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Posts Tagged ‘Jerry Tarkanian’

Bejarano’s pending transfer reduces Arizona scholarship overload to one

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

Daniel Bejarano (shown here at the conclusion of his stellar Phoenix North career) could not crack Arizona's rotation as a freshman, playing in only eight games (Arizona Republic photo)

With the likely transfer of guard Daniel Bejarano this week from the Arizona basketball program, coach Sean Miller needs to address only one more scholarship spot.

The Wildcats currently have 13 scholarship spots filled if all four of their Class of 2011 recruits attend the UA starting this summer. Those recruits are point guard Josiah Turner, guard-wing Nick Johnson, power forward Sidiki Johnson and post player Angelo Chol.

Because of the UA’s self-imposed penalty in 2011-12, following alleged improprieties involved with the elite youth basketball tournament Cactus Classic toward the end of the Lute Olson era, Miller has only 12 scholarship spots next year, instead of the customary 13.

Bejarano’s likely transfer, Derrick Williams‘ decision to leave for the NBA after his sophomore season, and Jamelle Horne exhausting his eligibility means these nine current players are under scholarship (classification is for the 2011-12 season):

Guards (4): Kyle Fogg, Sr.; Lamont “MoMo” Jones, Jr.; Brendon Lavender, Sr.; and Jordin Mayes, Soph.

Forwards (3): Solomon Hill, Jr.; Kevin Parrom, Jr.; and Jesse Perry, Sr.

Centers (2): Alex Jacobson, Sr., and Kyryl Natyazhko, Jr.

To allow room for Turner, Nick Johnson, Sidiki Johnson and Chol, one of these nine scholarship spots must be relinquished.

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Tarkanian’s grudge against Olson, UA apparent in SI article

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Former UNLV coach Jerry Tarkanian's distaste for Arizona is evident again with critical comments made in the latest Sports Illustrated

Jerry Tarkanian has not coached at UNLV for almost 19 years. The last time he coached against Arizona with nemesis Lute Olson was more than 20 years ago. Tom Tolbert changed his mind 24 years ago about attending UNLV and decided to play for the UA instead, prompting Tarkanian to dub Olson, “Midnight Lute”, for snatching away his recruit at the last minute.

Evidently, Tarkanian, the embattled former UNLV coach who shares a long past with Olson back to their Long Beach State days in the early 1970s, does not find carrying a grudge too heavy.

In the latest Sports Illustrated, which features Tarkanian in a “Where are they now” segment, Tarkanian criticizes the way Olson’s coaching staff recruited against the Running Rebels.

“People said a lot at our expense,” Tarkanian told SI. “The Arizona assistants, they were always telling the parents of our recruits that the mob is going to get your sons or the hookers are going to get your sons if they go to UNLV. We heard it all.”

This follows disparaging comments he has made about Olson, Arizona and the Wildcat fans in his “Shark Bytes” blog published online by The Las Vegas Sun.

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Pac-10 expansion into Texas could rekindle old rivalry

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Arizona State aside, Arizona has engaged in some pretty intense rivalries over the years.

Before the Cats and UCLA became fierce basketball rivals, another rivalry stoked the fire for Arizona fans.

Playing Texas Tech in football meant something in the 1970s, but now the attraction will undoubtedly be Texas and Oklahoma potentially coming to Tucson. (Photo by US Presswire/Brett Davis)

Playing Texas Tech in football meant something in the 1970s, but now the attraction will undoubtedly be Texas and Oklahoma potentially coming to Tucson. (Photo by US Presswire/Brett Davis)

I’m not talking about UCLA-Arizona softball, Stanford-Arizona basketball, California-Arizona football (with an incredible 16 games decided by a TD or less in the 1980s and 1990s), Arizona-New Mexico football (the battle for the Kit Carson rifle) and UNLV-Arizona basketball (when Jerry Tarkanian and Lute Olson, who are not on each other’s buddy list, were running the programs).

The rival in football I remember the most from my childhood years, other than ASU, is Texas Tech. Trivia question: After ASU (36 wins against the Cats) and USC (26), what is the next program that has the most victories against the UA in the history of the football program? You got it: Texas Tech with 25 wins against the UA. In fact, the Red Raiders have the best winning percentage against Arizona — an eye-popping record of 25-4-2 (.839 percentage).

I am not old enough to remember when they played each other back in the old Border Conference, but I recall the Red Raiders and Wildcats continuing their rivalry on the football field long after the UA left to the WAC in 1962.

If the rumors of Pac-10 expansion hold true, and the conference gains six existing Big 12 teams including Texas Tech, the Wildcats and Red Raiders would again be in the same conference for the first time in 48 years. Rivals.com reported first last week that this alignment is a strong possibility. The Dallas Morning News posted a blog late Wednesday that indicated that Texas Tech and other Texas teams in the Big 12 will be invited to join the Pac-10 “soon”.

Those old enough to remember Arizona football pre-Larry Smith years, recall that perhaps the most memorable moment in the 1970s — other than John Jefferson‘s controversial catch in 1975 — was Lee Pistor‘s game-winning field goal and subsequent safety by the UA against Texas Tech also in 1975.

Arizona’s 32-28 win over Texas Tech on Oct. 18, 1975, ranks in the top 5 games ever played at Arizona Stadium, and I happened to be there at age 8. The Cats scored 26 points in the second half, including five in the last six seconds, to come back from a 21-6 halftime deficit. Pistor drilled a 41-yard field goal with six seconds remaining to put the UA ahead 30-28. After the ensuing kickoff, Arizona’s Tony Mitre tackled the Texas Tech returner in the end zone after the squib kick was mishandled by the Red Raiders.

Only two minutes earlier, UA coach Jim Young gambled on a two-point conversion and failed as Texas Tech held on to a 28-27 lead.

The win gave the 13th-ranked Cats a 5-0 record that season and a nine-game winning season stretched from the year before. Young produced the best Wildcat team in history at that point with Bruce Hill, “T” Bell, Willie Hamilton, Jim Upchurch, Obra Erby and Pistor.

Will we see less of Arizona playing USC and miss plays such as Earl Mitchell sacking Matt Barkley to end the game if the Cats are in a separate divison of the Pac-16? (Photo by US Presswire/Gary A. Vasquez)

Will we see less of Arizona playing USC and miss plays such as Earl Mitchell sacking Matt Barkley to end the game if the Cats are in a separate divison of the Pac-16? (Photo by US Presswire/Gary A. Vasquez)

Of course, the Texas Tech-Arizona football rivalry will be secondary news in this generation behind the thought of Texas’ football team coming to Tucson for the first time since 1925. That is the only meeting in history between the Longhorns and Wildcats (which Texas won 20-0). In fact, that season UA hosted USC and Texas and lost by a combined score of 76-0.

And the thought of Mike Stoops vs. big brother Bob Stoops might cause some indigestion within the Stoops’ family, but it will be exciting for the fans of Arizona and Oklahoma. Playing the basketball programs of Texas and Oklahoma is also intriguing (do you think former Texas commit Daniel Bejarano would be ready to play against the Longhorns?). In baseball, Arizona playing the storied programs of Texas and Oklahoma State is intriguing as well.

With all of this discussion, are we forgetting what playing USC and UCLA regularly means to all of the Arizona programs? What do all the UA alumni in southern California think about this news and the possibility of seeing their Wildcats less?

To escape that thought for now: The memory of Arizona’s players piling on top of each other in celebration after tackling Texas Tech for a safety to end that classic 1975 game. Bring on the Red Raiders. Arizona has a lot of catching up to do.