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Best of last week

  • May 4, 2015
  • May 4, 2015

You may have missed the most popular stories of last week.

Burglars caught on camera at Park Place mall

Burglars were caught on surveillance cameras taking items from at least eight kiosks at Park Place mall.

The burglars, who appear to be teen-agers, entered the mall through an open door either late Thursday or early Friday morning, said Sgt. Pete Dugan, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.

The mall is at 5870 E. Broadway, just west of South Wilmot Road.

Property and cash were taken from the businesses, but police did not release how much cash or what type of items were stolen. A damage estimate to the kiosks was not known, Dugan said. 

At least five people were involved in the burglaries, Dugan said. He said the group was seen leaving in a small, four-door vehicle that was described as red or maroon with faded paint.

Anyone with information is asked to call 88-CRIME.

Arizona basketball: Donovan move could affect Miller, USA staff

Billy Donovan's decision to jump into the NBA with the Oklahoma City Thunder could shake up USA Basketball's U19 staff this summer, and possibly even give UA coach Sean Miller a chance to coach the team.

Donovan was scheduled to be the head coach for the USA team that will compete in the U19 World Championships this summer. Miller and Providence's Ed Cooley are scheduled to serve as assistant coaches as they did last summer on the U18 team that had Allonzo Trier and the core of what is expected to be this year's U19 team.

USA Basketball spokesman Craig Miller said today via email that if Donovan has to withdraw because of his Thunder duties, the USA Junior Team National Committee would probably consider the assistant coaches for the head coaching position.

The U19 World Championships are scheduled to be held in Greece from June 27 to July 5 -- right after the June 25 NBA Draft and just before NBA summer leagues -- while USA's U19 team will hold training camp in Colorado Springs earlier in June.


While Miller isn't expected to be among Florida's targets to replace Donovan, his brother, Archie, just might be...


Washington's Lorenzo Romar landed New Zealand big man Sam Timmons for the 2016-17 season (Timmons will graduate high school in November but Romar says he won't play next season at all).


Give Skype an assist for keeping Jakob Poeltl around at Utah for another season, after Larry Krystkowiak jumped on a three-way call with Poeltl and his Austrian-based mother to talk about Jakob's future. Poeltl told the Deseret News he wants to take a bigger leadership role next season without Delon Wright and Dallin Bachynski around.

Sexy vegan alert: Tucson's got one

Yeah whatever, Australia. You got Sexiest Man Alive — that would be actor Chris Hemsworth for all you non-readers of People magazine. But Tucson has a sexy vegan next door.

Maybe even the sexiest.

Dr. Guy Borders is one of 10 male finalists in PETA’s annual Sexiest Vegan Next Door contest. Voting ends Friday, and contestants find out Wednesday which man and woman are hot enough and vegan enough to score a free Maui vacation.

“I’m excited,” said Borders, 45, who was vegetarian but went whole hummus, switching to a plant-based diet, eight years ago. “Who knows what will happen?”

The married neuroradiologist, who has a 2½-year-old daughter, is very aw shucks about how far he’s advanced. His competition, by the way, includes a guy from California who posed with a bunch of strategically placed bananas.

Borders’ contest photo shows off two of his rescued pets, beagle Barnaby and Gretchen the cat — as well as a serious dimple and major muscles, thanks to a fitness regimen that includes weight-lifting and biking 24 miles to and from work a few times a week.

Borders, who grows potatoes in a home garden, said he entered the contest not for the provocative title but as a way to promote veganism, which he’s done over the years through groups such as the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a national organization.

“This is a good medium to let people know a plant-based diet is one of the most thoughtful diets one can do health-wise, and it affects the world at a global level,” Borders said.

This is the 12th year People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has run this contest, although in the past it was open to vegetarians. It’s been vegans only for the past three years. PETA also just launched a Coolest Vegan Alive contest that includes the under-18 set.

And no, you don’t have to be vegan to vote.

Arizona 2-year-old shoots himself in face

PEORIA, Ariz. — A 2-year-old Arizona boy was hospitalized in critical but stable condition Friday after shooting himself in the face with a handgun that police said was apparently rolled up in sheets on a bed.

