
Imago
Arizona head coach Lute Olson and his assistant Miles Simon right argue a call against their team with official Mike Eades during the first half of play at the McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona, Saturday, January 27, 2007. North Carolina defeated the Wild Cats 92-64. Robert Willett/Raleigh News & Observer/MCT Tucson AZ USA EDITORIAL USE ONLY Copyright: xx 1039917 RobertxWillettx krtphotoslive241314

Imago
Arizona head coach Lute Olson and his assistant Miles Simon right argue a call against their team with official Mike Eades during the first half of play at the McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona, Saturday, January 27, 2007. North Carolina defeated the Wild Cats 92-64. Robert Willett/Raleigh News & Observer/MCT Tucson AZ USA EDITORIAL USE ONLY Copyright: xx 1039917 RobertxWillettx krtphotoslive241314
It was Tommy Lloyd’s finest hour as a professional coach.
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Yet as his young Arizona squad celebrated the Wildcats’ dominant Elite Eight win over Purdue and the program’s first Final Four berth since 2001, the fifth-year head coach had someone else on his mind.
Someone more ethereal in legend.
“You fans deserve this! This I know!,” an emotional Lloyd told the crowd at halfcourt during his postgame interview.
“There’s a good looking guy with white hair looking down on us right now that’s happy!”
And with that, the well-traveled Wildcat nation on hand at San Jose’s SAP Arena breathed a palpable sigh of relief the only way they know how. Closure after 25 years.
“Luuute!”
Robert Luther Olson. Known in the college basketball universe as a hall-of-fame coach, national champion and master developer of talent and men.
In Tucson, he’s simply known as “Luuute!”
THE MYTH, THE LEGEND
Lute Olson didn’t need Arizona. The Wildcats needed Lute Olson.
The man who never served as an assistant was already the winningest coach in Iowa history when he first stepped foot on campus in Tucson.
Olson saw potential in Arizona, despite the wreckage that was the 1983 Wildcats. Previous head coach Ben Lindsey posted a program-worst 4-24 record a year prior, then successfully sued the school for $200,000, claiming wrongful termination.
Perhaps it was the year-round sunshine, the area’s untapped recruiting pipeline, or a never-before-disclosed affinity for cacti that drew the Silver Fox to the desert.
The rest is hoops history with 23 consecutive NCAA tournaments, including a quartet of Final Four appearances, along with 589 career wins, a 1997 national title, and a McKale Center floor that bears the names of himself and his late wife Bobbi.
Before he passed away in 2020 at the age of 85, the standards that Olson imposed on the program are still celebrated and expected of future Wildcats.
LUTE OLSON … BIG TEN LEGEND?
Olson’s success at Arizona wasn’t random. It was the implementation of a blueprint.

Despite being separated by a decade, both Arizona and Iowa experienced historical arcs that are eerily similar during the pre-, active- and post-Olson eras at each school.
As with the Wildcats, Olson quickly revived a Hawkeye program that was mired in its fourth-straight losing season in 1973-74, with a meh 8-16 record.
Iowa would go 165-93 under Olson, win the 1978-79 Big Ten title en route to making five consecutive March Madness appearances. That includes earning a slot in the 1980 Final Four, the last time the Hawkeyes reached such hallowed late-March ground.
Translation? Olson was the last coach to lead both Iowa and Arizona to the Final Four. Until 2026, when Tommy Lloyd stepped up to the crowd at the Elite Eight and said the words that Arizona fans have been waiting to hear for 25 years.

PRAISE THE LLOYD
While Lute Olson held only head-coaching roles, Tommy Lloyd was a career assistant prior to Arizona. In fact, Lloyd joined Mark Few’s Gonzaga program in 2000-01…Lute’s last Final Four run.
Big-time programs came calling to hire Lloyd, but Gonzaga held him in such high esteem that the Bulldog brass guaranteed him the top job upon Few’s retirement. There was only one job that could lure him out of Spokane, Lloyd admitted when hired at Arizona.
“This is the only place I would ever leave Gonzaga to come be the head coach at.”
This was a task to restore Olson’s groundwork. And so, 43 years and one day after Arizona hired Olson, Lloyd had officially brought the Wildcats full circle to the Final Four.

THE LANDING
Only one city has ever mattered to Arizona basketball outside of Tucson. And that’s Indianapolis.
It’s where Arizona and Olson concluded their ‘97 championship run by becoming the only school to beat three No. 1 seeds in the same March Madness tourney.
It should come as no cosmic surprise that the 2026 NCAA Men’s tourney championship is being held in Indy.
A formidable top-seeded Michigan is the first hurdle for Arizona. But if you ask Tommy Lloyd, the good-looking guy with the white hair will have the best seats in the house.