Arizona ‘excited’ for First Four matchup against Auburn in NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament

Addison Kalmbach
8 Min Read


The most magical Sunday in all of college basketball occurred on St.
Patrick’s Day with the annual bracket selection of the NCAA Women’s
Basketball Tournament, and it might have delivered the first upset of
the spring.

For the fourth consecutive year, the Arizona women’s basketball team
was invited to the Big Dance, and that was far from a given going into
the day. After starting the season 5-0, the Wildcats lost 12 of their
next 20 games.

However, Arizona came on to sneak into the NCAA Tournament, drawing a
First Four bid as an 11-seed in Portland Region 3. The Wildcats will
face Auburn in Storrs, Connecticut, Thursday.

After finishing the 2022-23 season with a 22-10 record and suffering a
second-round loss to Maryland in the tournament, the Wildcats are just
17-15 as they head into the Portland Region 3 this year.

“I’m so excited for this team. I’m so excited for Arizona. If you
were to ask me if we’d be in such a situation a month ago, I would have
said, ‘Oh, a little tough,’’’ said Wildcats coach Adia Barnes. “So I’m
just happy that we’ve worked so hard to put ourselves in a situation to
be in the NCAA Tournament for the fourth year in a row. So very, very
happy and blessed.”

Meanwhile, the Tigers enter the First Four and NCAA Tournament for
the first time under third-year coach Johnnie Harris after finishing
seventh in the competitive Southeastern Conference with a 20-11 record.

The winner will advance to play sixth-seeded Syracuse in the first
round of the tournament with a chance to play either powerhouse
third-seeded UConn or 14-seeded Jackson State in the next round.

“We’re excited to be in, and we’ll just prepare to play that play-in
game and that’s just another opportunity for our team to play,” Harris
said. “It’s never been easy for us, so we don’t expect that. I expect
our team to come out ready to play.”

The Tigers play with a sense of toughness and hope to make opposing
guards uncomfortable. Auburn has caused so much disruption that they are
ranked fifth nationally in opponents’ assists to forced turnovers,
allowing only 8.5 assists per game versus 19.5 turnovers a game.

That same hard-nosed approach allowed the Tigers to overcome adversity throughout the season.

“I like our team’s resilience. I think we bounce back really well,”
Harris said. “I think our team has some toughness, so we’ll put all that
together and take it on the road to Connecticut and put our best foot
forward.”

For the Wildcats to win their first game in the 2024 version of March
Madness, they will need to keep up the high level of play they have
shown of late, especially on the defensive side.

That starts with fifth-year guard Helena Pueyo. Arizona has the
seventh-best stealing defense in the country and ranks in the top 35 for
turnovers forced per game. Pueyo has set the defensive tempo for the
Wildcats all season and ranks fifth nationally in total steals with 103
and 10th nationally in steals per game at 3.2.

Arizona will also have to slow down Auburn graduate guard Honesty
Scott-Grayson,who is coming off a team-high 17 points per game with most
of her damage coming from inside the arc.

After an unusual up-and-down season for the Wildcats, Barnes and Co.
were tested this season with one of the hardest schedules in the
country, playing ranked teams such as Ole Miss, Texas and Gonzaga in
their non-conference schedule and faced nationally ranked USC, UCLA and
Stanford twice in Pac-12 play.

The difficulty of the schedule ultimately helped Arizona get into the
First Four, but Barnes indicated she might have overdone it.

“I’ve also learned some other things, and this is what I think is
always contradictory, because everybody always says you want to have
this hard strength of schedule,” she said. “I really scheduled too hard
for what we had. So when I look at all of our comparables, all the teams
that were like those last 11 (or) 12 (teams in), our numbers were
significantly better.

“So it’s like, that’s kind of hard, because now I’m just going to
schedule easier. I thought whether we’re only 9-11 in the Pac-12 or two
games above .500, we had one of the hardest schedules in the country.

“Now we played all those teams, so I thought that would hold more value.”

To go along with their hard schedule, Arizona started three freshmen
after losing six players to the transfer portal last season. The lack of
experience hurt the Wildcats in some games this season but those
younger players also gained valuable experience for the tournament.

Barnes said there is no doubt that making the NCAA Tournament, even
in the First Four, is a better option than the Women’s Basketball
Invitational Tournament for her young team.

“I think that as you’ve built a program, you want to sustain
success,” Barnes said. “So you want a program where every year you’re in
the NCAA Tournament. I think there’s so much value to playing in the
postseason.

“I think it’s just an amazing experience for our young players, and
they’re the foundation for the future. So I’m excited. I think that
we’re good enough to beat a lot of these tournament teams, and we have a
very favorable bracket. So I think that it’s a perfect situation for
us.”

Barnes is staying optimistic about Arizona’s showdown against Auburn,
even after facing criticism all year. She has often stuck with younger
players and that has caused some more experienced players to opt for the
transfer portal.

Retaining players has been a struggle, as evidenced by the six
transfers lost last year. Still, Barnes has kept Arizona in the NCAA
Tournament, and that’s something that is a point of pride.

“I’ve been here eight years (and) it was my first coaching job,” she said. “We’ve completely transformed the program.”



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Addison Kalmbach , www.tucsonsentinel.com
Sports news | TucsonSentinel.com , 2024-03-20 14:52:26
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