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 Thursday, February 17
Wildcats have revenge on their minds
 
Associated Press

 TUCSON, Ariz. -- The fourth-ranked Arizona Wildcats play five of their remaining seven Pac-10 games at home, beginning with Thursday night's contest with USC, the only conference team to beat them.

The teams' circumstances are far different than they were Jan. 22 in Los Angeles, when USC was one of the hottest teams in the nation and beat Arizona 80-72.

Jason Gardner
Jason Gardner has made just 7 of his last 41 field-goal attempts.

Lately, the Trojans have fallen on hard times. They've lost three in a row and four out of five and, at 13-9 overall and 6-4 in the Pac-10, are in danger of falling out of the NCAA Tournament picture.

The Wildcats (21-4, 10-1 Pac-10) aren't taking anything for granted.

"They beat us last time, and we're going to have to play hard against them," Gilbert Arenas said. "We're worried about the Pac-10 title. It's us and Stanford battling for the title."

In order for that March 9 showdown with second-ranked Stanford to mean anything, though, Arizona must keep winning. The Wildcats rolled to a pair of victories at Washington and Washington State last week and want to keep the momentum going against the Trojans Thursday and UCLA on Saturday.

Arizona coach Lute Olson said the Trojans, despite their recent struggles, present the same kinds of problems that befuddled the Wildcats in Los Angeles, mainly in the form of Brian Scalabrine and David Bluthenthal.

"They both shoot the '3' well, and they force you to spread out," Olson said. "I don't think the last game was a matter of us not playing well, but USC just shot the lights out. I think it will come down to shooting percentage again. We took care of the ball and rebounded well against them, but they just shot the ball too well."

In the USC game, Michael Wright elbowed the Trojans' Abdullah Elmagbari in the face and neck. Referees didn't see it, but later after reviewing tape of the incident, the Pac-10 reprimanded Wright, and he was placed on probation for the rest of the season.

"It was a mistake," Wright said. "I did it because I was frustrated. Our team was losing. I won't throw an elbow ever again."

The Wildcats are hoping that point guard Jason Gardner climbs out of a shooting slump that has plagued him for three weeks. Starting with Arizona's humbling 86-60 loss at LSU, Gardner has made just seven of his last 41 field-goal attempts, including 3 for 26 3-pointers.

"Everybody goes through a slump," Gardner said. "Hopefully, I will improve. I made some shots in the last game, which helped boost my confidence. ... I took some shots after practice, and that helped."

Gardner, as the team's only point guard among the seven scholarship players currently available, is crucial to Arizona's hopes for the Pac-10 title and the No. 1 seed in the West. He's needed for much more than his shooting.

"I think Jason understands that there is more to the game than just shooting the ball," Olson said. "He is our primary ball handler, and he knows how to distribute the ball. The worst thing to do is to start looking for shots when a player is in a slump.

"Jason is defending well and taking care of the ball. Jason is not attempting a lot of difficult passes, so his turnovers are going down. He is doing a good job of selecting his passes."

The Wildcats have won 25 Pac-10 home games in a row. Their last conference loss at McKale Center was to UCLA on Feb. 13, 1997.
 



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