Jan. 13, 2000
Box Score
By BOB BAUM
AP Sports Writer
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP and staff sources) - Much to the shock of coach Lute Olson, No. 2 Arizona came out for Thursday night's game against Washington State wearing white
headbands.
After his team struggled to an 80-75 victory, Olson promised the headbands
would never be seen again.
"The headbands compressed the brains," Olson said. "The first time I saw
them was when they came out to warm up. You won't see the headbands again."
Loren Woods scored a career-high 25 points and blocked a school-record 10
shots as Arizona barely survived, but Olson was livid about his team's performance in its first game since beating then-No. 1 Stanford on the road last Saturday.
"We were outsized and they had better athletes but it comes down to
heart," Cougars forward Chris Crosby said. "It was gut-check time, and we
fought like crazy. We laid it all on the line."
Olson would not argue Crosby's conclusion about which team played harder.
Washington State, Olson said, "played extremely well. We played extremely
stupidly. That's what I'm concerned with. We played like we had no brains."
The Wildcats (14-2, 3-0 Pac-10) beat the Cougars for the 29th consecutive
time, the longest current streak of any opponents in the same conference in
major college basketball. But it was anything but easy for an Arizona team
favored by 24 points.
Washington State (5-7, 0-3) led 35-34 at halftime, fell behind by 13 in the
second half, then cut Arizona's lead to three on four occasions over the final
2:06.
The Wildcats, down to seven scholarship players after Richard Jefferson
broke his right foot at Stanford last Saturday, pulled it out by going
12-for-12 at the foul line over the final 5:16.
Arizona didn't have a field goal over the last 8:53, but went 14-for-16 at
the line the rest of the way. For the game, the Wildcats made 31 of 37 free
throws, while WSU was 9-for-13.
Michael Wright added 20 points for Arizona but grabbed only three rebounds,
none in the first half, as the smaller Cougars outrebounded the Wildcats 36-25.
Jason Gardner scored 12 points and Gilbert Arenas added 11 for Arizona.
Mike Bush scored 18 points for Washington State and Eddie Miller added 16
points and 14 rebounds. Crosby and Jan-Michael Thomas had 14 points each.
Thomas, who had a McKale Center-record eight 3-pointers in his last trip to
Tucson, was 4-for-6 from long range this time.
"Our team can definitely use this game as a stepping stone," first-year
Washington State coach Paul Graham said. "We came into a hostile environment
and played hard. I can't say enough about our effort. That's what I want to see
every night."
Olson was most upset with his three freshmen starters - Gardner, Arenas and
Luke Walton - for their penchant to throw up long-range shots or take wild
drives to the basket when the Wildcats had an obvious offensive advantage
inside.
"I say more than anything else it's time to grow up," Olson said. "I'm
more than disappointed. It's so frustrating that we can go out and play like we
did against Stanford and then think all we have to do is just show up."
The 7-foot-1 Woods shattered the old Arizona blocked shot record of seven.
The record was set by Anthony Cook against UTEP in the first round of the 1987
NCAA tournament and already tied three times by Woods this season.
"I am a shot-blocker," said Woods, whose presence altered uncounted other
Washington State shots. "They kept trying to shoot layups. You have to think
they would get the hint after a while."
The Wildcats finally had what seemed to be a comfortable lead when Rick
Anderson capped a 15-5 spurt with a 3-pointer that made it 66-53 with 8:53 to
go.
But a 14-4 run by Washington State cut the lead to 72-69 on Bush's drive
with 2:06 to play.
Wright, Gardner and Justin Wessel each made two free throws, but each time
Washington State answered with field goals - two by Miller, then one by Bush
that cut it to 78-75 with 2.9 seconds left.
Anderson finally clinched it with two free throws with two seconds to play.
The Cougars, who last beat Arizona on Jan. 30, 1986, stunned the big
Wildcats crowd by scoring the final nine points of the first half to take the
one-point halftime lead.
Additional Notes and Quotes
WSU Head Coach Paul Graham
"I could see the effort of our kids tonight. I saw their hearts tonight. They could have folded, especially when we got down by 13, but they responded well."
"I guess we have to work on our fouling because we had a lot of calls against us tonight. But regardless, Arizona did what a No. 2 teams does and that's make free throws."
"I can't say enough about our effort tonight. That's the kind I want to see every night and the kind of effort we have to have every night. We are always going to be going against bigger players and Eddie (Miller) and Mike (Bush) and Milton (Riley) did a good job on the boards tonight."
On Mike Bush (18 points, 7 reb., 6 ast.)
"What can you say about Mike Bush's effort tonight. He just gave it his all out there and he always does. Mike Bush is beginning to rub off on his teammates."
General Notes
This is the closest WSU has played Arizona in Tuscon in 14 years. The last time the Cougars lost by five points or less at McKale was 1985-86 (62-61 Arizona).
WSU held Arizona without a field goal for the final 8:53 of the game. The Wildcats made 14-of-16 free throws to account for their final 14 points of the game. For the game, WSU made just nine-of-12 from the free throw line, while the Wildcats hit a staggering 31-of-37. The foul differential: WSU 26, Arizona 13.
WSU senior Chris Crosby moved into 16th in WSU career scoring, his 14 points Thursday night lifted his career total to 1,089 points and past Keith Morrison (1,077 points/1983-86). Crosby has scored in double figures in eight straight games.
WSU junior Eddie Miller had his second double-double of the season with 16 points and a career-high-tying 14 rebounds. It was Miller's second double-double in his last three games. Miller has pulled down 45 rebounds in four games this season for an average of 11.3 per game.
Jan-Michael Thomas moved into seventh place in WSU career three pointers with four versus Arizona. His career total is now 121, Thomas passed Blake Pengelly (119/1997-00).
WSU faces Arizona State Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m. (4 p.m. MST) in Tempe.