 swingman attends Westover High School in Fayetteville, North Carolina, but before that he went to Marana High School in Arizona, though that didn’t prove very useful for the Wildcats.

As I outlined last week, Arizona will likely have a smaller class than usual in this recruiting cycle. So far they have a commitment from 4-star combo guard K.J. Simpson. They are also seen as the favorites to land 4-star wing Shane Nowell and, depending who you ask, 4-star forward DaRon Holmes.



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Mark Few says Arizona-Gonzaga game likely to be moved to 2021-22 season

Gonzaga v Arizona Photo by Jennifer Stewart/Getty Images

Every bit of Arizona’s 2020-21 basketball schedule is up in the air right now, including the marquee game against the Gonzaga Bulldogs that was originally scheduled for Dec. 5.

Zags coach Mark Few recently told the Spokesman Review that it’s likely to be pushed back to the 2021-22 season.

That makes sense for Gonzaga, which would rather play a premier opponent in front of a boisterous home crowd than in an empty arena, and that probably won’t be feasible for most of—if not all of—the 2020-21 season.

“We’ve had talks with everybody,” Few told the Spokesman Review. “We’re in the process of deferring most of those games (to next season) because there’s not going to be anybody here. The hardest thing about the Pac-12 is they still haven’t made an announcement if they’re playing. We’ve been working on this schedule for a long time. We’ve been spending 20 hours a day on the phone setting up all kinds of stuff up. You just have to move on with some of your plans.”

As you can tell, Few made these comments before the Pac-12 announced its basketball season will start in November with the rest of the country. But based on the rest of his statement, it doesn’t seem like that will be enough to make the second leg of the Arizona-Gonzaga home-and-home series happen this year.

Arizona is reportedly not playing in Preseason NIT as scheduled either, so the Wildcats, like everyone around the country, have a ton of scheduling work to do before Nov. 25 rolls around.

Many see a multi-team event in Las Vegas as the best way for teams in the West to fill up their schedules, so that’s probably something to keep an eye on moving forward.



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Tuesday, September 29, 2020

North Carolina the favorite for D’Marco Dunn, who will announce commitment Wednesday

Photo via @POBScout on Twitter

D’Marco Dunn shared more information about his Wednesday commitment date, announcing on Twitter that he will reveal his decision at 3 p.m. ET.

The four-star shooting guard is picking between North Carolina, Vanderbilt, Arizona, Georgia, Louisville, Texas and Clemson.

Experts in the industry overwhelmingly believe Dunn will choose UNC. 247Sports’ Travis Branham predicted as such. So did five different folks from Rivals.com.

The only person picking Dunn to go elsewhere is Jeff Erman, a 247Sports publisher who covers Maryland. He thinks Dunn could be headed for Vanderbilt. Even still, that prediction was made in late August and he’s not confident about it, submitting his confidence level as a 4 out of 10.

Known for his shooting, Dunn is the No. 79 player in the 2021 class. He used to live in Tucson before moving to North Carolina.



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Arizona OL Donovan Laie enters transfer portal

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: OCT 20 Arizona at UCLA Photo by David Dennis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Arizona Wildcats lost another key player Tuesday when starting offensive lineman Donovan Laie announced he is entering the transfer portal.

The junior started every game over the last two years, with 22 of those 24 starts coming at left tackle. The other two came at left guard.

Laie was one of the few players in the program with legitimate NFL potential. He’s also the fourth 2019 starter to enter the transfer portal—the others being linebackers Colin Schooler and Tony Fields II and safety Scottie Young Jr. The Wildcats also lost edge defender Kylan Wilborn, who was once one of their best pass rushers.

Laie joined the Wildcats in 2018 as a three-star recruit from Oceanside High School in California. He has two years of eligibility left. The only player on Arizona’s roster who has started at left tackle at the Division I level is Jordan Morgan, a sophomore from Marana High School.

Laie’s father died last November, perhaps a factor in his decision to transfer so he can be closer to home.

“Being a Wildcat these past few years have been an honor and I have been nothing but blessed to be able to play and work with some of the most amazing people,” Laie wrote in a statement. “I would like to thank the University of Arizona for believing in me since I’ve stepped on campus to compete in a Wildcat uniform. I would like to thank coach Sumlin and the entire staff for giving me the opportunity these past two seasons at Arizona. I would like to thank Coach B and the whole strength and conditioning staff for holding it down for me since I’ve arrived in 2018. Last but certainly not least, to the community of Tucson, being a starter every game on a Power 5 team since I’ve stepped on campus has come with responsibility and a lot of growing pains but y’all have shown nothing but love and support and I thank you guys. You all will be truly missed.

“Although I will miss the UofA atmosphere, community and people greatly, I feel that it is time to move forward in the path to continue my football career.”



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3 Arizona freshmen ranked among best in college baseball

arizona-wildcats-college-baseball-america-freshmen-rankings-2021-chase-davis-daniel-susac-tj-nichols OF Chase Davis | Photo by Jennifer Stewart/MLB Photos via Getty Images

At least on paper, the Arizona Wildcats’ incoming recruiting class appears to be the most talented in school history.

