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TUCSON, Ariz. — Anthony Dell’Orso scored a season-high 22 points after coming off the bench, Ivan Kharchenkov added 18 and No. 4 Arizona bounced back from its first two losses of the season by beating No. 23 BYU 75-68 on Wednesday night.
Arizona (24-2, 11-2 Big 12) started the season with 23 consecutive wins, spending nine straight weeks as the nation’s No. 1 team before losing back-to-back games to No. 9 Kansas and No. 16 Texas Tech.
Dell’Orso, a 6-foot-6 Australian, helped the Wildcats get back in the win column after shooting 8-of-15 from the field, including 4-of-8 on 3-pointers.
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Arizona played without starting forward Koa Peat and backup guard Dwayne Aristode. The school stated Peat will also miss Saturday’s game against No. 2 Houston because of a muscle strain in his lower leg area. He’ll be re-evaluated next week.
Aristode missed his second straight game with an illness.
“Gritty win by our guys,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd stated. “We knew it was going to be tough. Obviously we’re going through injuries right now. It’s just that point of the season where sometimes you hit a little struggle, and if you don’t embrace it, you’re not built for it. So our guys have done a good job embracing it.”
BYU (19-7, 7-6) was led by freshman star AJ Dybantsa, who finished with 35 points on 13-of-28 shooting. The 6-foot-9 forward topped 30 points for the sixth time this season.
The Cougars were playing their first game without starting guard Richie Saunders, who tore his ACL in a 90-86 overtime victory against Colorado on Saturday. He’s out for the rest of the season.
Arizona never trailed in the second half and slowly pulled away, taking a 66-50 lead on Dell’Orso’s 3-pointer with 6:40 left. BYU cut the deficit 73-68 with 1:05 remaining but couldn’t get any closer.
“I knew it wasn’t going to be aesthetically pleasing every second of the game, but you know, to be able to kind of control the game in that second half — I wish we were able to close it out a little better, but if you watch college basketball it seems to be a theme,” Lloyd stated.
“And to withstand a player like AJ, who had 35 points easy, and come out on top was a great effort by our guys.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.