Arizona Wildcats Outlast BYU in a Physical 75–68 Win

Wildcats Kharchenkov putting up a three

The Arizona Wildcats walked into McKale Center on Wednesday night knowing they needed a response. After dropping two of their last three, they weren’t just looking for a win. They needed a performance that reestablished who they are. They delivered exactly that, grinding out a 75–68 victory over No. 23 BYU in a matchup that felt like March basketball from the opening tip.

Arizona wasted no time asserting itself. The Wildcats built a 42–35 halftime lead behind crisp ball movement, steady shot‑making, and a defensive effort that forced BYU into tough looks. Every time the Cougars tried to string together momentum, Arizona answered with poise.

Wildcats Hold Off BYU’s Push

BYU didn’t fold. The Cougars matched Arizona bucket for bucket in the second half, with both teams scoring 33 after the break. BYU’s guards kept attacking, and the Cougars briefly threatened to flip the game’s rhythm with a series of strong drives and timely threes. But the Wildcats never lost their grip on the lead.

Arizona’s ability to withstand those runs defined the night. When BYU trimmed the lead to a single possession, the Wildcats didn’t flinch. They went right back to their strength inside and stayed calm with the clock winding down. Ivan Kharchenkov came up huge in that stretch, knocking down a tough fadeaway and then throwing down a momentum‑shifting dunk that sent the arena into a roar, giving Arizona the breathing room it needed.

Key Plays That Sealed It

With under a minute left, BYU still had a chance. But Arizona’s defense tightened, forcing a pair of contested misses. The Cougars’ final three‑point attempt from Robert Wright III fell short, and the Wildcats secured the rebound that effectively ended the night. Moments later, the horn sounded, and Arizona had its 23rd win of the season, one that felt as important as any on its résumé.

Wildcats’ Balanced Attack Makes the Difference

What separated Arizona wasn’t one star performance. It was balanced. The Wildcats spread the scoring, moved the ball with purpose, and controlled the glass in key stretches. Their ability to generate high‑percentage looks while limiting BYU’s second‑chance opportunities proved decisive.

Even without two impact freshmen, Koa Peat and Dwayne Aristode, the Wildcats found enough offense from their rotation to keep BYU chasing. Brayden Burries stepped into a larger role and delivered, knocking down a critical three in the second half that halted a BYU surge.

BYU’s Effort Falls Just Short

To their credit, the Cougars didn’t back down. Kennard Davis Jr. and AJ Dybantsa hit timely shots, and BYU’s interior play kept them within striking distance. But the Cougars never led in the second half, and every push they made was met by a Wildcats answer.

BYU’s late‑game execution simply couldn’t match Arizona’s discipline. A missed free throw, a missed three, and a final defensive rebound by the Wildcats told the story of a team that did just enough to win on the road, or in this case, protect home court.

What This Win Means for the Wildcats

For Arizona, this wasn’t just another February win. It was a reminder of what makes the Wildcats dangerous: depth, toughness, and the ability to close out tight games. At 23–2, they remain firmly in the national conversation.

This victory over a ranked BYU squad reinforces their standing as one of the most complete teams in the country. The Wildcats didn’t dominate wire‑to‑wire, but they controlled the moments that mattered. And in college basketball, that’s often the difference between a good team and a great one.