September 29, 2024

Caleb Love has 17 first-half points but Arizona Wildcats trail WSU 34-33 at halftime

Caleb Love #CalebLove

On an atmospheric stage at McKale Center on which Arizona could have taken a commanding lead in the Pac-12 race, the Wildcats instead handed over first place to the team that was picked to finish 10th.

Surging Washington State dealt Arizona its first loss at McKale Center this season, 77-74, after Cougar wing Jaylen Wells made a go-ahead four-point play with 24 seconds left and UA’s Caleb Love was forced to throw up an errant 45-footer as time expired.

Wells and Love each led their respective teams in scoring with 27 points.

The loss dropped Arizona to 20-6 overall and 11-4, putting the Wildcats a half-game behind the Cougars (21-6 and 12-4). While the teams are tied in the loss column, WSU now owns the tiebreaker between them because the Cougars also beat Arizona on Jan. 13 in Pullman, and therefore has the inside track to the Pac-12 Touranment’s No. 1 seed.

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“Obviously we had opportunities but they’ve been really good in close games all year,” UA coach Tommy Lloyd said. “They’re a team on a roll right now and they were able to find a way. They made a bunch of clutch, big-time plays down the stretch.”

The biggest was a fadeaway 3-pointer that Wells hit from the left corner while he picked up a foul from UA’s Keshad Johnson. WSU guard Myles Rice had missed a 3 earlier on the Cougars’ possession, but Andrej Jakimovski grabbed the rebound and found Wells in the corner, where he was surrounded by defenders, courtside fans and photographers alike.

“We hung around just enough, which you want to do on the road,” WSU coach Kyle Smith said.

Before Wells’ corner shot “they really defended us well. We were able to come up with that offensive rebound and Andrej had great awareness. Actually, I think the officials passed on a reach on the floor – thank you – and he found Jaylen, who got clipped and he made the shot.

“Kind of what you have to do to win down here. We were very fortunate.”

Wells also hit two final free throws with 2.7 seconds left to all before Love’s desperation heave was unsuccessful. While the game was played almost entirely within two possessions, with WSU leading by no more than seven points and UA by no more than four, the Cougars actually had an easier time of it at McKale Center last season when they won 74-61.

Still, it was the first time the Cougars had swept the season series against UA since 2009-10, former UA coach Sean Miller’s first season with the Wildcats.

After Arizona’s final possession failed, the Cougars’ bench stormed the floor while the stunned, near-capacity crowd filed quietly out of McKale Center after having stood on its feet for much of the game., waving red glo-sticks placed on seats beforehand. A piece of the glo-stick even found its way on to the court as Wells went to shoot his final free throws, resulting in a public address warning that further objects on the court could result in a technical foul – an announcement that drew boos.

Several WSU players and coaches, many with Arizona-based family and friends on hand, stuck around for an hour after the game to celebrate while assistant coach Jeremy Harden was lifted up by players after it was revealed he had just successfully proposed to his girlfriend after the Cougars’ win.

It was Arizona’s first loss at McKale Center all season and only the third under third-year coach Tommy Lloyd.

It was a party for Washington State, which was only one of two schools left after the Pac-12’s implosion last summer.

“Incredible win for our program,” WSU coach Kyle Smith said. “Our guys just gutted it out. They’re really hard to defend and they opened up the second half with some transition.”

Trailing 34-33 at halftime, Arizona began the second half looking like it was just starting to do its thing. The Wildcats used defense to set up two alley-oop dunks by Johnson to take a 43-39 lead three minutes into the second half.

Ballo first blocked a shot from Isaac Jones, leading to an alley-oop pass from Love to Johnson for a dunk that tied it at 38. Later, Johnson set up his own dunk, blocking Jones, which led to another alley-oop pass from Love that Johnson slammed in as he raced to the right of the rim.

But WSU went on a 10-1 run to take a 57-51 lead with nine minutes left and, after a 3-pointer from Love later brought the Wildcats within two points, the Cougars showed the kind of poise on both ends of the court that helped them ultimately win the game.

