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UA routs WSU

By The Associated Press
Arizona Daily Wildcat,
February 14, 2000
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Associated Press

PULLMAN, Wash.-Arizona had the answers inside and outside against Washington State.

The Wildcats had 7-foot-1 junior center Loren Woods clogging the inside, forcing Washington State to let fly from the outside. But too many shots clanged off the rim and No. 7 Arizona rolled to a 73-50 victory Saturday night.

"We had practiced on defending the perimeter. They're good 3-point shooters," said Woods, who recently tied an NCAA record with 14 blocked shots in a game.

He had five Saturday night.

Washington State made six-of-22 3-pointers in the game, and shot just 34 percent overall, in losing its 12th straight game. Arizona has won 30 straight against Washington State, the longest winning streak in the nation among conference opponents.

Woods scored 10 points and grabbed four rebounds, but it was fear of his blocking ability that dictated the game.

"He keeps the ball up high. He's like a 10-foot guy out there," Washington State coach Paul Graham said. "We tell our guys when the shot clock goes down, they should take it inside.

"But Woods is back there waiting for it," Graham said.

Freshman guard Gilbert Arenas matched his season high with 24 points for Arizona (21-4 overall, 10-1 in Pacific-10 Conference).

Washington State (5-15, 0-11) has not won since beating Portland State on Dec. 20. This was their worst home loss since an 86-62 defeat by Arizona in 1990.

The Cougars had little chance of breaking the losing streak Saturday, as Arizona opened the game with a 3-point basket by Luke Walton and never trailed.

The undersized Cougars, respectful of 7-foot-1 Arizona center Loren Woods, hesitated to take the ball inside. But they also failed to connect from outside, and Woods still ended up with five blocks.

Washington State has no players taller than 6-foot-8 Chris Crosby.

Michael Wright scored 19 points and grabbed eight rebounds for Arizona. Crosby led Washington State with 14 points.

Washington State made just eight-of-33 field goals in the first half for 24 percent, while the Wildcats were shooting 58 percent.

"You look at our inside percentage today, with 15 out of 26 from the three inside guys," said Arizona coach Lute Olson, referring to Walton, Woods and Michael Wright. "That is credited to the perimeter people, for getting it to where we could score."


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