2019–20 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season
Sports season
The 2019–20 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2019 followed by the 2019–20 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November 2019. The conference schedule began in December 2019. This was the eighth season under the Pac–12 Conference name and the 60th since the conference was established under its current charter as the Athletic Association of Western Universities in 1959. Including the history of the Pacific Coast Conference , which operated from 1915 to 1959 and is considered by the Pac-12 as a part of its own history, this is the Pac-12's 104th season of basketball.[ 1]
The Pac-12 tournament was scheduled from March 11–14, 2020 at the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada . On March 12, the Pac-12 cancelled the tournament prior to its second round due to the COVID-19 pandemic .[ 2]
Pre-season
Recruiting classes
Rankings
Team
ESPN[ 3]
Rivals[ 4]
Scout/247 Sports[ 5]
Signees
Arizona
No. 6
No. 11
No. 5
4
Arizona State
-
No. 21
No. 37
6
California
-
No. 76
No. 48
3
Colorado
-
-
-
1
Oregon
No. 15
No. 15
No. 17
6
Oregon State
-
No. 47
No. 69
6
Stanford
-
No. 56
No. 43
3
UCLA
-
No. 72
No. 91
2
USC
No. 8
No. 5
No. 10
6
Utah
-
No. 45
No. 40
4
Washington
No. 5
No. 7
No. 8
4
Washington State
-
No. 71
4
Preseason watchlists
Below is a table of notable preseason watch lists.
Preseason All-American teams
ESPN
CBS [ 15]
USA
AP [ 16]
Blue Ribbon
Athlon Sports
NBC Sports [ 17]
Street & Smith's
Sporting News
Sports Illustrated
Payton Pritchard
RV
Isaiah Stewart
2nd
RV
2nd
McKinley Wright IV
RV
Preseason polls
Source:[ 30]
Men's Basketball Media Preseason Poll
Place
Team
Points
First place votes
1.
Oregon
291 Pts
9
2.
Colorado
288 Pts
9
3.
Washington
273 Pts
6
4.
Arizona
263 Pts
2
5.
USC
198 Pts
1
6.
Arizona State
187 Pts
--
7.
Oregon State
161 Pts
--
8.
UCLA
148 Pts
--
9.
Utah
131 Pts
--
10.
Stanford
84 Pts
--
11.
Washington State
47 Pts
--
12.
California
35 Pts
--
Early season tournaments
Pac-12 Preseason All-Conference
First Team
[ 42]
Name
School
Pos.
Yr.
Ht., Wt.
Hometown (Last School)
Tyler Bey
Colorado
G/F
Jr.
6−7, 206
Las Vegas, Nev. (Middlebrooks Academy)
C. J. Elleby
Washington State
F
So.
6−6, 200
Seattle, Wash. (Cleveland HS)
Nico Mannion
Arizona
G
Fr.
6−3, 190
Siena, Italy (Pinnacle HS)
Remy Martin
Arizona State
G
Jr.
6−0, 170
Chatsworth, Cali. (Sierra Canyon HS)
Jaden McDaniels
Washington
F
Fr.
6−9, 200
Seattle, Wash. (Federal HS)
Payton Pritchard
Oregon
G
Sr.
6−2, 190
West Linn, Ore. (West Linn HS)
Nick Rakocevic
USC
F
Sr.
6−11, 225
Chicago, Ill. (St. Joseph's)
Isaiah Stewart
Washington
F
Fr.
6−9, 240
Rochester, N.Y. (La Lumiere)
Tres Tinkle
Oregon State
F
Sr.
6−8, 220
Missoula, Mont. (Hellgate HS)
McKinley Wright IV
Colorado
G
Jr.
6−0, 195
North Robbinsdale, Minn. (Champlin Park)
Second Team
[ 42]
Name
School
Pos.
Yr.
Ht., Wt.
Hometown (Last School)
Timmy Allen
Utah
F
So.
6−6, 210
Mesa, Ariz. (Red Mountain HS)
N'Faly Dante
Oregon
C
Fr.
6−11, 230
Bamako, Mali (Sunrise Christian Academy)
Daejon Davis
Stanford
G
Jr.
6−3, 185
Seattle, Wash. (Garfield HS)
Josh Green
Arizona
G
Fr.
6−6, 210
Sydney, Australia (IMG Academy)
Ethan Thompson
Oregon State
G
Jr.