The shooting occurred Thursday night in the Phoenix suburb of Peoria while the boy and a 7-year-old brother were being watched by a grandmother and aunt. The aunt was washing dishes in the kitchen when the gun went off, according to an audio recording from a 911 call released by police.

"My baby nephew got shot in the face with a gun," the aunt told the 911 operator. When the operator asks who did the shooting, the aunt replies: "He did it."

The aunt, whose full name was not released, then was transferred to a fire department dispatcher and described the boy's breathing as shallow. "My mother is holding him ... he's barely breathing," she said.

Police say the boy was playing on the bed in the master bedroom when he found the gun, which belonged to his father, who was not at home at the time.

The bullet struck the boy's cheek and exited his head, authorities said. A portion of his skull was removed to alleviate swelling.

Peoria police spokeswoman Shari Howard identified the father as Manuel Zeschitz-Garrison. He has been cooperating with the investigation, which is still ongoing. No criminal charges are pending at this time. The boy is not being identified because he is a juvenile.

Under Arizona state law, incidents where a child is put in a situation that could cause injury or death can result in child abuse charges.

All firearms should be stored in gun safes or have locks, Howard said. "But supervision is the key to all of it," she said.

Police find metal spikes in eastside manhole covers

Tucson Police are warning drivers on the east side of town about metal spikes found sticking out of manhole covers-- for the second time this year.

Police received reports in late January after several vehicles were damaged after driving over the spikes.

Thursday morning, an eastside resident located two manhole covers with the same type of spikes while he was out walking his dogs, said Tucson Police spokesman Sergeant Pete Dugan.

The manholes were in the area of South Pantano Parkway and South Sleepy Hollow Avenue, near the area of East Golf Links Road and East 22nd Street.

Authorities said that it's obvious the spikes are being placed on purpose, most likely with the intention of causing damage to passing vehicles.

After the spikes were discovered and removed, police received reports from two people who had damaged their vehicles when they drove over the spikes at about 5 a.m.

Anyone with information is asked to call 88-CRIME.

Drivers who see anything similar to the spikes or suspicious in the roadway are asked to call 911 immediately.

Tucson police reminds the public that placing an object in the roadway that has the potential to cause an accident or damage property could face felony charges.

Arizona football: Ex-Cat Abnous living new dream as agent

For the rare lucky ones out there, when they give up football, football doesn’t give up on them.

Haig Abnous thought he was through, thought the game was through for him. He’d willed himself into four more years of football after walking on at cornerback for Mike Stoops and Arizona in 2007 following his high school career at Danville, California’s San Ramon High School.

He wanted it so bad, just one more day, another practice, but tryouts proved fruitless.

He was lost.

Then, he was found, by renowned agent Jeff Sperbeck, off an assist from, of all people, NBA legend Chris Mullin. Mullin, family friend and neighbor of Abnous’ — who calls him “basically my second father” — emailed Sperbeck to give the plucky kid a chance. Mullin saw his passion, his commitment. Abnous drove over to his parents’ office.

They’d been nervous about his future. All he wanted to do was play.

Then they were ecstatic.

Now Abnous will spend Thursday afternoon living out another man’s dream, with his own discarded long ago. He is a professional sports agent, and a young one, with an even younger premier client. He will be side-by-side with Washington nose tackle Danny Shelton, a projected first-half-of-the-first-round pick, Abnous’ first major recruit.

“Honestly, my pitch to Danny was that I’m passionate about what I do and who I work with: I’m dedicated and this is what I eat, sleep and live,” said Abnous, a 2010 UA grad.

“My fiancée laughs at me for this, but they’re going to have to pry the Blackberry from my hands. But I don’t work a day. I just do what I love to do and it’s not work.”

One of the lucky ones, it seems, but also one of the smart ones.

Abnous sold Shelton not on his relatability but his credibility. Some young agents pride themselves on their ability to speak the same language as their young clients. They’re on Instagram. They’ve used Uber. They know what “on fleek” means.

Abnous is not flashing his youth but flexing his experience. He has also worked with Brandin Cooks and Nick Toon and Billy Winn, all recent NFL draft picks, as well as Sperbeck’s established clientele, which includes NFL legends John Elway and Ronnie Lott.