Already ranked among the best in the country by Baseball America, the UA’s crop of newcomers also includes some of college baseball’s highest-rated prospects.

Outfielder Chase Davis, catcher Daniel Susac and right-handed pitcher TJ Nichols are the crown jewels of a 2020 class that’s ranked fourth nationally, the highest in program history. Each figures to have a shot to play right away, while several other first-year players will be in the mix for playing time on a team that should be stacked with talent.



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How Arizona Wildcats fared in final week of Athletes Unlimited softball league

Athletes Unlimited Softball Final Weekend Photo by Quinn Harris/Getty Images

The first year of Athletes Unlimited softball is complete! Below is how the four former Arizona Wildcats in the league fared in the fifth and final week, as well as their stats for the whole season, some Week 5 highlights, and the final top 10 leaderboard.

Katiyana Mauga, IF

  • Week 5 Stats: 3-11, 3 HR, 3 RBI
  • Week 5 Points: 450
  • Total Points: 1530 (1,120 win points, 330 stat points, 80 MVP points)
  • Player ranking out of 56: 13 (same spot as last week)
  • Total Stats: 11-46, 6 HR, 13 RBI, 6 R, 4 BB, .239 AVG

Danielle O’Toole, LHP

  • Week 5 Stats: 12 IP, 16 H, 8 R, 7 ER, 4 BB, 6 K
  • Week 5 Points: 296
  • Total Points: 1,434 (740 win points, 494 stat points, 200 MVP points)
  • Player ranking out of 56: 16 (Same as last week)
  • Total Stats: 62.2 IP, 2.82 ERA, 66 H, 32 R, 25 ER, 10 HR, 13 BB, 42

Mandie Perez, OF

  • Week 5 Stats: 3-9, 3 RBI, BB
  • Week 5 Points: 180
  • Total Points: 900 (770 win points, 110 stat points, 20 MVP points)
  • Player ranking out of 56: 42 (same as last week)
  • Total Stats: 6-26, 1 HR, 5 RBI, 3B, 1 R, BB, .239 AVG

Taylor McQuillin, LHP

  • Week 5 Stats: 5.2 IP, 8 H, 9 R, 7 ER, 5 BB, 8 K
  • Week 5 Points: 116
  • Total Points: 784 (630 win points, -12 stat points)
  • Player Ranking out of 56: 51 (-3 from last week)
  • Total Stats: 20.1 IP, 8.61 ERA, 34 H, 31 R, 25 ER, 15 BB, 2 HBP, 19 K

Points graph

Week 5 highlights

Final top 10 leaderboard (points)

  1. Cat Osterman, P (1,990)
  2. Jessica Warren, IF (2,020)
  3. Victoria Hayward, OF (1,860)
  4. Erika Piancastelli, C (1,840)
  5. Gwen Svekis, C (1,710)
  6. Morgan Zerkle, OF (1,710)
  7. Haylie McCleney, OF (1,710)
  8. Tori Vidales, IF (1,690)
  9. Sahvanna Jaquish, C (1,680)
  10. Haylie Wagner, P (1,662)


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Monday, September 28, 2020

Arizona opting out of NIT Season Tip-Off, per report

arizona-wildcats-nit-2020-orlando-withdraw-coronavirus-goodman-st-johns-cincinnati-texas-tech Photo by Porter Binks/Getty Images

Looks like the Arizona Wildcats won’t be going to Disneyland after all.

Stadium’s Jeff Goodman is reporting that Arizona will no longer be playing in the NIT Season Tip-Off, which was set to be played over Thanksgiving weekend at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla. The event is one of several preseason tournaments that have been moved from their original locales (in this case, New York City) due to scheduling changes prompted by the coronavirus pandemic.

Arizona, Cincinnati, St. John’s and Texas Tech were the marquee teams scheduled to play in the NIT, but Goodman’s report also indicates St. John’s is withdrawing. The original tournament would have had the Wildcats playing two games at McKale Center before heading to Madison Square Garden in New York for two more contests.

The 2020-21 college basketball season is set to begin Nov. 25, moved back a few weeks by the NCAA. The Pac-12 last week voted to match this start date after previously canceling all competition through the rest of 2020.



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Arizona women’s basketball drops a spot in ESPN’s way-too-early preseason rankings

Arizona v Oregon Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Now that we have a date for the start of the college basketball season—it’s Nov. 25—ESPN revisited their women’s basketball way-too-early preseason rankings, and they moved the Arizona Wildcats down a spot from 7th to 8th. (N.C. State leapfrogged them.)

There is no explanation from the three folks who are responsible for compiling these rankings—Charlie Creme, Graham Hays and Mechelle Voepel—but Hays did have this to say about the Cats:

Arizona secured its place as a contender as soon as Aari McDonald (20.6 PPG) opted to return rather than enter the WNBA draft, and the Wildcats only strengthened their position over the spring and summer. Virginia Tech graduate transfer Trinity Baptiste, the reigning ACC Sixth Player of the Year, joins returnees Cate Reese (13.6 PPG) and Sam Thomas (9.5 PPG) to give the Wildcats one of the most experienced cores in a season of change in the Pac-12.

Arizona is the second-highest ranked team from the Pac-12, only behind Stanford, which checks in at No. 6.