6−5, 190
Los Angeles, Calif. (Bishop Montgomery HS)
Honorable Mention
October 8, 2019 – Pac-12 Men's Basketball Media Day, Pac-12 Networks Studios, San Francisco, Calif.
Midseason watchlists
Below is a table of notable midseason watch lists.
Final watchlists
Below is a table of notable year end watch lists.
Regular season
The Schedule will be released in late September. Before the season, it was announced that for the seventh consecutive season, all regular season conference games and conference tournament games would be broadcast nationally by CBS Sports, FOX Sports, ESPN Inc. family of networks including ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNU, and the Pac-12 Network.
Records against other conferences
2019–20 records against non-conference foes:[ 45]
Regular season
Record against ranked non-conference opponents
This is a list of games against ranked opponents only (Rankings from the AP Poll):
Date
Visitor
Home
Site
Significance
Score
Conference record
November 9
No. 16 Baylor
Washington†
Alaska Airlines Center • Anchorage, AK
Armed Forces Classic
W 67– 64
1–0
November 12
No. 13 Memphis
No. 14 Oregon†
Moda Center • Portland, OR
Phil Knight Invitational
W 82– 74
2–0
November 21
No. 1 Duke
California†
Madison Square Garden • New York City, NY
2K Sports Classic
L 52– 87
2–1
November 22
No. 22 Texas
California†
Madison Square Garden • New York City, NY
2K Sports Classic
L 45– 62
2–2
November 24
No. 7 Virginia
Arizona State†
Mohegan Sun Arena • Uncasville, CT
Hall of Fame Tip Off
L 45– 48
2–3
November 27
No. 3 Michigan State
UCLA†
Lahaina Civic Center • Lahaina, HI
Maui Invitational
L 62– 75
2–4
November 27
No. 13 Seton Hall
No. 11 Oregon†
Imperial Arena • Nassau, Bahamas
Battle 4 Atlantis
W 71– 69
3–4
November 28
No. 8 Gonzaga
No. 11 Oregon†
Imperial Arena • Nassau, Bahamas
Battle 4 Atlantis
L 72– 73 OT
3–5
November 29
No. 6 North Carolina
No. 11 Oregon†
Imperial Arena • Nassau, Bahamas
Battle 4 Atlantis
L 76– 78
3–6
December 7
No. 12 Arizona
No. 18 Baylor
Ferrell Center • Waco, TX
L 59– 63
3–7
December 7
No. 20 Colorado
No. 2 Kansas
Allen Fieldhouse • Lawrence, KS
L 58– 72
3–8
December 8
No. 9 Gonzaga
No. 22 Washington
Alaska Airlines Arena • Seattle, WA
L 76– 83
3–9
December 14
No. 10 Oregon
No. 5 Michigan
Crisler Center • Ann Arbor, MI
W 71– 70 OT
4–9
December 14
No. 6 Gonzaga
No. 15 Arizona
McKale Center • Tucson, AZ
L 80– 84
4–10
December 18
No. 6 Kentucky
Utah†
T-Mobile Arena • Las Vegas, NV
W 69– 66
5–10
December 21
No. 13 Dayton
Colorado†
United Center • Chicago, IL
Chicago Legends
W 78– 76 OT
6–10
December 21
No. 25 San Diego State
Utah†
Staples Center • Los Angeles, CA
Air Force Reserve Basketball Hall of Fame Classic
L 52– 80
6–11
December 29
No. 5 Kansas
Stanford
Maples Pavilion • Stanford, CA
L 56– 72
6–12
Team rankings are reflective of AP poll when the game was played, not current or final ranking
† denotes game was played on neutral site
Conference schedule
This table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.[ 46]
Arizona
ASU
California
Colorado
Oregon
OSU
Stanford
UCLA
USC
Utah
Washington
WSU
vs. Arizona
–
1–1
0–1
0–1
2–0
1–1
0–1
2–0
1–1
0–1
1–1
0–2
vs. Arizona State
1–1
–
0–1
1–0
1–1
0–2
0–1
1–1
1–1
0–1
1–1
1–1
vs. California
1–0
1–0
–
1–1
2–0
1–1
1–1
1–0
1–0
1–1
1–1
0–2
vs. Colorado
1–0
0–1
1–1
–
1–1
1–1
1–1
2–0
0–2
1–1
0–1
0–1
vs. Oregon
0–2
1–1
0–2
1–1
–
1–1
1–1
0–1
0–1
0–2
0–1
1–0
vs. Oregon State
1–1
2–0
1–1
1–1
1–1
–
0–2
1–0
1–0
1–1
1–0
1–0
vs. Stanford
1–0
1–0
1–1
1–1
1–1
2–0
–
0–1
1–0
1–1
0–2
0–2
vs. UCLA
0–2
1–1
0–1
0–2
1–0
0–1
1–0
–
2–0
0–2
0–2
1–1