“It is important to be able to talk to them, but if you have a track record of being respectable and having clients, age will never be a problem,” Abnous said. “Age becomes a problem when you make it an excuse. I can easily say being young, people wouldn’t want to work with me, because I’m not as experienced and so I have to continue to work hard, to get them to see I’m here to help them.”

And as much as Shelton went with Abnous, Abnous went with Shelton. He did his homework on the Pac-12 terror who had nine sacks and 16.5 tackles for loss as he became an all-conference first-team pick.

Abnous found a good dude with a heck of a work ethic, evidenced by his three Pac-12 all-academic team nods.

Abnous singled him out early in the process, hoping to secure him as a …

As a something?

“I hate the word client,” Abnous said. “I don’t think it’s a word. Everyone uses brother. I don’t have a word, but they are like my brother. (Former Oregon running back) LaMichael James is the first guy I worked with. I look at him as a younger brother. If I were to do something for my little brother, I would do it for LaMichael. If I can’t answer a question with my heart feeling this is the right thing, I don’t do it, for me or for them.”

He’s off to a good start.

He’s engaged to a woman, Ani Bagdasarian, whom he says helped pull him out of his post-playing-days haze. They just bought a house, and they’ll be married in June. Things are coming together for one former Wildcat who has closed the book on one career and is now well on his way in another.

“I thought if I couldn’t play football, I didn’t know what to do,” Abnous said. “It’s like a chapter, I see now. I never saw it that way. I thought, ‘This is how people look at me, what they see me as. Am I still going to be cool?’

“Now I know it’s a chapter, and it ends.”

Pima softball: For Ayala, mother's memory never far away

As she walks up to the plate in the late game of a long Saturday afternoon, 12-year old Alexis Ayala can’t shake this nagging feeling.

Maybe two nagging feelings.

One is disappointment. Earlier that morning, she’d hit a home run, and her mom was not there to see it.

The night before, the family had gone to see “Shrek,” and then Monica Ayala took Alexis and her younger sisters, 7-year-old Jazmine and 3-year-old Gracie, to their aunt’s house while their father, Rene Ayala, went over to a friend’s. They would see each other in the morning for yet another day at the ballpark.

Alexis loved to show off for her parents. Monica was a high school softball star herself, at Desert View and Sunnyside; Rene was a stud on the diamond, too – first on Sunnyside’s 1992 Little League championship team and later on Sunnyside High’s state finalist baseball team — and Alexis inherited their genes.

Rounding the bases after her home run in that first game, Alexis scanned the crowd, searching for her mother. She dropped her head a little when she was nowhere to be found. Hours went by.

Finally, she’s up for her last at-bat, and the nagging feeling returns. Where is mom?

As she settles into her stance, two men in uniforms walk into the Lincoln Park entrance gates, far on the other side of the complex. She takes some practice swings as they approach the field.

The pitcher throws, and Alexis strokes another hit and rounds first base. She scans the crowd again for those adoring eyes. Nothing, still.

She ends up on second base and looks beyond the dugout, where her dad stands with the two men, his head in his hands.

Where is mom?

And why is dad talking to those police officers?

• • •

Seven years later, sitting on a bench behind the bleachers at Pima Community College, where Alexis is a freshman batting .402, Rene Ayala is doing his best to maintain a stiff upper lip when talking about the day his life was shattered.

He admits, honestly, “I feel like I put up a front,” and right now, his front is showing some cracks.

He is describing a conversation no father wants to have. The kind of conversation that leaves you floating above your body, trying to search for the words, as if there are any, trying to somehow explain to a 12-year-old, a 7-year-old and a 3-year-old that their mother has gone to stay with Tio Arthur in heaven and would not be back to tuck them in or kiss their forehead or watch a home run.

Earlier that morning, they had argued. She wanted to run errands; he wanted her to come straight to the ballfield. It’s where they always put any skirmish aside, the place that always brought them together as a family.

All day long, just like Alexis, Rene wondered where Monica was. It wasn’t like her to go so long without communicating. They’d had to cancel her game — Monica was coaching Jazmine’s Sunnyside Bumblebees team at the time — and none of her sisters had heard from her either.

Finally, the phone rang, and in the dugout watching a game, in a haste he answered without looking at the caller ID.