UCLA (9), Oregon (10) and Oregon State (15) also cracked the Top 25.

Gonzaga (24) is there too. The Wildcats were originally scheduled to host the Bulldogs in December as part of the first game of a home-and-series, but it’s unclear if that matchup will still go on as planned due to the coronavirus crisis.

Arizona coach Adia Barnes said Friday that she is still interested in hosting the Zags, but it’s not really her call.

“I can’t even schedule non-conference yet because I don’t know if a mid-major school is going to have a capability of testing,” she said. “So there’s so much in the air.”



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Bears name Nick Foles starting QB after comeback performance vs. Falcons

nick-foles-chicago-bears-starter-mitch-trubisky-indianapolis-colts-atlanta-falcons-2020 Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

Direct an amazing comeback, get a new role.

Less than 24 hours after leading the Chicago Bears back from a 16-point deficit in the fourth quarter, former Arizona Wildcats star Nick Foles has been named the starting quarterback.

Foles, 31, threw three fourth-quarter touchdowns in relief of Mitch Trubisky on Sunday in the Bears’ 30-26 win at the Atlanta Falcons. It was his first action with Chicago since being traded from the Jacksonville Jaguars in the offseason and after losing out to Trubisky for the starting job in training camp.

Sunday marked the 11th time Foles had led a team back from a fourth-quarter deficit, with most of those being while he was with the Philadelphia Eagles. His next game will mark his 49th career start.

Foles played for Arizona from 2009-11, finishing as the school’s career passing leader. He was drafted by the Eagles in the third round in 2012, starting 24 games over the next three seasons before playing with the St. Louis Rams in 2015 and Kansas City Chiefs in 2016.

Back with Philly in 2017-18, he started the final five games of 2018 including the entire playoffs as the Eagles won the Super Bowl (and Foles was named Super Bowl MVP). He signed a free agent deal with Jacksonville in 2019 but suffered a broken collarbone in the season opener and appearing in only seven games before the Jags dealt him to Chicago in March for a fourth-round pick.



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How Arizona Wildcats fared in Week 3 of NFL season

Las Vegas Raiders v New England Patriots Photo by Kathryn Riley/Getty Images

The third week of the NFL season is in the books—or at least the games that include former Arizona Wildcats are.

Here’s a rundown of how things went down. Keep in mind that Will Parks (Eagles) and Dane Cruikshank (Titans) are on short-term injured reserve and could return to the field as soon as Week 4.

J.J. Taylor, New England Patriots

Taylor, whose new nickname is “Small Fry”, enjoyed his most productive game as an NFL player, amassing a team-high 11 carries for 43 yards in New England’s 36-20 win over the Raiders. The undrafted rookie also returned a punt for 11 yards.

Taylor did almost all of his damage in the first half, racking up 34 of his rushing yards in the first two quarters when he was serving as the Patriots‘ top running back. They leaned on Sony Michel and Rex Burkhead in the second half as they pulled away from the Raiders.

For the season, Taylor has 16 carries for 70 yards, a solid 4.4 yards per carry. It will be interesting to see how his role changes when pass-catching specialist James White returns to the backfield.

Nick Folk, New England Patriots

Folk made all three of his field-goal attempts, but they were only from 33, 23 and 32 yards—kicks all NFL kickers should make. He went 3 for 4 on extra points, missing one in the fourth quarter that could have made it a three-score game.

Nick Foles, Chicago Bears

It seemed like a matter of when, not if, Foles would take over as the Bears QB. Well, it happened Sunday and Foles Magic made a grand return.

The 31-year-old threw for three touchdowns off the bench as the Bears overcame a 16-point third-quarter deficit in a 30-26 win over the Falcons.

Foles tossed the game-winning TD to Anthony Miller with a little under two minutes left, an 18-yard pass off his back foot that hit Miller in stride deep over the middle.

Foles finished 16 of 29 for 188 yards, the three TDs and a pick.

“It’s not easy coming in cold like that, but if you can approach it with a mindset of ‘hey, one play at a time, you can’t get all those points back in one throw,’ that helps a lot,” Foles told reporters. “It was just something where on the sidelines, coach (Matt) Nagy just said, ‘Hey, you’re in. Get warm.’ And it was just simple as that.”

Nagy wouldn’t commit to Foles being the full-time starter, even though Mitchell Trubisky has struggled for most of the season.

“Honestly, we’re not there right now,” Nagy told reporters. “But I think that there’s something here that we’ve just got to discuss and just go through and talk through the situation and understand there’s these feelings that these kids are going through right now, and I think we just want to enjoy the win right now.”

You can see our full story and more highlights from Foles’ heroics here.

Rob Gronkowski, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

After only catching two passes in his first two games and labeling himself a “blocking tight end”, Gronk tripled his production Sunday by catching six of his seven targets for 48 yards, rekindling his connection with Tom Brady in a 28-10 win over the Denver Broncos.

All of Gronk’s catches went for short yardage, with his long only being 10 yards.