vs. USC
1–1
1–1
0–1
2–0
1–0
0–1
0–1
0–2
–
1–1
1–1
0–2
vs. Utah
1–0
1–0
1–1
1–1
2–0
1–1
1–1
2–0
1–1
–
0–1
0–1
vs. Washington
1–1
1–1
1–1
1–0
1–0
0–1
2–0
2–0
1–1
1–0
–
2–0
vs. Washington State
2–0
1–1
2–0
1–0
0–1
0–1
2–0
1–1
2–0
1–0
0–2
–
Total
10–8
11–7
7–11
10–8
13–5
7–11
9–9
12–6
11–7
7–11
5–13
6-12
Points scored
Team
For
Against
Difference
Arizona
2,368
2,020
348
Arizona State
2,288
2,184
104
California
1,960
2,152
-192
Colorado
2,200
1,975
225
Oregon
2,352
2,069
283
Oregon State
2,136
2,028
108
Stanford
2,172
1,921
251
UCLA
2,153
2,079
74
USC
2,179
2,046
133
Utah
2,130
2,109
21
Washington
2,189
2,049
140
Washington State
2,153
2,161
-8
Through March 10, 2020 [ 47]
Rankings
Improvement in ranking
Drop in ranking
RV
Received votes but were not ranked in Top 25
NV
No votes received
Pre
Wk 2
Wk 3
Wk 4
Wk 5
Wk 6
Wk 7
Wk 8
Wk 9
Wk 10
Wk 11
Wk 12
Wk 13
Wk 14
Wk 15
Wk 16
Wk 17
Wk 18
Wk 19
Final
Arizona
AP
21
19
14
14
12
15
16
24
25
24
RV
22
RV
23
RV
24
RV
RV
RV
C
17
17
14
14
11
14
17
24
24
24
RV
21
RV
23
RV
21
24
RV
RV
Arizona State
AP
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
RV
NV
C
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
NV
NV
California
AP
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
C
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
Colorado
AP
RV
25
23
21
20
24
RV
RV
RV
25
20
23
20
24
16
18
21
RV
RV
C
RV
RV
25
24
21
23
RV
RV
RV
RV
21
RV
21
24
15
17
20
RV
NV
Oregon
AP
15
14
11
11
13
10
8
6
4
9
8
12
11
14
17
14
14
13
13
C
14
14
11
10
14
13
10
7
6
9
8
13
12
15
18
16
16
13
13
Oregon State
AP
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
C
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
Stanford
AP
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
NV
NV
RV
RV
NV
RV
NV
NV
NV
RV
NV
C
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
RV
RV
NV
NV
25
RV
RV
RV
NV
NV
NV
RV
NV
UCLA
AP
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
RV
C
RV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
USC
AP
RV
NV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
NV
C
RV
RV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
RV
RV
Utah
AP
NV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
C
NV
NV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
Washington
AP
RV
20
25
23
22
RV
22
21
RV
RV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
C
RV
RV
24
22
23
25
22
20
RV
RV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
Washington State
AP
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
C
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
NV
Head coaches
Coaching changes
On December 31, 2018, UCLA fired head coach Steve Alford after 5½ seasons and named assistant coach Murry Bartow interim head coach for the remainder of the season.[ 48] On April 9, 2019, Cincinnati head coach Mick Cronin was named the new head coach of the Bruins.[ 49]
On March 14, 2019, Washington State fired head coach Ernie Kent after 5 seasons.[ 50] On March 27, San Francisco head coach Kyle Smith was named the new head coach of the Cougars.[ 51]
On March 24, 2019, California fired head coach Wyking Jones after 2 seasons.[ 52] On March 29, the Golden Bears hired former Georgia head coach Mark Fox for the head coaching job.[ 53]
Coaches
Note: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season. Overall and Pac-12 records are from time at current school.[ 54]
Notes:
Overall and Pac-12 records, conference titles, etc. are from time at current school and are through the end the 2018–19 season.
NCAA tournament appearances are from time at current school only.