It was the sheriff’s department. They said they needed to talk to Rene in person. He was dubious. “What’s going on?” he implored, to no avail. They kept calling. Finally, he said meet me at Lincoln Park.

When they walked onto that field, he knew. He saw the chaplain’s insignia on the officer’s lapel.

Monica was alone, driving on a highway near Three Points, near her grandfather’s house. There was a curve, and some loose gravel. The car flipped.

“My first reaction is, ‘Shut up,’” Rene says. “‘Shut up, man. What are you’ … they had stone cold faces. ‘Where is she? What hospital? And that’s when they told me she didn’t make it. At that point, to be honest, of course I’m dying inside, but we have our girls. My job, to this day, to her, is to take care of these girls.”

One accident, one life, two deaths.

• • •

Rene, tell me about your wife.

“She was beautiful, supportive,” he says. “Mom. My wife.”

He laughs.

“Funny.”

They met when they were 13, on the ballfields of Mission Manor Park. Where else?

She was outgoing, Rene says of 13-year-old Monica, ready to try new things. They just clicked. Their first date was at the Red, White and Blue concert at the Tucson Convention Center. They watched fireworks, still too young to make any of their own. It was 1992.

“Good times,” Rene says.

They originally went to different high schools — he starred at Sunnyside, she at Desert View — but they stayed close.

Every time distance would grow, and maybe other relationships would pry them away, they would get closer. They continued dating, she transferred to Sunnyside, and during his senior year — her junior year — Monica became pregnant with Alexis.

He was a state baseball champion hoping to parlay a two-year stint at Pima into a four-year degree; she was a softball star who hoped to walk on to Arizona until she got pregnant.

“That threw a wrench into a things,” he said. “I was 18, and we had Alexis during Christmas break. A nice, big present.”

Plans did change. They accepted the responsibility and doted on their baby. They worked at a Fry’s food store together, and they eventually worked their way into professional careers. She became a medical assistant, and five years after having Alexis, they had Jazmine. They built a family, and they had a path.

“I’d be happy when the electric bill came,” he said. “It was cool. We had enough to pay it.”

• • •

If it was softball that kept them together as a family when Monica was alive, the sport helped them survive after her passing.

“I think softball has virtually saved the family,” said Pima coach Armando Quiroz, whose Aztecs play at Phoenix College at 9 a.m. Saturday in the NJCAA regional playoffs. “It’s given them a purpose and a meaning. They love the game and the game loves them. Without it, it would’ve been really tough.”

All three sisters play, and three star. Rene coaches, and wins. His 2013 Sunnyside team won the Little League Softball World Series; Jazmine was the winning pitcher. They feel like they’re carrying on Monica’s legacy.

“She touched so many people’s lives, especially in the softball community,” Alexis says. “Mission Manor Park, that was our second home. We are known there. A lot of people lost someone they loved.”

When Monica died, Alexis’ team rallied around her. They cried with her, mourned with her, made keepsakes.

She still has a bracelet that one of the team moms made. To this day, softball friends tell her she reminds them of her mother.

Alexis sees it, too.

She has a video of her mom, singing and dancing to a Janet Jackson song, acting a fool. She sees her same silliness in it.

“Mom was the person who was so bright and loud,” Alexis said. “You knew she was there. You could not miss her laugh. Even her smile was so big. She loved to be happy. She lived to make everybody laugh and be silly. She knew she was silly. She loved life. She wanted to never be a fighter, and I hear stories from my tias (and they’d say), ‘your mom was never drama.’ She’d call one of us, she’d never handle it. She wasn’t a confrontational kind of person. I’m a peacemaker too.”

Quiroz sees it, too. Just a freshman, Ayala is considered a leader in the clubhouse, something he saw in her back when she was 12. In a bit of true serendipity, Quiroz was in those very same Lincoln Park bleachers the day of Monica’s accident in 2008, recruiting during his first season at Pima. He remembers the officers, the chaplain, slow walk, Rene’s head dropping.

Quiroz considers it an honor to be coaching his daughter now.