However, he could have had an easy touchdown if Brady would have been more accurate on this throw toward the corner of the end zone:

“Not every week you’re gonna get targets your way because you never know how the game’s gonna go, but today, it went that way, where I had a lot of targets, and it just felt good to get involved,” Gronk told reporters after the game. “I just knew that if I kept week in, week out just practicing hard, doing what we need to do, it was going to click. I’ve been in the league for a while, and there are some games where you just don’t get any looks, and then there are some games where you get a lot of looks. There’s some games where I’m just not clicking and everything’s just not clicking.

“I’m here just getting better week in, week out and fix the problems when there are problems and things aren’t going right. That’s the grind of the football season. I did definitely have the faith that I was going to get involved in the passing game, and it happened today. I truly believe that we can keep getting better.”

Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles, San Francisco 49ers

With injuries mounting for the Niners, Flannigan-Fowles made his NFL debut, logging two tackles in the 36-9 blowout win. DFF plays linebacker now after spending four seasons at safety at Arizona.



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Sunday, September 27, 2020

Andre Iguodala joins elite company with sixth straight trip to NBA Finals

Boston Celtics v Miami Heat - Game Six Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Andre Iguodala’s historic run continues.

The Miami Heat beat the Boston Celtics 125-113 on Sunday to win the Eastern Conference Finals in six games. It marks the sixth straight year Iguodala has reached the NBA Finals, just the 10th player to ever do that.

The other nine are Bill Russell (10), Sam Jones (9), Tom Heinsohn (8), Frank Ramsey (8), James Jones (8), LeBron James (8), K.C. Jones (7), Bob Cousy (7) and Tom Sanders (6).

What makes Iguodala’s streak so impressive is that he’s done it with multiple organizations. (He previously made five straight Finals with the Golden State Warriors.) LeBron and James Jones are the only other players to do that.

Iguodala, 36, was a big factor in clinching his sixth straight trip, posting 15 points, three rebounds, two steals and an assist in Miami’s Game 6 victory. That included a scorching 4 for 4 from 3-point land and a +20 plus-minus that ranked second on the Heat.

It was Iguodala’s highest scoring outing of the playoffs. He’s mostly a defensive specialist these days.

Three other Arizona Wildcats will join Iggy in the Finals, which will begin Wednesday, Sept. 30—Heat teammate Solomon Hill and Lakers assistants Miles Simon and Quinton Crawford.

Hill had a rebound in five minutes in Game 6.



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Arizona’s Josh Green, Nico Mannion and Zeke Nnaji among NBA Draft Combine participants

arizona-wildcats-basketball-leadership-freshmen-veterans-mannion-green-nnaji-2020-pac-12-miller Darren Yamashita-USA TODAY Sports

Former Arizona Wildcats Josh Green, Nico Mannion and Zeke Nnaji will participate in the NBA Draft Combine, according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania.

The trio will participate in a unique Combine format to be held in both team markets and virtually beginning September 28. The Combine process will run through November.

The NBA Draft was postponed from June to November 18 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Green, Mannion and Nnaji all declared for the NBA Draft after their freshman season came to an abrupt halt during the Pac-12 Tournament.

Most mock drafts have the three being selected in the late first to early second round.

Here’s more from NBA.com on the new Combine format:

NBA Draft Combine 2020 will give players the opportunity to participate in league and team interviews, both conducted via videoconference from Sept. 28 through Oct. 16. Players will also take part in an individual on-court program consisting of strength and agility testing, anthropometric measurements, shooting drills and a “Pro Day” video, all conducted in October at the NBA team facility nearest to a player’s home or interim residence. Medical testing and examinations will be performed by NBA-affiliated physicians in the same market.

As part of the event’s innovative format, the NBA will incorporate HomeCourt, a mobile basketball training application that uses advanced machine learning and computer vision, to provide analytics and record the shooting evaluation portion of NBA Combine 2020 and for players to create a unique “Pro Day” video. The video, used to showcase a player’s skills, may feature only the individual player (and either a coach or trainer) and can be up to 45 minutes long. HomeCourt is developed by NEX Team, Inc., an NBA strategic partner.

Additionally, the NBA has expanded its use of “Combine HQ,” an online tool developed by Fusion Sport in its software platform Smartabase. An interactive online platform, Combine HQ provides NBA teams with a one-stop shop for scouting information gathered during the on-court portions of this year’s Combine. Using Combine HQ, NBA teams and scouts will be able to compare participating players to their peers, past Combine participants and current NBA players, and view detailed shot charts and statistics.



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Nick Foles comes off bench to rally Bears past Falcons

nick-foles-chicago-bears-atlanta-falcons-mitch-trubisky-comeback-arizona-wildcats-nfl-2020 Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images

Foles Magic is back!

Former Arizona Wildcats star Nick Foles came off the bench to throw three touchdown passes in the fourth quarter on Sunday, giving the Chicago Bears a 30-26 road win over the Atlanta Falcons.

His 28-yard pass to Anthony Miller with 1:53 left proved to be the game winner, bringing the Bears back from down 16 points in the fourth quarter.

The 31-year-old, who was traded from Jacksonville in March for a fourth-round draft pick, was beat out by Mitch Trubisky for the starting job during the preseason. Trubisky led the Bears to wins over Detroit and the New York Giants but was benched after starting Sunday’s game 13 for 21 for 128 yards and a TD.

