This is a pretty good summation of UofA, UO & ASU going into the conference tourney, IMO:
Work left to do:
Arizona [17-12 (8-9), RPI: 26, SOS: 2] The Wildcats went 3-7 down the stretch of Pac-10 play to finish under .500, which is not a great place to be. They got Nic Wise back this week, but still couldn't handle Oregon on the road. The Cats went 0-6 against the RPI Top 25 but were 10-5 against the rest of the Top 100, which is a huge number of games and wins in that category. Assuming they beat the Beavers in the 7-10 game in the Pac-10 tourney, they probably will be fine, even at 8-10, although beating Stanford would really make things a lot easier on everyone. They also should get some consideration for injuries. Nonetheless, let's drop them down a level until things clarify themselves. Their best nonconference win looked like it was over Texas A&M, but that is looking dicier by the day. It might be better to focus on the road wins at UNLV and Houston.
Oregon [17-12 (8-9), RPI: 57, SOS: 23] The Ducks did what they needed to do, sweeping the Arizona schools to get to .500 in the league and finish ahead of Arizona after sweeping the Wildcats. The Ducks remain 1-7 against the top four teams in the league, which isn't a great indicator of any upside, but the profile is improving. They'll get another chance at an "up" win in league play against Washington State in the Pac-10 quarters. Oregon needs to win that game. Kansas State and Utah were their best nonconference wins, but the Ducks also lost at Saint Mary's, Nebraska and Oakland.
Arizona State [18-11 (8-9), RPI: 71, SOS: 63] The Sun Devils missed a chance to KO Oregon, but got the back end of the trip against the bottom-feeding Beavers to finish at .500 in league play. They have several very good wins over Xavier, Stanford, USC and a sweep of Arizona, but the RPI/SOS combo suggests that the Sun Devils need a quarterfinal win over USC in the Pac-10 tourney to feel good about their chances.