NCAA Final Fours and Championship include time at other schools
Post season
Pac-12 tournament
The conference tournament was scheduled for March 11–14, 2020, at the T-Mobile Arena, Paradise, NV. The top four teams had a bye on the first day. Teams were seeded by conference record, with ties broken by record between the tied teams followed by record against the regular-season champion, if necessary. On March 12, the Pac 12 announced the tournament would be canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic .[ 2]
First round Wednesday, March 11
Quarterfinals Thursday, March 12
Semifinals Friday, March 13
Championship Saturday, March 14
1
#13 Oregon
8
Oregon State
8
Oregon State
71
9
Utah
69
4
USC
5
Arizona
5
Arizona
77
12
Washington
70
2
UCLA
10
California
7
Stanford
51
10
California
63
3
Arizona State
11
Washington State
6
Colorado
68
11
Washington State
82
* denotes overtime period
NCAA tournament
Number of teams from the conference were selected to participate:
Seed
Region
School
First Four
First round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
Championship
N/A
–
–
–
–
–
–
Bids
W-L (%):
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
TOTAL: 0–0 (–)
National Invitation Tournament
Number of teams from the conference were selected to participate:
Seed
Bracket
School
First round
Second round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
−
−
−
−
−
Bid
W-L (%):
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
0–0 (–)
TOTAL: 0–0 (–)
Index to colors and formatting
Pac-12 member won
Pac-12 member lost
Awards and honors
Players of the Week
Throughout the conference regular season, the Pac-12 offices named one or two players of the week each Monday.[ 55]
Week
Player of the Week
School
Freshman of the Week
School
Ref.
Nov. 11
Tres Tinkle
Oregon State
Zeke Nnaji
Arizona
[ 56]
Nov. 18
Nick Rakocevic
USC
Zeke Nnaji (2)
Arizona
[ 57]
Nov. 25
Onyeka Okongwu
USC
Onyeka Okongwu
USC
[ 58]
Dec. 2
Remy Martin
Arizona State
Nico Mannion
Arizona
[ 59]
Dec. 9
Timmy Allen
Utah
Isaiah Stewart
Washington
[ 60]
Dec. 16
Payton Pritchard
Oregon
Onyeka Okongwu (2)
USC
[ 61]
Dec. 23
Timmy Allen (2)
Utah
Isaiah Stewart (2)
Washington
[ 62]
Dec. 30
Chris Duarte
Oregon
Isaiah Stewart (3)
Washington
[ 63]
Jan. 6
McKinley Wright IV
Colorado
Isaiah Stewart (4)
Washington
[ 64]
Jan. 13
Matt Bradley
California
Tyrell Terry
Stanford
[ 65]
Jan. 20
C. J. Elleby
Washington State
Zeke Nnaji (3)
Arizona
[ 66]
Jan. 27
Chris Duarte (2)
Oregon
Rylan Jones
Utah
[ 67]
Feb. 3
Oscar da Silva
Stanford
Jaime Jaquez Jr.
UCLA
[ 68]
Feb. 10
C. J. Elleby (2)
Washington State
Branden Carlson
Utah
[ 69]
Feb. 17
Remy Martin (2)
Arizona State
Zeke Nnaji (4)
Arizona
[ 70]
Feb. 24
Payton Pritchard (2)
Oregon
Tyger Campbell
UCLA
[ 71]
Mar. 2
Matt Bradley (2)
California
Tyrell Terry (2)
Stanford
[ 72]
Mar. 9
Both Gach
Utah
Jaden McDaniels
Washington
[ 73]
Totals per School
[ 74]
School
Total
Arizona
5
Utah
5
Washington
5
Oregon
4
USC
4
Stanford
3
Arizona State
2
California
2
UCLA
2
Washington State
2
Colorado
1
Oregon State
1
All-Americans
All-District
The United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) named the following from the Pac-12 to their All-District Teams:[ 75]
District VIII
All-District Team
District IX
Player of the Year
All-District Team
Conference awards
Voting was by conference coaches.
Individual awards
[ 76]
Tyler Bey
Pac-12 individual awards
Award
Recipient(s)
Player of The Year
Payton Pritchard , Sr., Oregon
Coach of the Year
Mick Cronin , UCLA
Defensive Player of The Year
Tyler Bey , G/F, Colorado
Freshman of The Year
Zeke Nnaji , Fr., Arizona
Scholar-Athlete of the Year
Stone Gettings, Sr., Arizona
Most Improved Player of The Year
Chris Smith , Jr., UCLA
Sixth Man of The Year
Alonzo Verge Jr. , Jr., Arizona State
All-Pac-12
First Team
[ 77]
Name
School
Pos.