Foles, who entered midway through the third quarter, was intercepted on his first drive but rebounded to throw TD passes to Jimmy Graham, Allen Robinson and Miller in the final 6:20. He finished with 188 yards on 16-of-29 passing.

It didn’t hurt that the Falcons, who blew a 19-point lead at the Dallas Cowboys last week, missed a field goal and had three consecutive three-and-outs to aid Chicago’s comeback. Then, with the Bears in the lead, Atlanta QB Matt Ryan threw an interception with 1:06 left.

It was the 11th fourth-quarter comeback of in the nine-year NFL career of Foles, who played for Arizona from 2009-11 and finished as the school’s career passing leader. Some NFL experts seemed to forget about Foles’ penchant for rallies, however.



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Arizona women’s basketball facing several scheduling challenges amid coronavirus pandemic

NCAA Womens Basketball: Arizona at Oregon Soobum Im-USA TODAY Sports

The Arizona Wildcats are finally able to stand in the same room with their teammates and look each other in the eye. After months of wildly variant training, they are all able to take part in conditioning and development work as a group. They even have a date on the calendar when their season is supposed to begin.

What the Arizona women’s basketball team doesn’t know is who they will be playing once the date turns to Nov. 25.

“I’m just so excited that we’re actually going to be able to play, we have a date,” Arizona head coach Adia Barnes said.

It was supposed to be a year with a vastly improved non-conference schedule. Going into her fifth year as the leader of her alma mater, Barnes had an experienced, talented team and she had scheduled accordingly. A return game from Texas was first, the second leg in a home-and-home arrangement that started last year in Austin.

Later would come a game against Gonzaga. While the Zags aren’t on the same level as their men’s team, the Gonzaga women almost knocked off Stanford in Palo Alto last season, and ended the season ranked one place behind Arizona at No. 13 in the AP poll. Tournament play offered the potential of playing teams like Arkansas, coached by Barnes’ former mentor Mike Neighbors.

Now, that’s all up in the air, exciting games replaced by questions about whether there will even be a full slate of non-conference games.

The first question that needs to be answered is how the Pac-12 plans to structure conference play. On the women’s side, teams are allowed to play 23 games plus one multi-team event or 25 games without a multi-team event. How many of those games will be played against conference foes?

One proposal is to play 22 conference games. That would give the league a true round-robin, with every team facing every other team home and away. It would also consume almost the entire allowance of games for the women.

A team that opted to play in a tournament would play 22 of its remaining 23 games within the conference. A team that didn’t play in a tournament would have three opportunities to schedule non-conference games.

The other option is to reproduce the men’s schedule—the same number of games and the same home/away dates. This would mean playing 20 games within the conference season. The major advantage to this is that the two teams could travel together.

For Arizona, traveling with the men would make all the difference in convenience and safety. The women very rarely get chartered flights. The men’s team charters on every road trip.

The ability to charter means less potential exposure to COVID-19 while standing in airport security lines, waiting at terminals and during flight. If the teams travel together, the Arizona women get the relative safety of chartered flights as well.

On the negative side, Barnes said that this would likely mean fewer women’s games being televised. She said that in Arizona’s case, the financial reality of the pandemic meant that having the men on TV was advantageous for both programs.

Even after the questions surrounding conference games are settled, scheduling non-conference games could hinge on the testing protocols of potential opponents. Barnes expected new NCAA protocols for in-season testing to be released on Sept. 26, but even those protocols won’t answer all of the questions.

“We don’t know if the teams we’re going to play fit that protocol,” she said. “I can’t even schedule yet non-conference, because I don’t know if a mid-major school is going to have a capability of testing. So there’s so much in the air.”

Arizona was very aggressive with its testing protocols even before the Pac-12 set up the partnership with Quidel. Will other schools be as aggressive? How much variance between the Pac-12 protocols and opponents’ protocols are acceptable?

“If they don’t have our same protocol, we can’t play,” Barnes said. “And so for me, from a personal standpoint, for my team, I’m going to try to do as many home games as I can, but then we have a disadvantage on the West Coast. We don’t have like 10 teams within two hours.”

The schedule will definitely see some changes. Last season, Arizona played 11 non-conference games plus a closed scrimmage and an exhibition. The closed scrimmages and exhibitions are already off the table based on the guidelines issued by the NCAA.

The number of non-conference games will depend on the conference schedule adopted by the Pac-12. If the women add two games to mirror the men’s schedule, they will be able to add three to five non-conference games depending on whether they play in an in-season tournament. That will eliminate at least half of the regular non-conference slate.

With the Nov. 25 start date, the question of availability is also important. Will Texas be able to accommodate all the changes?

“I’m still very interested in Gonzaga,” Barnes said. “I’m still very interested in Texas. But now I don’t know our game was in November. So I don’t know if Texas is going to come here, or I don’t know if Arkansas is going to travel to California. But I’m still interested in some of those things. But I’m not going to take our team to a tournament that doesn’t have a bubble-like thing and risk getting sick.”

Putting the puzzle together will require considering these additional limitations while also thinking about the legal details of some of the games that previously scheduled.

