Deandre Ayton took 13 shots in Arizona’s first-round NCAA Tournament loss to Buffalo and averaged 12.9 shots per game over the season.
Deandre Ayton’s celebrity is such that he is at the Final Four, making the rounds, and on Friday he told CBS Sports Radio in San Antonio that Buffalo’s NCAA victory over Arizona was a case of the Bulls “just wanting it more.”
“They were pit bulls,” he said. “They were aggressive and had purpose. You could feel the energy from their bench.”
Isn’t that what Buffalo should’ve said about Arizona?
Ayton took 13 shots against Buffalo, which matched his season average of 12.9 shots per game. UA fans are apt to wonder, now and forever, if Sean Miller took advantage of Ayton’s once-in-a-coach’s-lifetime skills.
Others have done so against Arizona.
When the UA’s Final Four hopes were crushed by Wisconsin in 2014 and 2015, the Badgers’ Frank Kaminsky attempted 20 shots in both games, scoring 57 points. Ayton scored just 14 against Buffalo.
In 2017 when Arizona was stunned by 11th- seeded Xavier in the Sweet 16, Xavier’s top player, Trevon Bluiett, took 17 shots and scored 25 points. Arizona’s go-to player, Lauri Markkanen took just nine shots, scoring nine points.
It’s a disturbing trend that doesn’t easily go away; in its biggest NCAA games of the last five years, Arizona hasn’t gotten winning production from its best players.
Does that reflect on Miller’s style? Did his stallion jog through the Kentucky Derby? Or is it a fluke?
Here’s a historical perspective of Ayton’s use (or misuse) at Arizona: When BYU had breakout star Jimmer Fredette, he averaged 14.7 and 20.7 shots per game. He torched Miller’s Arizona teams for a combined 82 points. Yes, 82 points in two games. Utilizing Fredette’s star power, the Cougars got max value, going 32-5 and 30-6.
Arizona went 27-8 with Ayton.
From 1999-2003, every Pac-12 Player of the Year attempted more shots per game than Ayton:
1999: Arizona’s Jason Terry, 16.3
2000: ASU’s Eddie House, 19.5.
2001: Cal’s Sean Lampley, 13.6.
2002: USC’s Sam Clancy, 14.9.
2003: Oregon’s Luke Ridnour, 14.2
More: Pac-12 Player of the Year Joseph Young of Oregon averaged 16.4 shots per game in 2016. Two years earlier, Cal’s Allen Crabbe, the Pac-12 Player of the Year, averaged 14.2 shots per year.
Allen Crabbe took more shots than Deandre Ayton. It’s head-shaking.
When Miller hired former Washington head coach Lorenzo Romar — a man known for his up-tempo offenses — and paid him $400,000 to add to Arizona’s offense, nothing really changed.
Arizona prepared for zone-centric Washington by consulting TCU coach Jamie Dixon for advice. Dixon had often faced Washington’s Syracuse-type zone while coaching at Pitt.
What happened? Arizona shot 2 for 12 from 3-point distance and lost.
With Romar on the bench, Arizona averaged 67.1 possessions per game. That’s 224th in the nation. All of those thoroughbreds on Arizona’s roster actually played slower than the 2016 UA team, a No. 6 seed, that averaged 68.3 possessions per game.
In the same 2016 season, Romar’s Washington team averaged 77.5 possessions per game, No. 2 in the nation.
But at Arizona, even with Ayton’s abundant athletic skills, Romar was no help getting him the ball more. Ayton averaged 12 shots per game, the same amount Wildcat Gabe York did in 2016.

