Arizona Basketball

Rivalry between Arizona, UCLA West coast’s version of Duke, North Carolina, a dead heat

McKale Center always has a different feel when UCLA comes to town.

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When the Arizona Wildcats hired Lute Olson as coach in 1983, they literally have gone eye-to-eye with the UCLA Bruins.

So much so that since Arizona and ASU joined the league and made it the Pac-10 in 1978-79, the Wildcats have a 460-217 record in conference games. UCLA’s mark in that same span? The Bruins are almost identical at 461-217.

With the competition so very close, Arizona and UCLA comprise one of the best rivalries in college basketball.

In the 1960s and most of the 1970s, no program could dream to challenge the UCLA dominance that John Wooden achieved in Westwood, Calif. The Bruins won 10 national titles and advanced to 10 consecutive Final Fours under Wooden.

Three years after Wooden retired in 1975, Arizona and ASU joined the conference. Five years after that, in 1983, Arizona’s version of Wooden, the Hall of Famer Olson, changed the landscape of West Coast basketball.

The Wildcats are by no means the equal of UCLA in the history of the sport, but from 1983 on, Arizona does not take a backseat to the Bruins. Since Olson’s hire in 1983-84, Arizona holds a close lead of 37-34 in their series leading up to Friday night’s game at McKale Center between the rivals.

“The Arizona-UCLA game is the signature game of college basketball in the western United States,” UCLA legend Bill Walton, whose son Luke attended Arizona, said a few years ago while analyzing the game between the Wildcats and Bruins.

Nothing tops the rivalry between Arizona and UCLA in college basketball since the mid-1980s except Duke-North Carolina and Louisville-Kentucky.

The reasons include the prolific amount of NBA players produced by the programs, the dramatic moments that impacted the conference race and championships, their nine Final Four appearances and the two national titles won by the Bruins and Wildcats.

Other factors for why the Arizona-UCLA rivalry is by far the best the West has to offer: The recruiting wars, the teams winning 75 percent of the conference titles in the last 28 years and the way the creators of their dominance — Wooden and Olson — are viewed as royalty in college basketball.

The rivalry has a fresh look with young coaches Steve Alford, 51, of UCLA and Sean Miller, 48, of Arizona commanding their respective programs. UCLA is the only program that has a winning record against Miller, who is 8-9 against the Bruins. One of the losses was in the 2008 Elite Eight while with Xavier.

Miller is 3-2 against Alford, whose son Bryce made a last-second three-pointer at Pauley Pavilion last month to beat Arizona. Miller heated up the rivalry earlier this season making an indirect reference to struggling attendance at UCLA. Steve Alford responded by indirectly associating Miller with the term “micro-manager”.

Since Arizona went to its first Final Four in 1987-88 under Olson, the Wildcats and UCLA have achieved unmatched success in the NCAA tournament compared to their West Coast counterparts.

The lone exception is UNLV, which won the NCAA title in 1991 while a member of the Big West.

The Bruins and Wildcats are the only teams west of the Mississippi to win an NCAA title since 1995, when the Bruins captured the title under Jim Harrick. That team included Cameron Dollar, Toby Bailey, Charles and Ed O’Bannon, J.R. Henderson and Kris Johnson.

Arizona won its only title in 1997 with Mike Bibby, Miles Simon and Michael Dickerson ruling the perimeter.

Stanford could have joined Arizona and UCLA in 1998 but lost to Kentucky in the national title game.

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Arizona came close to another title in 2001 but lost to Duke in the championship game. UCLA had three appearances in the Final Four from 2006-08 but came up empty.

Arizona and UCLA are among the top five programs since 1988 who have the most NBA draft picks.

The Wildcats’ 40 selections, including 21 first-round choices. Thirteen of Arizona’s last 16 NBA draft picks have been first-rounders.

UCLA has 111 NBA draft selections in its history with 35 of them selected in the first round.

Including Darrick Martin’s buzzer-beater that ended Arizona’s 71-game winning streak at McKale Center in 1992 and the “He Touched the Ball” episode in 2013, the Bruins and Wildcats have shared in some monumental games.

Among them the memorable turn of events:

— Arizona clinched its first Pac-10 title in the 1985-86 season with Elliott, Kerr and Co., beating UCLA at Pauley Pavilion. A month earlier in Tucson, Arizona took command in the conference race by routing UCLA 85-60 as Wildcat nemesis Reggie Miller fouled out with more than seven minutes remaining.