“Yesterday we went to a girl’s house — they had us over for dinner — and it was just girls acting silly, laughing, having a great time. It did come to my mind — this doesn’t happen very often for her,” he said. “She was in heaven with her teammates. It was really nice to watch. You think, I wish she had more of this growing up.”

• • •

Alexis Ayala had to grow up fast.

At 12, she had to become a mother to her younger sisters. Rene did a wonderful job as a father, but there are just some things that a father can’t teach a little girl, things that Alexis would have to learn from her loving aunts.

Rene remembers the first time she talked back to him. It was a proud moment as a father. He knew she was as strong as her mother.

There are times, though, when she is weak, just like everyone.

“I remember the first time Gracie had a breakdown, I just broke down, too,” Alexis says. “I just felt so hurt for her. She told me straight up that she doesn’t really remember our mom. She wishes she did. She wishes she was still here.”

Alexis can’t help but feel a sense of motherhood with her two younger sisters, who both play softball like their big sister and their mom, who both have big smiles and big personalities like their big sister and their mom.

Jazmine’s quinceañera is just around the corner, and Alexis can’t wait.

“I will be the one to do her mother-daughter dance,” she says, beaming. “I know for sure I’m going to have be the one changing her, getting her ready, just as my mom would’ve done. I remember the first time she did a little Instagram for me, the first time she’s said I wouldn’t want anybody else to be my big sister/second mom.”

She remembers her own special day, too.

“My mom was crazing on that day for the longest,” she said. “I remember that morning, and thank God I had my tia and my older cousins to get my hair done. They had me for that. I can remember calling my dad and he was so choked up. He had his moment. That father-daughter dance did get everyone. There’s a picture of me just trying to cover my face. I am thankful my nana had so many girls.”

That day for her was more than four years ago, and she’s matured since then, blossomed from a young lady into a woman.

Sitting in a pizza joint on the eve of the regional playoffs, she wears a pink shirt, silver hoop earrings and a cross necklace. And a few tattoos.

Her dad took her to get the first one. It’s on her right ankle, because Monica had a tattoo of her name on her right ankle. The name Monica, with a flower and a butterfly.

Monica loved black and yellow butterflies.

“I’ll be driving and I’m on the field and I see one fly in front of our dugout and I’ll think of her,” Alexis says. “Our number is 21. My mom’s birthday is August 21, my dad’s is July 21, they got together on June 21, it was both their numbers. I’ll be driving and I’ll ask someone for the time, and they’ll say 8:21. I’ll think, ‘Oh, hi, mom. How are you doing? Thanks. I needed that.’”

When she was 12 years old, standing on second base, Alexis Ayala wondered, “Where’s mom?”

Turns out, she’s everywhere.

Steller: TUSD's awkward communications night

At Tuesday night’s meeting, TUSD’s five school board members were supposed to go to five separate tables to talk about improving communications.

Except two members refused to join in the discussions.

And one had to call in on a cellphone because she was out of town.

And the people in the audience were allowed to mingle and listen to the conversations, but they could only attend one of the five discussions at a time, of course, only having one body per person.

The effort was perhaps a sign of the way things are going lately on the Tucson Unified board. Even an apparent effort at improved communication on the board ended up instead in complications, reinforcing the divide between the three allies who make up the board majority and the two who are its chief dissidents.

It also raised the suspicions of this journalist, in that one of the five tables was dedicated to discussions of how to communicate better with the news media. The only guideline I’d like to see on that topic is: Return my calls.

Board President Adelita Grijalva told me Thursday that the breakout sessions were intended to help TUSD’s staff draft a code of ethics or conduct for board members. It’s an idea that emerged in part from the National School Boards Association meeting in Nashville in March.

(More division there: Grijalva and her two allies on the board, Kristel Foster and Cam Juarez, attended, while Mark Stegeman and Michael Hicks did not.)

“There isn’t a way for us as a governing body to make sure that we’re all playing by the same rulebook,” she said.

Tuesday night, there were tables dedicated to communications between the board and the superintendent, the district’s other top leaders, school principals, the news media, and each other. But Grijalva couldn’t be there, because she was in Phoenix where her sister-in-law had just given birth to her nephew, making her an aunt for the first time.

