Oregon 66 Simon, Bibby steal the show Miles Simon and Mike Bibby combined to score 45points in Arizona’s win over the Ducks By Rob Moseley Spoils Reporter Third-ranked Arizona stepped into McArthur Court Saturday af ternoon and delivered a message. The subject was the Wildcats’ domination of the Pacific-10 Con ference and the rest of the nation, and the couriers were Arizona’s starting backeourt of senior Miles Simon and sophomore Mike Bibby. The pair drove the point home soundly by combining to over come a sluggish Arizona start and unimpressive play by the front court to put Oregon away. “They are a very excellent team on the perimeter," Oregon head coach Ernie Kent said. “We knew that one of those guys would step up, and both certainly did and played extremely well." Sometimes the numbers alone speak for themselves: 45 points, eight assists, 17-of-33 shooting and six of 13 from three-point range from Simon and Bibby. It was, however, Bibby’s and Si mon’s teammates, coaches and opponents that spoke volumes about the pair. “They’regood players,” Arizona center A.J. Bramlett said. “We know they’re going to hit us when we’re open if we just run the court.” Arizona head coach Lute Olson, who has coached 20 consecutive 20-win teams, had heard this mes sage before. “It shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone,” Olson said. “Both of these guys have a way of turning it up when you really need it the most. Not only in terms of how they scored, but they did a good job of providing the leadership and making sure we stayed sound with our game plan.” Oregon senior Jamar Curry was faced with the task of guarding one of the two nearly every time he was on the court, and he came away impressed. “This team knows its strengths, and they go to them,” Curry said. “They’re great players. When you’re talented and smart, that’s a big part of the game.” Talent plus smarts usually equals NBA riches, and no matter how im pressive the numbers Bibby and Si mon put up against the Ducks, they should be dwarfed come draft day when both should be lottery picks. Although just a sophomore, Bibbv is not expected to return to Tucson foranother season. One aspect required of an NBA player is the ability to put shaky performances behind him, a task both players were faced with fol lowing an 83-82 win over Arizona State on Feb. 15 and a 71-70 victo ry over Oregon State on Thursday that took a last-second prayer by Simon to win. “I said after the game [on Thurs day] that we were going to be a new team on Saturday,” Simon said, “and we came out and did it." Both players knew beating the Ducks at home would be no easy chore. “We weren’t really focused against Oregon State,” Bibby said. “But we knew ifwe wanted to win, we had to come here and play tough and play as hard as we could.” That meant taking over the game from the backcourt, something both Bibby and Simon can handle. “The guards know we’re tough to stop," Bibby said. “So I was just telling them if you got it, take it, and things will happen." Simon got it and took it early in the first half, hoisting up a three pointer that found nothing but the bottom of the net. Fortunately for Oregon fans, the ball didn’t pass through the hoop first, and the sellout crowd of more than 9,000 voices quickly reminded him of the airball each time Simon had the ball in the first half. Loss: Bibby sparked 17-6 run in first half M Continued from Page 7 the perimeter,” Smith said. “We gave them some open looks and they hit them.” Particularly when it mattered the most. The key for Oregon during its recent string of suc cesses has been its ability to maintain a five- to six minute stretch where its offense and defense are clicking together. But on Saturday, every time Ore gon started a run, it was squashed by Arizona. After going scoreless in the first four minutes, 11 seconds of the game, Oregon rattled off eight straight points to go up 8-7. Bibby answered, though, by scoring eight consecutive points, including back-to back three-pointers, sparking a 17-6 Arizona run that put the Wildcats up by 10. The Ducks cut away at the lead and were within five points, 30-25, with 2:53 left in the first half and looked to have some momentum going. But with Ore gon having to sit center Flo Hartenstein because of foul trouble, Arizona was able to work inside with lit tle resistance. Subsequently, the Wildcats scored eight points — all under the basket — to end the half up 38-29. Four of those points were by reserve forward Eu gene Edgerson on consecutive tip-ins off missed shots. "I thought it was a great job by our guys of being mentally ready to play,” said Arizona head coach Lute Olson. “This is a tough place to play and this was a real critical win. We came out and got the lead and kept the crowd under control. Every time they made a run, we seemed to answer it pretty well.” Madden scored Oregon’s first six points in the second half as the Ducks opened with an 8-2 run that brought them within three. But once again, the Wildcats had an answer — and once again it was Bibby. The sophomore point guard scored 10 points as Arizona broke the game wide open with a 17-2 run that left Oregon down by 18 with 11:03 remaining. From then on, Oregon was all but out of the game. (^Except small cones and tinies. Expires 3/9/98) campus w SUBSHOP Mon.-Fri. lOam-lOpm Sat. llam-9pm Sun. 12pm-9pm 1225 Alder 345-2434 Not valid with any other discounts or coupons. 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