Yr.
Ht., Wt.
Hometown (Last School)
CJ Elleby
Washington State
F
So.
6−6, 200
Seattle, WA (Cleveland High School)
Remy Martin †
Arizona State
G
Jr.
6−0, 170
Chatsworth, CA (Sierra Canyon High School)
Zeke Nnaji
Arizona
F
Fr.
6−11, 240
Hopkins, MN (Hopkins High School)
Onyeka Okongwu
USC
F
Fr.
6−9, 245
Chino Hills, Ca (Chino Hills High School)
Payton Pritchard ‡
Oregon
G
Sr.
6−2, 190
West Linn, OR (West Linn High School)
Oscar da Silva
Stanford
F
Jr.
6−9, 225
Munich, Germany (Ludwig Gymnasium)
Chris Smith
UCLA
G
Jr.
6−9, 215
Chicago, IL (Huntington Prep)
Isaiah Stewart
Washington
F
Fr.
6−9, 250
Rochester, NY (La Lumiere)
Tres Tinkle †††
Oregon State
F
Sr.
6−8, 220
Missoula, MT (Hellgate High School)
McKinley Wright IV ††
Colorado
G
Jr.
6−0, 195
North Robbinsdale, MN (Champlin Park)
‡ Pac-12 Player of the Year
††† three-time All-Pac-12 First Team honoree
†† two-time All-Pac-12 First Team honoree
† two-time All-Pac-12 honoree
Second Team
[ 78]
Honorable Mention
Chris Duarte (ORE, G)
Tyrell Terry (STAN, G)
Alonzo Verge Jr. (ASU, G)
All-Freshman Team
[ 79]
Name
School
Pos.
Ht., Wt.
Nico Mannion
Arizona
G
6−3, 190
Zeke Nnaji‡
Arizona
F
6−11, 240
Onyeka Okongwu
USC
F
6−9, 245
Isiah Stewart
Washington
F
6−9, 250
Tyrell Terry
Stanford
G
6−2, 160
‡ Pac-12 Freshman of the Year
Honorable Mention
All-Defensive Team
[ 80]
Name
School
Pos.
Yr.
Ht., Wt.
Tyler Bey‡
Colorado
G/F
Jr.
6−7, 215
Kylor Kelley ††
Oregon State
F
Sr.
7−0, 215
Jonah Mathews
USC
G
Sr.
6−3, 205
Bryce Wills
Stanford
G
So.
6−6, 195
McKinley Wright IV
Colorado
G
Jr.
6−0, 195
‡Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year
†† two-time Pac-12 All-Defensive Team honoree
Honorable Mention
Chris Duarte (ORE, G)
Jalen Hill (UCLA, F)
Jervae Robinson (WSU, G)
Dylan Smith (ARIZ, G).
All-Academic team
The Pac-12 moved to seasonal Academic Honor Rolls, discontinuing sport-by-sport teams, starting in 2019-20 [ 81]
Name
School
Pos.
Ht., Wt.
