Pac-12 men’s basketball tournament: Predictions, dark horses, players to watch…
Here’s a breakdown of the tournament, with upsets, who wins and which teams are going dancing in the NCAA Tournament
The Arizona Wildcats celebrate winning the Pac-12 Regular Season Championship on March 5, 2022, at McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona. (Photo by Rebecca Noble/Getty Images)
Adam Grosbard and Tarek Fattal (LA Times and So Cal News Group)
On Wednesday, the Pac-12 men’s basketball tournament will tip off in Las Vegas as teams vie for the conference title and an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Last year, it was Oregon State who surprised the field by taking home the trophy.
It has been eight years since UCLA won the sudden-death tournament, and 13 for USC. Is this their year? Or will Arizona add to its record seven championships?
UCLA reporter Tarek Fattal and USC reporter Adam Grosbard preview the tournament and make their predictions below.
Team To Watch
Fattal: Arizona. The Wildcats are the No. 1 seed and are playing for a regional No. 1 seed, too. Picking the top-seeded team ‘to watch’ might be obvious, but that’s because I think they’ll win the tournament and be hard to beat in the national tournament. The Wildcats have a go-to player in Bennedict Mathurin, someone that protects the rim in Christian Koloko, and can shoot the 3 (third-best FG% in conference). Look for Wildcats fans to pack T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
Grosbard: If there is a dark horse that can go deep in the tournament, it’s No. 6 seed Washington. Sometimes all you need is a high-octane scoring guard who hits another level in March. Pac-12 leading scorer Terrell Brown Jr. fits that mold for the Huskies, especially after averaging 23.5 in the final four games of the regular season.
Player To Watch
Fattal: There’s only one player in the Pac-12 Conference that is top five in points per game and rebounds per game: Jabari Walker. The sophomore averaging 14.7 points per game and leads the conference with 9.4 rebounds per contest. He’s played in all 30 Colorado games this season. He’s the son of former Laker Samari Walker and also a Los Angeles native.
Grosbard: Aside from Brown, I’m curious to see which version of UCLA guard Johnny Juzang shows up in Las Vegas. Juzang was hampered by an ankle injury late in the season, but it’s hard not to think about his electric NCAA Tournament run from a year ago as the postseason starts up again. If Juzang is right, it greatly increases UCLA’s odds this week.
Day 1 upset
Fattal: No. 9 seed Stanford over No. 8 seed ASU. The two split during the season. The Cardinal won the first 79-76 on Jan. 22, but the Sun Devils won the most recent on March 5 65-56. I think Harrison Ingram, the conference’s best freshman, is going to have a big game.
Grosbard: I’m still trying to wrap my head around how Oregon State only won three games this season after making the Elite Eight a season ago. That said, the 12th-seeded Beavers are the defending Pac-12 Tournament champs and drew rival Oregon on Day 1. The fifth-seeded Ducks have been far from sharp lately, losing three straight and six out of eight to close the regular season. An Oregon State win to pop Oregon’s bubble would go a long way to redeeming the Beavers’ lost season.
Day 2 Upset
Fattal: No. 5 seed Oregon over No. 4 seed Colorado. The Ducks have lost five of their past six games, including three straight to USC, Washington and Washington State, yet still snagged fifth place in the conference. Dana Altman is going to inspire Oregon to make a stink in this tournament, and it’s going to happen when the Ducks take down Colorado.
Grosbard: As you’ll see in a moment, I’m not predicting this outcome, but No. 6 seed Washington over No. 3 seed USC is the biggest potential upset of this day. The Trojans have been vulnerable to guards like Brown this season and aren’t playing their best basketball of the year entering the tournament.
Final Four
Fattal: UCLA vs. USC. What good is a conference tournament without a rivalry rubber match? UCLA and USC shouldn’t have a problem getting through their first-round byes (that was a joke), and should be able to put away whichever team meets them in the quarterfinals (most likely the Washington schools). The Trojans were winners of five straight over the Bruins before UCLA finally got over the hump Saturday at Pauley Pavilion. This semifinal will be a great appetizer for the championship game. And then Arizona vs. Oregon. Unless Oregon’s shocker over Colorado comes easy, I don’t think the Ducks will have enough left in the tank to take down No. 1 Arizona, unless they reach into the reserve tank of Madness here in March. It could happen, but I’m not seeing it. Look to hear (and feel) a strong presence from Arizona fans this weekend.
Grosbard: It’s boring, but I see all top-four seeds advancing, setting up a rubber match between UCLA and USC and Colorado-Arizona in the other half of the bracket. These are clearly the top four teams in the conference, and I don’t think the bottom eight are capable of upsetting the established order.
Title Game
Fattal: Arizona vs. UCLA. Jaime Jaquez Jr. is back, and has a Pac-12 Player of the Week Award to prove it. That’s a good sign for the Bruins. But the way UCLA beat Arizona earlier this season was due to an anomaly that even coach Mick Cronin couldn’t argue when Kerr Kriisa and Dalen Terry combined to go 0 of 17 from the field. Mathurin went 5 of 22.
