ARIZONA BASKETBALL

Arizona basketball: Allonzo Trier among ESPN’s top-25 players

Aug 25, 2016, 7:54 PM | Updated: 7:56 pm

Arizona's Allonzo Trier, left, drives against Gonzaga's Domantas Sabonis during the first half of a...

Arizona's Allonzo Trier, left, drives against Gonzaga's Domantas Sabonis during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Dec. 5, 2015, in Spokane, Wash. (AP Photo/Young Kwak)

(AP Photo/Young Kwak)

Sean Miller’s 2016 recruiting class looks impressive even with McDonald’s All-American Terrance Ferguson’s decision to play pro ball in Australia rather than report to Tucson for a year.

But perhaps the Wildcats’ biggest victory came in the return of guard Allonzo Trier for his sophomore season.

ESPN’s John Gasaway certainly believes so. He called Trier the 24th-best player in the nation heading into the 2016-17 season.

The 6-foot-6 wing did his part as one of three preferred options on offense, alongside Ryan Anderson and Gabe York, and in that role, Trier hit his shots from both sides of the arc and took commendably good care of the ball. He is more than ready for the scoring responsibilities that will come his way, now that Anderson and York have both departed.

Trier averaged 14.8 points, 3.3 rebounds and 1.1 assists as a freshman while shooting 47 percent overall and 36 percent from three-point range. His effectiveness shooting decently from three and very well at the rim was only more impressive considering his ability to shoot 5.4 free throws per game and make 79 percent.

In short, he was efficient and used his possessions well despite not dominating the ball.

The effectiveness in that role and the low-turnover rate will be important again considering he’ll be splitting the opportunities with freshmen Kobi Simmons, Rawle Alkins and Lauri Markkanen and returning players like Ray Smith, Kadeem Allen, Parker Jackson-Cartwright and Dusan Ristic.

Defensively, Trier also took steps forward, especially in the 2015-16 postseason.

Putting that together, there’s a good chance he will only improve across the board despite Arizona rolling out a younger, maybe even more talented team compared to a year ago.

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Arizona Basketball

Caleb Love and KJ Lewis were invited to the G League Elite Camp....

Nick Borgia

Arizona’s Caleb Love and KJ Lewis invited to G League Elite Camp, per report

NBA draft prospects Caleb Love and KJ Lewis, who played at Arizona, were invited to the NBA's G League Elite Camp, according to a source.

10 hours ago

Tyon Grant-Foster backs down a defender...

Arizona Sports

GCU’s Tyon Grant-Foster, 2 Arizona Wildcats invited to 2024 NBA Draft Combine

GCU's Tyon Grant-Foster and Arizona's Pelle Larsson and Keshad Johnson were among the prospects invited Friday to the 2024 NBA Draft Combine.

1 day ago

Caleb Love...

Kevin Zimmerman

Caleb Love left off early entry list, 3 other Arizona Wildcats eligible for 2024 NBA Draft

Pelle Larsson, K.J. Lewis and Jaden Bradley were the Arizona players on the early entry list for the 2024 NBA Draft. Caleb Love was not.

4 days ago

Tobe Awaka #11 of the Tennessee Volunteers...

Arizona Sports

Tennessee big man transfer Tobe Awaka lands with Arizona

The Arizona Wildcats are adding former Tennessee big man Tobe Awaka through the transfer portal, he told On3's Joe Tipton.

5 days ago

Dennis Evans...

Arizona Sports

Grand Canyon basketball lands Louisville transfer, former 4-star recruit Dennis Evans

Dennis Evans, a 7-foot transfer from Louisville, announced his commitment to Grand Canyon men's basketball on social media Friday.

8 days ago

Trey Townsend of Oakland...

Arizona Sports

Trey Townsend transfers to Arizona after NCAA Tournament run with Oakland

Trey Townsend will transfer from Oakland to Arizona. His commitment fills a hole at power forward for the Wildcats.

10 days ago

Arizona basketball: Allonzo Trier among ESPN’s top-25 players