GPA
Major
Stone Gettings‡
Arizona
F
6−9, 240
4.0
Accounting
Grant Fogerty
Arizona State
G
6−9, 240
Economics
Mickey Mitchell
Arizona State
F
6−7, 225
Liberal Studies
Jacob Orender
California
G
5−11, 180
Master of Education, Cultural Studies of Sport in Education
Aidan McQuade
Colorado
G
5−11, 180
Integrative Physiology
Frank Ryder
Colorado
F
6−10, 235
Economics
Zach Reichle
Oregon State
G
6−5, 200
Business Information Systems
Ethan Thompson
Oregon State
G
6−5, 195
Digital Communication Arts
Daniel Begovich
Stanford
G
6−5, 205
Undeclared
Sam Beskind
Stanford
G
6−4, 190
Undeclared
Oscar da Silva
Stanford
F
6−9, 230
Biology
Keenan Fitzmorris
Stanford
C
7−0, 230
Undeclared
Lukas Kisunas
Stanford
F
6−10, 260
Undeclared
Kodye Pugh
Stanford
F
6−8, 205
Film & Media Studies
Isaac White
Stanford
G
6−2, 180
Sociology
Bryce Wills
Stanford
G
6−6, 205
Undeclared
Alex Olesinski
UCLA
F
6−10, 225
Education
Russell Stong
UCLA
G
6−3, 190
Mechanical Engineering
Riley Battin
Utah
F
6−9, 230
Business Administration
Brooks King
Utah
G
6−3, 170
Finance
Marc Reininger
Utah
F
6−9, 230
Mechanical Engineering
Jason Crandall
Washington
G
6−0, 160
Business Administration Marketing
Jonah Geron
Washington
F
6−6, 200
Pre-Major
Travis Rice
Washington
G
6−2, 185
Communication
Aljaz Kunc
Washington State
F
6−8, 220
Business
Jeff Pollard
Washington State
F
6−9, 240
Business Administration
‡ indicates player was Pac-12 Scholar-Athlete of the Year
†† two-time Pac-12 All-Academic honoree
††† three-time Pac-12 All-Academic honoree
Home game attendance
[ 47]
Team
Stadium
Capacity
Game 1
Game 2
Game 3
Game 4
Game 5
Game 6
Game 7
Game 8
Game 9
Game 10
Game 11
Game 12
Game 13
Game 14
Game 15
Game 16
Game 17
Game 18
Total
Average
% of Capacity
Arizona
McKale Center
14,644
12,960
13,780
12,755
13,161
12,828
12,943
13,256
14,644 †
14,644 †
13,549
14,279
13,816
14,644 †
13,555
14,644 †
13,052
13,604
232,114
13,654
93.24%
Arizona State
Desert Financial Arena
14,100
7,496
7,472
7,685
6,889
9,067
9,395
8,795
9,479
9,608
13,500†
7,708
9,628
12,951
9,688
9,829
8,829
148,019
9,251
65.61%
California
Haas Pavilion
11,858
3,780
3,423
4,115
2,242
3,063
3,211
5,734
4,317
3,953
4,660
9,168†
6,117
6,322
6,291
6,046
5,134
6,420
83,996
4,941
41.67%
Colorado
Coors Events Center
11,064
7,713
5,904
6,170
6,169
6,570
6,082
6,753
10,770
7,309
8,017
7,864
9,521
6,656
10,930
10,027
11,214 †
127,669
7,979
72.12%
Oregon
Matthew Knight Arena
12,364
6,779
7,260
6,017
8,095
6,599
5,803
6,764
6,771
10,113
9,213
7,497
9,309
9,301
9,275
8,542
10,098
7,651
10,862†
145,949
8,108
65.58%
Oregon State
Gill Coliseum
9,604
3,422
6,173
3,553
3,670
3,765
3,946
4,364
4,828
4,911
4,073
6,526†
4,118
4,953
3,718
4,545
65,565
4,438
46.21%
Stanford
Maples Pavilion
7,233
2,930
2,756
2,558
3,491
2,173
2,502
3,298
3,303
6,582
3,691
5,328
3,526
2,820
5,523
3,312
4,839
2,978
7,123†
68,733
3,819
52.79%
UCLA
Pauley Pavilion
13,800
6,265
6,235
6,601
4,427
4,836
4,801
5,243
6,418
13,659†
5,148
5,970
5,566
4,497
5,125
8,014
9,626
11,567
113,998
6,706
48.59%
USC
Galen Center
10,258
3,021
2,720
2,210
2,139
3,625
4,275
2,871
4,312
5,017
4,478
5,736
4,765
4,057
4,121
4,786
7,622†
65,755
4,110
40.06%
Utah
Jon M. Huntsman Center
15,000
9,926
12,760
10,546
11,565
9,888
9,579
13,104†
9,396
9,807
10,049
10,766
9,815
9,765
10,886
137,852
10,561
70.41%
Washington
Alaska Airlines Arena
10,000
7,480
8,072
8,370
8,537
7,178
7,419
9,268†
7,760
9,027
8,774
8,207
9,268†
9,123
9,066
8,622
8,873
9,131
144,175
8,481
84.81%
Washington State
Beasley Coliseum
11,671
2,810
2,704
2,204
1,222
1,995
1,987
2,037
2,122
2,256
2,825
3,082
10,380†
2,811
4,032
4,866
2,860
3,618
53,811
3,165
27.12%
Total
11,800
1,398,636
7,064
59.86%
Bold – At or Exceed capacity
†Season High
Notes
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Future teams (from 2026–27) Championships & awards Conference challenges Seasons