“There’s also contracts we’ve signed,” Barnes said. “We paid from anywhere (from) $25,000 to $30,000 for guarantee games... and we just don’t know how to prepare for that as a coach. And we don’t know how many non-conference games yet, and we don’t know who’s gonna fit the protocol. So it’s kind of like I can’t even do anything until I know those things next week.”

Barnes has additional challenges after giving birth to her second child on Sept. 15, but she’s looking at the positive sides of the job she “signed up for.”

“The program still goes on,” she said. “I can’t say ‘Oh, look, wait a month. Let me do scheduling in a month.’ It doesn’t work like that. So I think that’s the more challenging part. But these are to me, in my opinion, they’re good problems to have if I have to decide on the non-conference that we’re playing. So I’m more happy about that, and I’ll figure out how to juggle it.”



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Arizona grads Miles Simon, Quinton Crawford reach NBA Finals with Lakers

Los Angeles Lakers v Houston Rockets - Game Four Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images

Miles Simon is one step closer to another championship.

The Los Angeles Lakers finished off the Denver Nuggets on Saturday to advance to the 2020 NBA Finals. Simon, the Final Four’s Most Outstanding Player in Arizona’s 1997 national championship run, is in his third year as an assistant coach with the Lakers, mostly serving in a player development role.

He is the only coach left over from the Luke Walton era. First-year head coach Frank Vogel retained Simon when the Lakers fired Walton after the 2018-19 season.

Los Angeles’ staff also features former Arizona walk-on Quinton Crawford, who was hired as an assistant in July after spending a season the Charlotte Hornets‘ head video coordinator. Before that, he had the same role with the Orlando Magic when Vogel was in charge there.

Crawford graduated from Arizona in 2013 with a general studies degree. He was part of UA basketball for two seasons (2013-15), appearing in nine games. The Wildcats went 50-20 over his two years and made it to the Sweet Sixteen in 2013.

After graduating from Arizona, Crawford spent two seasons as a graduate manager at Pepperdine, where he earned a master’s degree in educational psychology. The Old Bridge, New Jersey native was then an assistant video coordinator for the Sacramento Kings for a season before joining the Magic.

The UA could have two more representatives in the NBA Finals if Andre Iguodala, Solomon Hill and the Heat can stave off the Celtics. They hold a 3-2 lead heading into Game 6 on Sunday.



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Saturday, September 26, 2020

Tracking Arizona transfers: Brenden’s Texas outlasts Colin’s Texas Tech in wild Schooler Bowl

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Arizona Wildcats fans got some great news earlier this week when the Pac-12 announced it was bringing back football this fall. That won’t happen until November, however, so in the interim we have to settle for living vicariously through the exploits of former UA guys currently playing elsewhere.

Ground zero for that on Saturday was Lubbock, Texas, where Texas Tech hosted Texas in what was unofficially dubbed the Schooler Bowl. And what a game it was.

It took overtime, as well as a 15-point comeback in the 2:49 of regulation, but in the end No. 8 Texas came away with a 63-56 win to give Brenden Schooler a win over little brother Colin Schooler.

Brenden, a wide receiver who never played for the UA after coming over from Oregon as a graduate transfer during the offseason, led the Longhorns with seven catches for 58 yards and a 3-yard touchdown pass. In two games with Texas he has two TD receptions.

Colin, a linebacker who started every game for Arizona from 2017-19, had seven tackles in his Texas Tech debut. He was unavailable for the Red Raiders’ first game on Sept. 12.

The Texas-Texas Tech game included a third player with Tucson ties in Texas freshman running back Bijan Robinson, who played just up the road from the UA at Salpointe Catholic High School. Robinson had four carries for 12 yards, an 11-yard reception and an incredibly scary moment after trying to hurdle a defender

Robinson somehow popped right up after that play.

Here’s how some other former UA players now at other Division I schools did Saturday:

LB Tony Fields II (West Virginia)

Fields earned his first start in the Mountaineers’ 27-13 loss at Oklahoma State to begin Big 12 play, and as he did in the Mountaineers’ season opener against Eastern Kentucky two weeks ago led the team in tackles with nine. The senior also picked off a pass late in the third quarter, his third career interception after recording two during his three seasons at Arizona.

In two games with West Virginia Fields has 19 tackles, giving him 306 for his career.

The other ex-Wildcat with the Mountaineers, safety Scottie Young Jr., is not eligible this season after transferring.

WR Devaughn Cooper (UTEP)

Technically not a transfer—he was dismissed from the program in May 2019—Cooper is still showing elsewhere what he could have done for the Wildcats had he stuck around. The 5-foot-11 senior had two catches for 44 yards to help UTEP to a 31-6 win at Louisiana-Monroe.

Big deal, right? Actually, it is. UTEP, which went 2-24 the previous three seasons, is 3-1 for the first time since 2010 and won a non-conference road game for the first time in five years. The Miners’ other two wins are against FCS schools, but still.



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Arizona target, Tucson native D’Marco Dunn sets commitment date

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A 2021 prospect who grew up in the Tucson area is set to pick his college next week, and the Arizona Wildcats are on his short list.