— Elliott broke Lew Alcindor’s conference scoring record in 1989 against UCLA at McKale Center and finished with 2,555 career points.

— Arizona’s Chris Mills made a last-second jumper in 1991 at Pauley Pavilion to send the game into overtime and the Wildcats prevailed 105-94. The Wildcats won the Pac-10 title that season with a 14-4 record.

— In the game following that classic, Martin and UCLA upset Arizona 89-87, ending the Wildcats’ 71-game winning streak at McKale Center. Martin’s game-winning off-balance shot with three seconds left over Damon Stoudamire sent the UCLA bench into a frenzy in front of the stunned crowd.

— In the season Arizona won its national championship (1996-97), UCLA swept the season series with an overtime win at Pauley Pavilion and a two-point escape at McKale Center. The Bruins, who featured Charles O’Bannon, Henderson and Bailey, won the Pac-10 regular season by three games with a 15-3 record.

— Arizona went through a 13-4 stretch against the Bruins, culminating in 2005 with another sweep of UCLA that led to another regular-season Pac-10 title for Arizona. In that season, Salim Stoudamire drilled a long three-pointer late in the game to beat the Bruins at McKale Center.

— In 2003, UCLA (at 9-19) upset the top-ranked Wildcats 96-89 in overtime in a quarterfinal game of the Pac-10 tournament.

— UCLA turned the tide against Arizona in the series during the Wildcats’ lean years from 2006-09, with Olson retiring and two interim staffs taking over. UCLA won eight consecutive games against Arizona and advanced to three Final Fours in that stretch under Ben Howland.

— Miller, hired in 2009-10 by Arizona, won his first two meetings with UCLA but has since gone 6-8, including a 3-5 record in the last eight games. The final game in 2013 in the Pac-12 tournament was highlighted by the “He Touched the Ball” episode. Miller argued with a referee, who called a double-dribble violation against Arizona’s Mark Lyons, that UCLA’s Jordan Adams touched the ball in the process. Miller was assessed a technical foul and the Bruins prevailed 66-64. Miller was later fined $25,000 by the Pac-12 for allegedly confronting a ref and throwing a tirade in front of a conference staff member in a corridor of the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas. A couple of weeks later, it was revealed by CBSSports.com that former Pac-12 director of officiating Ed Rush allegedly placed a bounty on Miller in the Pac-12 tournament, forcing the resignation of Rush.

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Arizona and UCLA have unparalleled success in the Pac-12 over the last 30 years and that has translated into national honors no other conference team can match.

Not since 1959, when California won the NCAA title under Pete Newell, has the Pac-12 produced a national champion other than Arizona and UCLA.

UCLA has 11 titles, 10 of them under Wooden from 1964-75, and the other was achieved under Harrick in 1995. Arizona won its NCAA championship in 1997 with Olson as coach.

The Bruins and Wildcats have combined to share at least 23 of the last 30 regular-season titles in the Pac-12, including nine of the last 13.

Since the Pac-10 formed in 1978-79, UCLA and Arizona have the most conference victories by far. As mentioned before, UCLA is 461-217 in that span with 11 championships. Arizona is 460-217 with 14 titles.

Stanford (362-314) is the only other conference team with a winning record since Arizona and ASU joined in 1978. Colorado has a winning record of 44-39 since it joined in 2011-12.

UCLA and Arizona have combined for at least a share of 24 titles while Oregon State (five), Stanford (four), Washington (three), Cal (one), USC (one) and Oregon (one) have combined for 15.

Arizona and UCLA are still among the best in the conference after the league expanded to 12 teams with Utah and Colorado in 2011. In the last three seasons, Arizona has the most league victories with 62, followed by Oregon with 57 and UCLA with 51.

Miller admired the development of the Arizona-UCLA rivalry as a player at Pitt in the late 1980s.

“Everybody in this country respects the great teams, players, coaches,” Miller was quoted as saying by TucsonCitizen.com. “When you would watch that game, whether it would be in McKale or Pauley Pavilion, you knew you were getting high quality basketball.”

ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com publisher, writer and editor Javier Morales is a former Arizona Press Club award winner. He is a former Arizona Daily Star beat reporter for the Arizona basketball team, including when the Wildcats won the 1996-97 NCAA title. He has also written articles for CollegeAD.com, Bleacher Report, Lindy’s Sports, TucsonCitizen.com, The Arizona Republic, Sporting News and Baseball America, among many other publications. He has also authored the book “The Highest Form of Living”, which is available at Amazon.

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