No. 9 Arizona beats Washington after extended break

Arizona hadn't played since Dec. 18

Ben Mathurin scored 27 points, Christian Koloko added 22 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 9 Arizona returned from an extended break to beat Washington 95-79 on Monday night.

The Wildcats (12-1, 2-0 Pac-12) moved the ball well offensively in their first game in 16 days, shooting 55% and finishing with 28 assists on 33 made shots.

Kerr Kriisa finished with 21 points and Arizona went 12 for 25 from 3 for its best start since opening the 2015-16 season 13-1.

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The Wildcats were a bit shaky at taking care of the ball for the second straight game, though, with 21 turnovers that Washington converted into 25 points and allowed them to hang around despite struggling from the perimeter.

Washington (5-6, 0-1) had played two games since Nov. 27 because of COVID-19 issues before Monday, including its own pause that led to the postponement of a Dec. 2 game at Arizona.

Terrell Brown Jr. had a nice night against his former team, scoring 28 points in the arena where he played last season. Emmitt Matthews Jr. added 16 points, but the rest of the Huskies had a hard time finding the mark, finishing 7 for 24 from the 3-point arc.

Arizona hadn't played since its first loss of the season, 77-73 at No. 18 Tennessee on Dec. 18. The Wildcats were supposed to play No. 7 USC and No. 5 UCLA last week, but those were postponed due to COVID-19 issues with both programs.

Arizona guard Dalen Terry (4) shoots a three-point basket against Washington during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Tucson, Ariz., Monday, Jan. 3, 2022.  (Rebecca Sasnett/Arizona Daily Star via AP)

The time off didn't seem to bother the shooting form of the nation's top-scoring team. Arizona had a good offensive flow going early, getting out in transition and working the ball around Washington's zone for open looks. The Wildcats used a 13-0 run to go up 24-10 and kept making shots, including Mathurin's highlight-reel windmill dunk in transition.

Arizona shot 17 of 28 and made eight 3-pointers in the first half.

The one shaky area: turnovers. The Wildcats had 17 in the loss to Tennessee, in large part because of the Vols' relentless pressure.

The 10 first-half turnovers against Washington were mostly self-inflicted, many on passes into congested areas. The Huskies scored 17 points off turnovers to stay within 49-41 at halftime.

Arizona continued to throw careless passes that were easily picked off and didn't shoot quite as well in the second half, allowing Washington to linger. Matthews hit a corner 3-pointer off an offensive rebound to pull the Huskies within 72-65, but that was the closest they'd get.

Koloko dunked over Matthews for a three-point play on an alley-oop from Mathurin, then Mathurin made it 85-72 with a 3-pointer from the wing with 4 1/2 minutes left.

BIG PICTURE

Washington created some problems for the Wildcats with quick hands on defense, but had another shy shooting performance in a season that's been filled with them.

Arizona was superb at working the ball around to its shooters again. The Wildcats just need to stop giving the ball to the other team.

UP NEXT

Washington: Plays at Utah on Thursday.

Arizona: At rival Arizona State on Saturday.

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