1988–89 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team
American college basketball season
The 1988–89 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Arizona . The head coach was Lute Olson . The team played its home games in the McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona , and was a member of the Pacific-10 Conference . In the Pac-10 Basketball Tournament, Arizona beat Stanford by a score of 73–51 to claim its second consecutive Pac-10 title.
Roster
1988–89 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team
Players
Coaches
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
Legend
(C) Team captain
(S) Suspended
(I) Ineligible
(W) Walk-on
Schedule and results
Date time, TV
Rank#
Opponent#
Result
Record
Site city, state
Regular season
Nov 30, 1988 *
No. 11
New Mexico
W 80–67
1–0
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Dec 2, 1988 *
No. 11
vs. No. 10 North Carolina Diet Pepsi Tournament of Champions
L 72–79
1–1
Charlotte Coliseum Charlotte, North Carolina
Dec 3, 1988 *
No. 11
vs. No. 17 Temple Diet Pepsi Tournament of Champions
W 68–50
2–1
Charlotte, Coliseum Charlotte, North Carolina
Dec 10, 1988 *
No. 10
No. 9 UNLV
W 86–75
3–1
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Dec 18, 1988
No. 9
Washington State
W 76–59
4–1 (1–0)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Dec 20, 1988
No. 9
Washington
W 116–61
5–1 (2–0)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Dec 23, 1988
No. 9
at Oregon State
W 73–69
6–1 (3–0)
Gill Coliseum Corvallis, Oregon
Dec 28, 1988 *
No. 8
Loyola-Chicago
W 106–82
7–1
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Dec 30, 1988 *
No. 8
Pittsburgh
W 88–62
8–1
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Jan 5, 1989
No. 8
at Stanford
L 78–83
8–2 (3–1)
Maples Pavilion Stanford, California
Jan 7, 1989
No. 8
at California
W 64–55
9–2 (4–1)
Harmon Gym Berkeley, California
Jan 12, 1989
No. 12
Oregon State
W 85–64
10–2 (5–1)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Jan 14, 1989
No. 12
Oregon
W 95–71
11–2 (6–1)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Jan 19, 1989
No. 9
at USC
W 97–69
12–2 (7–1)
L.A. Sports Arena Los Angeles, California
Jan 21, 1989 *
No. 9
Villanova
W 75–67
13–2
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Jan 26, 1989
No. 6
at Arizona State Rivalry
W 96–71
14–2 (8–1)
ASU Activity Center Tempe, Arizona
Jan 29, 1989 *
No. 6
No. 19 Stanford
W 72–52
15–2 (9–1)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Feb 2, 1989
No. 4
California
W 86–59
16–2 (10–1)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Feb 5, 1989
No. 4
at Washington
W 85–68
17–2 (11–1)
Bank of America Arena Seattle, Washington
Feb 9, 1989
No. 1
at Oregon
W 78–57
18–2 (12–1)
McArthur Court Eugene, Oregon
Feb 12, 1989 *
No. 1
at No. 5 Oklahoma
L 80–82[ 2]
18–3
Lloyd Noble Center Norman, Oklahoma
Feb 16, 1989
No. 2
USC
W 93–70
19–3 (13–1)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Feb 18, 1989
No. 2
UCLA Rivalry
W 102–62
20–3 (14–1)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Feb 23, 1989
No. 2
Arizona State Rivalry
W 109–74
21–3 (15–1)
McKale Center Tucson, Arizona
Feb 26, 1989 *
No. 2
vs. No. 9 Duke
W 77–75
22–3
Brendan Byrne Arena East Rutherford, New Jersey
Mar 2, 1989
No. 1
at Washington State
W 74–48
23–3 (16–1)
Friel Court Pullman, Washington
Mar 4, 1989
No. 1
at UCLA Rivalry
W 89–86
24–3 (17–1)
Pauley Pavilion Los Angeles, California
Pac-10 Tournament
Mar 10, 1989 *
(1) No. 1
vs. (8) Washington State Pac-10 Tournament Quarterfinal
W 62–54
25–3
The Forum Inglewood, California
Mar 11, 1989 *
(1) No. 1
vs. (4) Oregon State Pac-10 Tournament Semifinal
W 98–87
26–3
The Forum Inglewood, California
Mar 12, 1989 *
(1) No. 1
vs. (2) No. 12 Stanford Pac-10 tournament championship
W 73–51
27–3
The Forum Inglewood, California
NCAA Tournament
Mar 16, 1989 *
(1 W) No. 1
vs. (16 W) Robert Morris First round
W 94–60
28–3
BSU Pavilion Boise, Idaho
Mar 18, 1989 *
(1 W) No. 1
vs. Clemson Second Round
W 94–68
29–3
BSU Pavilion Boise, Idaho
Mar 23, 1989 *
(1 W) No. 1
vs. (4 W) No. 15 UNLV West Regional semifinal – Sweet Sixteen
L 67–68
29–4
McNichols Sports Arena Denver, Colorado
*Non-conference game.
# Rankings from
AP poll . (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
W=West.
NCAA basketball tournament
Seeding in brackets
[ 6]
Rankings
Ranking movementsLegend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking — = Not ranked Week Poll Pre 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Final AP 11 10 11 10 9 9 8 8 12 9 6 4 1 2 2 1 1 1 Coaches 11 — 9 10 9 9 8 7 10 7 5 3 1 2 2 1 1 1
^Coaches did not release a Week 1 poll.
Awards and honors
Team players drafted into the NBA
[ 9]
References
^ "2017-18 Men's Basketball Media Guide" . Pac-12 Conference. p. 72. Retrieved February 16, 2018 .
^ "Oklahoma Stakes No. 1 Claim, 82-80" . The Washington Post . February 13, 1989. Retrieved August 30, 2020 .
^ "Arizona Quickly Slams the Door on Robert Morris" . Los Angeles Times . March 17, 1989. Retrieved August 23, 2020 .
^ "Arizona Wins Over Clemson in Victory" . Los Angeles Times . March 19, 1989. Retrieved August 23, 2020 .
^ "No. 1 Arizona Upset On 3-Pointer at :002" . The New York Times . March 24, 1989. Retrieved August 23, 2020 .
^ "RotoWire Fantasy Football, Baseball, Basketball and More" .
^ "About Us" . Archived from the original on January 7, 2009. Retrieved April 17, 2009 .
^ "Wooden Award - Athletics" . Archived from the original on April 13, 2009. Retrieved May 7, 2009 .
^ "1989 NBA Draft on Basketballreference.com" . Archived from the original on March 17, 2010. Retrieved May 7, 2009 .
Venues Rivalries Culture & lore People Seasons NCAA national championship in bold; NCAA Final Four appearances in italics