Unbeatens No. 14 Arizona, No. 10 Creighton to clash in Maui final

Nov 14, 2022; Omaha, Nebraska, USA; Creighton Bluejays guard Ryan Nembhard (2) looks to pass during the first half against the Holy Cross Crusaders at CHI Health Center Omaha. Mandatory Credit: Dylan Widger-USA TODAY Sports

Credit: Dylan Widger-USA TODAY Sports

No. 10 Creighton will look to win its first Maui Invitational title when it faces No. 14 Arizona in the final on Wednesday evening in Lahaina, Hawaii.

The BlueJays (6-0) are coming off a 90-87 win over No. 9 Arkansas in the semifinals on Tuesday after opening the tournament with a 76-65 win over No. 21 Texas Tech on Monday.

Creighton is making its first-ever appearance in the Maui Invitational.

Arizona (5-0), which advanced to the title game with an 87-70 victory over No. 17 San Diego State on Tuesday, won the tournament in 2014 and 2000 and lost in the final in 1997 and 1993.

Creighton played its best game of the season against the Razorbacks, whose four victories had been by an average of 21.3 points.

But the Bluejays were too prolific for Arkansas, as Ryan Nembhard scored 25 points to lead four Creighton scorers in double figures. The other three were Ryan Kalkbrenner (21 points), Baylor Scheierman (20) and Trey Alexander (12).

The Bluejays shot 58.5 percent from the field (31 of 53) while Arkansas shot 47.1 percent (33 of 70).

“We’re going to be a little tired tomorrow, but hopefully our energy and enthusiasm for being in the championship can trump some of that fatigue,” Creighton coach Greg McDermott said Tuesday night.

While Creighton had won its first five games by an average of 23.2 points, the Bluejays didn’t secure their most recent win until making 5 of 6 free-throw attempts in the final 16 seconds.

“It was just an incredible college basketball game,” McDermott said. “There were a lot of haymakers thrown out there in 40 minutes. [The Razorbacks’] poise for as young as they are is really incredible.”

Arizona’s semifinal win over San Diego State was far less suspenseful than that of Creighton. After the Aztecs took a 42-40 lead with 17:20 remaining, the Wildcats went on a 15-3 run to take a 55-45 lead on Courtney Ramey’s 3-pointer with 12:52 to go.

Kerr Kriisa’s layup gave Arizona an 80-59 lead with 4:08 remaining.

“I thought in the second half we finally settled in and we started cutting a little bit off the ball,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd said. “I think that loosened some things up a little bit. We started actually setting and holding our ball screen, because they’re really good at fighting over ball screens.”

The Wildcats had five scorers finish in double figures in their semifinal win.

Ramey had 21 points by going 8 for 12 from the field, including 5-for-5 from 3-point range, to go along with six rebounds. Kriisa added 21 points, five assists and four rebounds, while Azuolas Tubelis added 14 points and Oumar Ballo grabbed a game-high nine rebounds.

Arizona went 34 for 58 (58.6 percent) from the floor, outrebounded the Aztecs 41-30, and forced them to shoot 3 for 19 (15.8 percent) from 3-point range.

The Wildcats’ next game after the Maui Invitational will be Dec. 1 at Utah, and Creighton’s next matchup will be the same day at No. 4 Texas.

–Field Level Media

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