D’Marco Dunn, a 4-star shooting guard who began his high school career in nearby Marana but now plays for Westover High School in Fayetteville, N.C., will choose between Arizona, Clemson, Georgia, Louisville, North Carolina, Texas and Vanderbilt on Wednesday.

The 6-foot-4 Dunn is ranked by 247Sports as the No. 79 player in the 2021 class, as well as the 16th-best shooting guard and No. 2 prospect from North Carolina.

Dunn spoke highly of Arizona in August, saying “that’s my hometown school, and Coach (Sean) Miller and them, they just want the hometown kid back and think I’d do really well representing.”

However, Vanderbilt and North Carolina are the industry favorites for Dunn, with the Tar Heels garnering five of the six Crystal Ball and FutureCast predictions.

As a junior, Dunn averaged 20.4 points, 7.2 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 2.7 steals per game on 54 percent shooting, including 45 percent from 3-point range. He compares himself to Damian Lillard, while ESPN recruiting expert Paul Biancardi uses ex-Kentucky star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander as a comparison.

Check out Dunn’s highlights below.

Arizona currently has one commitment in the 2021 recruiting class in 4-star California combo guard K.J. Simpson. It has recently missed on several top targets, including 5-star centers Paolo Banchero and (Kentucky) Nathan Bittle (Oregon) and 4-star power forward Ben Gregg (Gonzaga).



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Arizona’s Grant Gunnell is highest-graded returning QB in Pac-12, per PFF

Arizona v USC Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images

If there’s one positive thing you can say about Arizona football, it’s that it’s in good hands at quarterback.

The analysts over at Pro Football Focus have graded sophomore Grant Gunnell as the top returning QB in the Pac-12, slightly above USC’s Kedon Slovis and Cal’s Chase Garbers.

Gunnell split time with Khalil Tate as a true freshman in 2019 and put up impressive numbers, completing 66 percent of his passes for 1,239 yards, nine touchdowns and just one interception.

However, PFF is unique in that it analyzes the nuances of every throw—timing, decision-making, accuracy, the quality of coverage, etc.—rather than just counting stats or a basic eye test to evaluate a player, and Gunnell checks out in that department as well.

A previous PFF article ranked Gunnell as the 13th-best QB in the country and had this to say about him:

“Gunnell had just three starts and a total of 185 dropbacks in his true freshman campaign last year yet still performed beyond expectations right out of the gate. His accuracy is what truly stood out, and it is right behind Slovis for best in the country. Gunnell threw an accurate pass on 65.9% of his throws beyond the line of scrimmage, which would have ranked third in college football had he qualified for a rank. Like (Michael) Penix, Gunnell is a breakout waiting to happen.”

The Wildcats have a revamped defense and shaky special teams, but if Gunnell is as good as advertised, they have a chance to be competitive in every game.



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Roundtable: How well has the Pac-12 handled the coronavirus crisis?

roundtable-pac12-football-basketball-larry-scott-coronavirus-management-leadership-2020 Photo by Leon Bennett/Getty Images

The Pac-12 announced Thursday it was bringing back football in 2020, playing a 7-game schedule beginning Nov. 6, while also giving the green light for men’s and women’s basketball to begin Nov. 25 in alignment with the NCAA’s new start date.

When the Arizona plays that first football game in November it will mark nearly eight months since any school in the league played any sport. Stopping competition in March at the outset of the coronavirus pandemic was out of the Pac-12’s control, but every action (or inaction) has been of their own doing. And the reviews have been mixed.

Our staff tackled this topic, weighing in on how they though the Pac-12 and commissioner Larry Scott have handled things:

Brian J. Pedersen

Once a follower, always a follower.

That’s basically how the Pac-12 has been during the vast majority of the coronavirus pandemic, taking notable steps in one direction or other only after others—usually the Big Ten—did so first. No bold decisions, no trailblazing, just a lot of following in others’ footsteps.

Other than canceling everything through the rest of 2020, rather than just the fall, though even that wasn’t innovative since the Ivy League had already done so. And it did more harm than good, since there hadn’t been any discussion nationally about basketball’s start being moved out of November, so it wasn’t until today that Pac-12 hoops teams could even think about putting together their schedules.

While I personally thought not playing this fall, at the time, was the right call, and the decision to come back feels more like the result of peer pressure—everyone else is doing it!—as well as a money grab, neither seems like it was done by independent choice. The Pac-12’s moves, outside of deal with Quidel Corporation for rapid antigen tests and testing equipment, have all been of the follow-the-leader variety.

Adam Green

Assuming you read my column on this very topic (and if you didn’t, please do), you’ll know that I’m somewhat conflicted on this question and understand that we may not be able to answer it until the abbreviated season is finished.

On one hand, you should not fault the conference for being cautious. We’re in the midst of a pandemic and while we all want to see Arizona back playing, the safety of the players, coaches and staff that makes the games happen is paramount.

On the other hand, other conferences being able to play right now would give the impression that the Pac-12 may have gone a bit overboard.

The biggest mistake made by the conference may have been the announcement of postponing everything until at least January 1, 2021, because it was an arbitrary date that left no room for adapting to an ever-changing climate. That decision, foolish as it was, led to some teams (including Arizona) seeing talented players leave because they had no interest in waiting for a winter or spring season.

