| Market | Baseline Review | Update Time | Move Indicator |
|---|---|---|---|
| SPREAD | HOU +1.5 (-112) ZONA -1.5 (-109) |
HOU +1.5 (-106) ZONA -1.5 (-112) |
JUICE SHIFT |
| TOTAL | Over 138.5 (-112) Under 138.5 (-109) |
Over 138.5 (-108) Under 138.5 (-112) |
TOTAL ADJUST |
| MONEYLINE | HOU +103 ZONA -124 |
HOU +109 ZONA -132 |
ML DIVERGE |
| Market | Baseline Review | Update Time | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spread Cover | HOU ~50.3% / ZONA ~49.7% | HOU ~49.3% / ZONA ~50.7% | +1% ZONA COVER |
| Win Probability | HOU ~47.1% / ZONA ~52.9% | HOU ~45.7% / ZONA ~54.3% | +1.4% ZONA WIN PROB |
No point spread movement; ML and juice-only activity
ZONA ML contracted from -124 to -132 (sharp buying); HOU ML lengthened from +103 to +109 (liability release)
Arizona’s Anthony Dell’Orso has scored 22 or more points in three of his last four games, transforming a late-season question mark into a genuine offensive weapon as the Wildcats enter Saturday’s Big 12 championship. The senior guard’s 26-point eruption against Iowa State on Friday night rescued Arizona from an early deficit and demonstrated the shot-making depth that separates this roster from its January form. Houston forward Chris Cenac Jr. anchors the Cougars’ interior with 12 double-digit rebounding games this season, providing the physical counterbalance to Arizona’s perimeter surge. The Wildcats and Cougars meet tonight, March 14, at 6 p.m. EDT at McKale Center with a tournament championship and NCAA Tournament seeding on the line.
| Metric | Houston Cougars | Arizona Wildcats |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 28-5 (14-4) | 31-2 (16-2) |
| Points Per Game | 77.2 (146th) | 86.4 (14th) |
| Points Allowed | 62.4 (2nd) | 68.6 (53rd) |
| Offensive Rating | 118.6 (33rd) | 120.3 (17th) |
| Defensive Rating | 95.8 (9th) | 95.6 (8th) |
| 3-Point % | 34.9% (137th) | 35.8% (82nd) |
| Defensive Rebounds/G | 23.9 (223rd) | 29.9 (2nd) |
| Turnovers/G | 8.5 (1st) | 10.9 (128th) |
| Assists/G | 14.7 (121st) | 17.2 (25th) |
| Blocks/G | 3.9 (95th) | 4.3 (56th) |
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Key Advantage
Interior Volume: Arizona generates 24.8 two-point field goals per game at 55.7% against a Houston defense that allows just 45.4% inside the arc, second nationally in opponent two-point percentage. Whether Arizona’s rim pressure can crack Houston’s top interior defense will determine if the Wildcats’ offensive efficiency translates to points on the board.
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Market Analysis
The spread sits at Arizona -1.5 (-109) with a total of 138.5, and the moneyline implies roughly 53% win probability for the Wildcats against Houston’s 47%. The narrow spread reflects Arizona’s 86.4 points per game against Houston’s 62.4 points allowed; the collision of top offense and top defense that typically compresses margin expectations.
Dell’Orso’s Surge and Arizona’s Shot-Making Depth
Arizona senior Anthony Dell’Orso has transformed his season over the past two weeks, scoring 22 points against both BYU and Houston in late February before his 26-point performance against Iowa State on Friday. The Wildcats guard averages just 8.1 points per game for the season but has shot 57.1% from three-point range over his last four contests, becoming the late-season weapon that coach Tommy Lloyd insisted would emerge. Dell’Orso’s timing could not be more consequential; Houston’s perimeter defense has held tournament opponents to 32.4% shooting, and Emanuel Sharp’s 29.4% from three over the last two games suggests the Cougars’ own deep shooting has cooled at the wrong moment.
The Wildcats’ offensive diversity creates problems that single-game defensive schemes struggle to contain. Arizona’s 17.2 assists per game reflect genuine ball movement, and the Wildcats’ 42.8 total rebounds per game, third nationally, generate second-chance opportunities even when initial attempts fail. Houston’s 36.7 rebounds per game is a workable figure against most opponents, but represents a six-board deficit against Arizona’s length that the Cougars must address through positioning rather than size.
Houston’s Turnover Discipline and Cenac’s Interior Presence
Houston’s 8.5 turnovers per game is the best mark in Division I, a ball-security foundation that has allowed the Cougars to survive offensive cold spells that would sink less disciplined teams. The Cougars commit nearly two and a half fewer turnovers per game than Arizona, generating extra possessions that compensate for their lower shooting volume. In a championship environment where every possession carries weight, that discipline becomes a genuine competitive advantage that can neutralize Arizona’s efficiency edge.
Freshman Kingston Flemings has been named second-team All-American by The Sporting News, the first freshman in Houston history to earn that status, and his 19-point tournament average demonstrates big-game reliability unusual for a first-year player. Flemings’ 17 points in the February meeting against Arizona led all Cougars scorers, and his ability to create against Arizona’s perimeter defense will determine whether Houston can generate enough offense to support their defensive identity.