Grosbard: Arizona vs. UCLA. The Wildcats are the clear class of the conference and should handle Colorado easily, while the Bruins played much better in Saturday’s 75-68 win over the Trojans than the final score indicated. Now that the Bruins have gotten over the hump against USC, they should have more confidence closing out this semifinal matchup.
Pac-12 Champion
Fattal:Â Arizona. Crown the Wildcats and give them the No. 1 seed they deserve, which is probably going to happen whether they win the conference tournament or not. Give first-year coach Tommy Lloyd Pac-12 Coach of the Year, too.
Grosbard: Can it be anyone other than Arizona? Yes, Colorado and UCLA have beaten the Wildcats this year, so it’s possible Arizona stumbles. But when this team is really rolling, there’s no Pac-12 opponent that can counteract its perimeter scoring, playmaking, and size and athleticism in the post.
Who’s Dancing?
Fattal:Â Arizona. UCLA. USC. Unless another Pac-12 team wins the tournament, I think the conference gets only three teams in. Colorado or Oregon might get a sniff if either one can make it to the final. Obviously winning the whole thing punches a ticket, but I think the Wildcats, Bruins and Trojans are the only ones practicing their dance moves in the mirror on Selection Sunday.
Grosbard: Unless there’s a dark horse who wins the tournament, only Arizona, UCLA and USC will make the NCAA Tournament out of the Pac-12. Oregon’s late-season collapse has left it on the wrong side of the bubble. Colorado is hamstrung by a weak nonconference résumé and a late-season loss to Arizona State. That said, the Buffs are probably the only team that could sneak into the NCAA Tournament without walking away with the trophy in Vegas this week. But that would require beating Arizona in the semifinals before losing in the championship game to either USC or UCLA.
Pac-12 Men’s Basketball Tournament
When:Â Wednesday-Saturday (all times local and approximate)
Where:Â T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
Wednesday
Noon:Â No. 8 Arizona State vs. No. 9 Stanford (Pac-12 Network)
2:30 p.m.:Â No. 5 Oregon vs. No. 12 Oregon State (Pac-12 Network)
6 p.m.:Â No. 7 Washington State vs. No. 10 California (Pac-12 Network)
8:30 p.m.:Â No. 6 Washington vs. No. 11 Utah (Pac-12 Network)
Thursday
Noon:Â No. 1 Arizona vs. winner of ASU-Stanford (Pac-12 Network)
2:30 p.m.: No. 4 Colorado vs. Oregon-Oregon State  (Pac-12 Network)
6 p.m.:Â No. 2 UCLA vs. winner of WSU-Cal (Pac-12 Network)
8:30 p.m.:Â No. 3 USC vs. winner of Washington-Utah (Fox Sports 1)
Friday
6 p.m.:Â Semifinal (Pac-12 Network)
8:30 p.m.:Â Semifinal (Fox Sports 1)
Saturday
6 p.m.:Â Championship (Fox Ch. 11)
ocregister.com
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New USC Football Coach Lincoln Riley Drops $17.2 Million on Glam Palos Verdes Estate
Nestled on gated, 3.17-acre bluff overlooking the ocean, in the affluent Palos Verdes Estates enclave, the stucco and terracotta-roof structure is fronted by a circular motor court, and then double Old World-style doors open to an enclosed courtyard crowned by a tiered fountain.
dirt.com
If you got it, flaunt it. I am sure it gives them the privacy they need. Probably a step up from Norman OK.
I never heard or read anything about where Choc Chip Kelly decided to live. I’m guessing he’s “slumming it” compared to LR. Just a hunch.
I love this high-profile Lincoln Riley approach to cementing himself as the big, bad new Los Angeles BMOC.
USC owns this town, once again. LR has already managed that without even coaching a game.
Enfield: “I am so proud of the success our players have had on the court and academically. I want to thank President Carol Folt, Mike Bohn, Brandon Sosna and Paul Perrier for their support. Their impact on our program has been significant. I also want to acknowledge how fortunate I am to be surrounded by outstanding coaches and staff, and would like to recognize our fans and students because their enthusiasm and energy have been tremendous assets. “My family and I are very happy to be part of the Trojan Family. I feel great about the future of USC basketball… Read more »
Good move Bohn! USC BB is a solid program with more upside potential. Good to lock in Enfield at least till next year. The problem is USC is pretty good but there is always another team that is playing lights out. This year it is Arizona. Maybe one of these years SC will be the lights out team.
“Solid and with more upside potential.” I think that’s been USC’s eternal basketball mantra, except when we’re bad and have no upside potential. I also think USC’s hoops failures have more to do with USC’s inner program deficiencies over the years than with other teams getting hot. It’s never been easy for Trojan basketball, as I view the annual records, and a woeful attendance history. Both UCLA and USC football have had a lot to do with that IMO. But USC basketball now is as good as I’ve ever seen it. ✌✌ More power to Enfield and Bohn for trying… Read more »
The upside I see is Enfield seems to be getting better talent. He may be growing as a coach, I don’t know about that. I hold out hope that every once in a while he puts together a hot team that will win the conference and go far in the Big Dance.
I am happy to see he is building a program, as good players come to USC, other good players will join them and then the dynasty gets built.