Arizona Kept Tommy Lloyd But This Deal Raises A Bigger Question

Despite securing Tommy Lloyds continued leadership, Arizonas basketball future remains tentatively balanced, with contract stipulations acknowledging the delicate stability in college sports coaching.

Arizona got the result it needed in April when Tommy Lloyd stayed put, and that mattered more than any of the noise around it.

The Wildcats were staring at a real possibility that Lloyd, fresh off one of the strongest seasons in program history, could have been tempted by North Carolina. Instead, he signed an extension and kept building in Tucson. That alone calmed the biggest fear around the program, even if nothing about college basketball feels permanent anymore.

Lloyd’s new deal came with a twist. Along with removing the buyout if he leaves for an NBA job, Arizona also changed the reporting line so he no longer answers to athletic director Desiree Reed-Francois. He now reports directly to school president Suresh Garimella, an unusual setup that shows how far Arizona went to keep him in place.

And it was worth the effort. Lloyd has already proven he fits the job and the city, and the Wildcats’ ceiling remains high with him running things. He’s assembling another strong roster with returnees, freshmen and portal additions, and there’s every reason to think Arizona can still win plenty of games even if the style looks different from last season’s 3-loss team.

The bigger picture, though, is that no coach seems fully safe in this era. Michigan’s Dusty May, who had what looked like a comfortable situation, still walked away for the NBA. 247Sports reported that Michigan’s president said, “... among his reasons for leaving were uncertainties and pressures involving the Transfer Portal and NIL support for student athletes.”

That’s the reality Arizona is operating in, too. If a coach as successful as May can move on, then anyone can. If Lloyd keeps winning and keeps producing NBA talent, it’s fair to wonder whether the league will come calling someday, and whether he’ll eventually decide the college game isn’t the place for him.

For now, though, he’s still in Tucson, and Arizona is better off for it. The Wildcats survived the danger of success this time. If Lloyd ever does leave for the NBA, Arizona can only hope he takes a national championship with him, the way May left Michigan with one.

In Other News...

Tommy Lloyd Weighed Which Wildcats Landed In The Best Spot

Tommy Lloyd had plenty to unpack after the draft, and not just because Arizona put multiple players into the pro pipeline. Brayden Burries came off the board 10th to Milwaukee, Koa Peat went at the end of the first round, Jaden Bradley followed in the second, and Anthony DellOrso also earned a shot with Sacramento. For a program that has spent years selling itself as an NBA incubator, this was the kind of night that reminded everyone how often Arizona talent gets moved from Tucson to the league in a hurry.

Lloyd still had a few individual angles to sort through, especially with how the draft board fell and where each player might fit next. He talked through which spots looked best for different Wildcats and what those opportunities could mean as the next phase begins, including the path for undrafted Tobe Awaka, who appears set for a look in Chicago. The broader picture was encouraging for Arizona, but the most interesting part now is how many of these players can turn draft-night momentum into actual roster traction. [Read more 🡒]