Johnson raced from behind WSU guard Myles Rice to block his fast-break layup but, while Johnson’s momentum carried him out of bounds, WSU forward Kymany Houinsou picked up the ball and slammed it.

That gave WSU a 60-55 lead before UA center Oumar Ballo had a layup and two free throws, helping UA tie the game at 60 with 6:30 to go. The game was played almost entirely within one possession from there, and the score was tied at 71 heading into the final minute after the Wildcats’ defense forced Wells to throw up an errant 3-pointer.

Ballo pulled down the rebound, leading to a driving layup from Love, who drew a foul and converted the and-one free throw to give UA a 74-71 lead. Then the Wildcats nearly shut down the Cougars on the other end, with guard Myles Rice missing a 3-pointer before Jakimovski pulled down the rebound to assist on Wells’ game-winning play.

The Cougars wound up shooting just 41.9% but had only nine turnovers and were outrebounded by only one. Arizona shot 44.8% but was just 5 of 18 from 3-point range and made just 17 of 27 free throws.

In the first half, Love scored 17 points but Arizona trailed WSU 34-33 at halftime. The game was competitive and tense from the beginning, with the Cougars taking an early 9-8 lead at the first media timeout after UA committed three turnovers in the first four minutes.

WSU led most of the first half but never by more than seven points. Love had a chance to give Arizona the lead heading into halftime but his final 3-point attempt with two seconds left bounced off the rim.

That turned out to somewhat foreshadow the end of the second half, a difficult loss that the Wildcats had all of 36 hours to shake off before hosting Washington on Saturday at noon.

“We’re a good team. I believe in these guys,” Lloyd said. “We just lost to another good team that’s on a roll right now. I don’t think it’s anything more than that, and we have an obligation to try to come out and play really well on Saturday. That’s our job. No one’s gonna feel sorry for us. I certainly don’t.”

Photos: Arizona takes on Washington State in at top 25 match-up, Pac-12 basketball

Arizona forward Keshad Johnson (16) looks around after being charged with a foul on Washington State forward Jaylen Wells (0) three point basket in final seconds of the second half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024. The free throw put the Cougars up 75-74 en route to a 77-74 road win.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Washington State guard Jabe Mullins (3), left, guard Kymany Houinsou (31) and guard Isaiah Watts (12) celebrate for the cameras after upsetting Arizona 77-74 in their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard KJ Lewis (5) gets hammered by Washington State center Rueben Chinyelu (20) trying to score on a fast break in the second half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard Caleb Love (2) runs into the defense of Washington State guard Myles Rice (2) trying to get into the lane in the final minutes of the second half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard Kylan Boswell (4) gets handled trying to get around Washington State guard Myles Rice (2) in the second half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard Caleb Love (2) tries to get past Washington State forward Oscar Cluff (45) late in the second half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Washington State guard Kymany Houinsou (31), left, celebrates with guard Parker Gerrits (10) after the clock expired on giving them a 77-74 road win over #4 Arizona at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard KJ Lewis (5) and guard Pelle Larsson (3) dive in to tie up the ball with Washington State guard Myles Rice (2) near mid-court in the first half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard Caleb Love (2) gives a yell from the floor after drawing a foul and earning an and-one opportunity in the first half of the Wildcats’ matchup with Washington State on Thursday, Feb. 25, 2024, at McKale Center in Tucson.

Kelly Presnell, Arizona Daily Star

Washington State center Rueben Chinyelu (20) throws up a roadblock on Arizona center Oumar Ballo (11) under the basket in the first half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard Jaden Bradley (0) drives to the basket on Washington State forward Oscar Cluff (45) in the first half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

Arizona guard KJ Lewis (5) nearly forces a steal, pressuring Washington State forward Isaac Jones (13) in the first half of their Pac 12 game at McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz., February 22, 2024.

Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star

VIDEO: Arizona men’s basketball coach Tommy Lloyd speaks to assembled media after the Wildcats defeated rival ASU 105-60 Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024, at McKale Center in Tucson. (Courtesy Arizona Athletics)

Contact sports reporter Bruce Pascoe at bpascoe@tucson.com. On X(Twitter): @brucepascoe

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