The good news is if even with all that, if the games can happen and COVID-19 stays away then it will be tough to truly criticize the Pac-12’s approach.

As for commissioner Larry Scott, however, that’s an entirely different matter.

Kim Doss

Frankly, I think the CEO Group has been absolutely absurd with its to-and-fro decision making. People can say whatever they want about Larry Scott, but the fact is that the presidents and chancellors made most of these decisions, and they weren’t very well thought out. They also showed very little courage.

If the conference CEOs really cared about the “health and welfare” of their student-athletes and the communities in which their schools operate, I think the entire fall semester would have been handled very differently. From Arizona bringing back off-campus students without testing them, forcing our local resources to be spent on doing that job, to Colorado doing such a poor job that Boulder County had to shut down all gatherings of college-aged people, this is a failure of those at the top of the decision-making pyramid at the 12 universities.

I don’t think this is about a change in testing, either. I think the about-face on fall football was made because the Big Ten didn’t have the guts to stick with the stand they took, and the Pac-12 followed behind like a lost puppy. It’s time for the league to get rid of this idea that whatever the Big Ten does, the Pac-12 must do, as well. If it was right to postpone to protect the health and welfare of the student-athletes before the Big Ten caved, it was still right to do after.

Why is it safe to play football, but not safe to play soccer? The answer is money. That’s why thousands of students were brought back to college towns around the country, and that’s why we will have football in 2020 but not soccer or volleyball.

As for the decision about basketball, why the league postponed that until after January is still unclear. There was no reason to make that decision so quickly. It just didn’t need to be announced in early August. Will there be a huge difference in COVID-19 cases over the five weeks between Nov. 25 and Jan. 1? I tend to doubt it. But if the CEOs really believed it was right, I don’t think things have changed. Their indecision is troubling.

The lack of direction and leadership by the people who lead our universities is very upsetting. I think all of the high-minded talk about student-athlete welfare was hollow. It’s hard to think anything else when there’s so little logic to the premature decisions and quick about-faces that have been applied to some sports, but not others.

Brandon Combs

Well, Larry Scott is awful. That’s a given. To me, though, I think they handled it like crap.

What was the point of releasing a schedule, touting it’s flexibility and whatnot, only to preemptively cancel the fall season a week later? The answer is there wasn’t a point.

Like Brian mentioned above, the Pac has taken a “let’s see what everyone else is doing”-type of approach to things under Larry Scott’s “leadership.” And the pandemic has been no exception. Thankfully, mercifully, it appears Larry’s days are numbered as commish.

I find it unacceptable that the leaders had created a schedule, and a good one at that, only to fall in-step with the B1G, which is run by another incompetent commissioner. Then, when the B1G sat back and said “I, uh, think we were a bit too hasty,” the Pac did the same thing.

Then you have the fiasco between the governments of California and Oregon, and the lack of communication with the conference and county governments. An absolute “dee-duh-dee” moment. Why wasn’t that communication happening the whole time? One guess....that’s right! He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named. At this point, I feel like Larry Scott has become Voldemort to Pac-12 fans and writers everywhere. Or maybe even Emperor Palpatine, though he was extremely competent. Voldemort couldn’t even take over a high school with an army of evil wizards/witches, trolls, giant spiders, and the most powerful wand ever created. Anyway....

Besides voting to actually have fall sports seasons, or some seasons rather, I feel the only other thing that the Pac-12 “leaders” got right was the rapid testing deal with the Quidel Corporation.

Ronnie Stoffle

Oh man. What a time to be alive, huh? The conference’s “leader”, Larry Scott, has been in a very bad spot from day one with this because of the financial pressure that not playing football creates for 11 of the 12 universities in the conference.

I say 11 of 12 because Stanford will continue to thrive without football due to their endowment which is approximately the size of Iceland’s GDP. For perspective of how that compares to other’s in the conference, the Cardinal have an endowment (~$28B) almost 5x that of the next closest, USC (~$6B). But I digress...

I understand the financial piece to this equation and this is the same position our country’s government has taken during the pandemic. It basically translates to “health and safety is important but not as important as the economy.”

There’s no debating that Larry Scott looks like a fool right now. Frankly, this is par for the course of his tenure, though. Adam Green wrote an excellent article this week about this very topic and referenced plenty of examples of head-scratching decisions from Scott over the years.

However, it is hard to blame him for allowing the season to start. For one, with the rest of the Power-Five schools in action, the Pac-12 really can’t be the only P5 conference sitting out. It remains to be seen what type of product this will lead to come early November but it might be safe to assume it’ll be mediocre at best.

Should Scott care about a lousy deliverable? At this point, probably not because it’s clearly just a cash grab in an effort to stop the bleeding from money lost to no NCAA Tournament and five less football games.

Scott’s message from day one should have been, “we will not start the season in late September but we will re-evaluate the situation at that time for a possible start in late October or early November.” This would have allowed teams to continue to prepare for the possibility of a return to the field, a la the Big 10.

In answer to the question, the Pac-12 has absolutely mishandled the conoravirus crisis. But no one should be surprised because this is a Larry-Scott-ran organization.



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