Stegeman and Hicks refused to participate. They may have perceived — correctly — that the workshop, as it was called, was intended in part to corral them. One of the key questions was whether there should be any protocols for board members visiting schools so administrators don’t feel obligated to drop everything when a board member drops by. Stegeman has been criticized for meddling with individual schools’ affairs in the past, and Hicks has more recently.

But Stegeman just hates the whole format. For the board to break into smaller groups to have discussions that the public can’t necessarily hear violates the spirit of Arizona’s open-meetings law, he told me. He said he’s objected to these breakout sessions before, and the board changed the format by allowing the public to listen in at each table and by recording and posting on the Internet the content of every conversation.

“If we’re going to collaborate, why don’t we sit together and collaborate?” Stegeman said. “Here they set it up so we’re deliberately not talking to each other.”

The idea was that each board member would spend 10 minutes at each table, rotating through, the questioners posing the same queries to each board member. Stegeman also would have preferred to know the questions in advance to be able to think over his answers, he said. He and Hicks plan to provide written responses to the questions posed Tuesday.

There were some interesting ones. Stefanie Boe, the district’s spokeswoman, asked whether board members feel it’s appropriate to discuss their votes or other information from board meetings with each other on social-media sites like Facebook. You could argue that if three or four board members start discussing school matters online — even if they just hit that “like” button on a comment — they could be breaking the open-meetings law.

But some of the questions asked of the board members have a slightly sinister feel — the feeling of an effort to assert central control over the board. Boe’s second question to board members, for example, was, “In your view, who at the district should you alert when contacted by the media?”

The correct answer, in my view, is “nobody.” That is, an elected board member should feel free to say whatever he or she wants to a reporter without telling anybody. They are accountable to the voters, after all, not to the administration.

But look, if they want to establish some guidelines that will help minimize conflict and keep themselves on task, they should feel free. It would be wise, though, to ensure that all five board members have communicated their thoughts on these matters of board communication.

Tucson Medical Center to announce Mayo alliance

Tucson Medical Center will officially become part of the Mayo Clinic Care Network on Friday, giving local patients access to Mayo doctors’ expertise.

The collaboration, expected to be announced Friday morning, is not an ownership change, a name change or a merger. TMC remains independent and locally owned — the only locally owned community hospital in Tucson.

Rather, the affiliation means that TMC will become a member of the Mayo network by paying a subscription fee and in return, be able to consult with Mayo Clinic doctors on an as needed basis. TMC officials would not disclose how much they paid for the subscription.

Mayo Clinic in Arizona chief executive officer Dr. Wyatt Decker says the network was formed about five years ago in reaction to hospital mergers and acquisitions that have been occurring nationwide in recent years.

“We did a lot of soul searching and thought, do we want to own and operate a lot of medical centers?” Decker said.

“We decided to take a different path, not to own and operate, but to affiliate and share like-minded knowledge. What is exciting is that they can remain independent, which is very important to a lot of medical centers.”

Other Arizona hospitals in the Mayo network include ASU Health Services, Kingman Regional Medical Center and Yuma Regional Medical Center. TMC is the 32nd hospital to join the network.

TMC also has a special connection for the Mayo clinic. Clinic co-founder Dr. Will Mayo built a house in Tucson in 1936 and used to do occasional rounds at TMC, which was then known as the Desert Sanatorium,Decker said.

“The foundation for this relationship is a shared treatment philosophy that is focused on best practices and evidence-based medical care,” TMC’s chief medical officer Dr. Rick Anderson said in a prepared statement. “We look forward to the resources that this collaboration will bring to the high-value care we already provide our patients.”

Hansen: Passion returns to Territorial Cup series

On the drive from Tucson to Tempe late Tuesday night, Arizona State baseball coach Tracy Smith tapped out this Twitter message:

“I think their bat boy was 2-for-3 tonight with 4 RBI”

As far as can be documented, it was the first time in the century-long UA-ASU rivalry that one of the coaches was daring enough to shed his game face and laugh at himself.

Good for him. The rivalry doesn’t always have to be Frank Kush keeping his starters on the field in a 55-19 game, or Lute Olson pointing to the scoreboard in Tempe.

Arizona walloped the Sun Devils 17-6 Tuesday but what did it really matter? The Sun Devils had already clinched the yearly Territorial Cup baseball point, and ASU is destined for the NCAA Tournament and perhaps a Pac-12 championship.

