
The FBI has asked ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ and the NCAA to pause any investigations into college basketball’s ongoing scandal until after federal agents complete their exploration into illegal recruiting.
With the NCAA temporarily stepping out of the FBI’s fact-gathering process, ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥â€™s 2017-18 season will almost surely be played without penalties. The postseason and a potential Final Four are in play.
After Friday’s Red-Blue Game, the Final Four surely entered the thoughts of any UA fan watching. Pac-12 Networks analystÌýDon MacLeanÌýsaid ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ has the best personnel he has seen since he began working for the league in 2004.
Temper your expectations at your own risk. Here are my four reactions to the game:
PJC can hold his own

Point guardÌýParker Jackson-CartwrightÌýhasn’t gotten any taller, but he looks more stout and strong, and he played a scrimmage like it was a night against UCLA at Pauley Pavilion. You’ve got to like his tenacity and example.
The UA lists PJC at 5 feet 11 inches and 170 pounds. He was listed at 5-10, 160 as a freshman. I suspect he’s close to 180 pounds. In short (sorry for the pun), PJC can hold his own more than at any time in his career. He can play for me anytime.
Time for a change
The school would do well to junk the music — “Bring 'Em Out’’ — that accompanies the team’s burst onto the court before each half. Given the ongoing fraud and conspiracy scandal, it looks (and sounds) bad when lyrics of the team’s entry music includes references strippers, prostitutes and drugs. The song says "it’s hard to yell when the barrel’s in your mouth" It’s out of place in college athletics.
Miller goes zoneÌý
Not many people noticed, butÌýSean MillerÌýimplemented a zone defense in the first half. And he almost never uses a zone defense — and only when in crisis.
But over the summer, Miller met with the Zen Master of zone defenses, Syracuse’sÌýJim Boeheim, in attempt to get a better understanding of what has been his club’s Achilles heel. Xavier shut down ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ in last year’s Sweet 16 with use of a zone defense. By working with Boeheim, it shows that Miller isn’t too stubborn to change.
T.J. or not, here comes Barcello

Freshman point guardÌýAlex BarcelloÌýwill inevitably be compared toÌýT.J. McConnell. It works for me, too, but if there had been no T.J. McConnell, Barcello still would have been impressive Friday. The fact that a 6-2 freshman had the brass to enter the dunk contest is revealing. He’s tough; he won’t be awed by the bright lights, or by a trip to Matthew Knight Arena in Oregon.