Besides, Smith had room to maneuver: Arizona’s baseball team is twisting in the wind.

This UA-ASU stuff isn’t often taken lightly. After Tuesday’s game, Arizona’s Hall of Fame softball coach Mike Candrea, a Sun Devil grad, tweeted: “Congrats for the smashing victory over ASU!”

Several weeks earlier, UA basketball coach Sean Miller famously suggested, via Twitter, that fans unhappy about Arizona’s Elite Eight loss to Wisconsin should “cheer for ASU.”

I always thought Utah-BYU would be the most fierce and everlasting rivalry I experienced in college sports, but this Territorial Cup business long ago lapped the Cougars and Utes.

Less than 24 hours after Smith’s bat-boy tweet, ASU clinched the 2014-15 Territorial Cup series (a compilation of all sports). It’s a competition that doesn’t get much public attention but one so heated inside the two athletic departments that the 2013 series continues to be a simmering feud.

The Wildcats insist they won. The Sun Devils list themselves as the ’13 champs. It is a contentious issue (swinging on a men’s indoor track result) that will never fully be decided, and ultimately that’s good for the fabric of the rivalry.

You wouldn’t want them to be friendly, would you?

The Sun Devils have changed their personality and platform over the last five years – the Greg Byrne years at Arizona — and are no longer the punching bag they were during the aimless reign of Lisa Love.

This week, for the first time I can remember, ASU chartered a luxury bus (impressively maroon and gold) and pulled into Tucson to celebrate its growing success.

The school’s athletic department Twitter feed declared “Tucson is Sun Devil Territory today.” New athletic director Ray Anderson, who has taken names and kicked butts in his first year on the job, told Tucson reporters “we will be back in Tucson because we don’t concede any territory to anyone.”

Byrne was the first to ambitiously tread in enemy territory, establishing a yearly caravan to Phoenix, buying outdoor billboard space to declare Phoenix as Wildcat turf, and making weekly appearances on Phoenix sports-talk programs. He has even scheduled a football game in Glendale.

That ate at ASU like never before, and not because Byrne is an ASU grad.

His visibility and aggressive nature forced ASU’s hand. Following Byrne’s template, the Sun Devils fought back and have become more visible and a force in social media. They even brought new basketball coach Bobby Hurley to Tucson this week, posing for cameras at Gap Ministries, doing community service in Tucson before he’s had time to introduce himself in Tempe.

The Sun Devil Caravan stopped Tuesday at the intersection of Prince and Campbell and staged a happy hour at El Saguarito, where they were greeted by about 60 or 70 boosters.

El Saguarito? Does that ring a bell? It’s the same caterer that regularly sells its wonderful Mexican food at Arizona Stadium, Hillenbrand Stadium, and for years catered meals for UA football teams.

El Saguarito is owned by Sunnyside High School grad Albert Vasquez; one of his restaurants is tucked on UA property behind the Law School.

A year ago, Byrne’s annual UA caravan to Tempe was marred when someone strongly suggested that doing business with the Wildcats wouldn’t be good for a bar-and-grill business in Tempe.

Capice?

The Tempe firm made an 11th-hour cancellation, forcing Arizona to scramble to find more neutral territory in the greater Phoenix area.

Part of the beauty (or is it grimness?) of the UA-ASU rivalry is that it rarely crosses boundaries, but Vasquez and El Saguarito proved it can be done.

His daughter, Jackie, a Catalina Foothills High School grad, was a third-team All-American softball outfielder at ASU in 2008, helping the Sun Devils win the national championship. She later married Tom Theodorakis, who was for four years Byrne’s associate athletic director for fundraising in Phoenix.

Tom and Jackie Theodorakis have since moved to neutral turf, Los Angeles; he is an associate AD at UCLA. It’s much safer that way.

Anyway, the kicker to this Territorial Cup business is that Smith, in his first year as ASU’s baseball coach, introduced himself to the rivalry in October. As he watched Arizona line up for a field goal attempt that would beat USC 29-28 at the buzzer, he activated his Twitter account and typed:

“Miss it!”

The kick missed. The rivalry remains dead center.

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