Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Colorado victory is a missed opportunit­y for UCLA in Pac-12

- By Tarek Fattal tfattal@scng.com @tarek_fattal on Twitte

Last weekend, a USC loss earlier in the day allowed UCLA to take advantage of an opportunit­y to climb in the Pac-12 standings, which it did. The Bruins topped Arizona State in the final second to regain top spot in the conference.

The same opportunit­y presented itself Saturday after USC lost to Utah. The Bruins had the chance to create a sizable gap at the top, but weren’t able to capitalize in a 70-61 defeat to Colorado in Boulder on Saturday night.

Despite the loss, UCLA (17-6, 13-4 Pac-12) is still in first place in the conference, a half game ahead of USC. Colorado (19-7, 13-6) is now just one game back of first place.

Just two players scored

in double figures for UCLA, Johnny Juzang led the Bruins with 25 points on 7-of-12 shooting. He added five rebounds. Freshman Jaylen Clark had a careerhigh 10 points.

The Buffaloes finished the game on a 13-3 run in the final 6:20. UCLA committed 14 turnovers in the game, five of which came in that 6:20 stretch.

“Candidly, I thought we tried to play too much individual basketball down the stretch,” UCLA coach Mick Cronin said. “Therefore, we had guys out of control. That’s why we had turnovers.”

The Bruins went almost seven minutes without a field goal. Tyger Campbell converted on a 3-pointer that gave UCLA a 57-55 lead with 7:11 left. The next Bruin field goal was made by Juzang, a meaningles­s 3-pointer with 19 seconds left with the game already in hand.

The game had 14 lead changes and 11 ties. The opening half had seven ties and five lead changes.

UCLA’s first lead didn’t come until the 11-minute mark on a Juzang layup, 13-11, but it was stolen away with a 3-pointer by Colorado’s Tristan da Silva on the ensuing possession. It was a tell of how the night was going to be, especially with Pac-12 position on the line ahead of March.

UCLA took a 23-20 lead after a Clark floater, his second elusive finish of the opening half. A 3-pointer from Jules Bernard created a 26-22 lead for the Bruins — part of a 6-0 run. UCLA made 7 of 8 shots during the stretch.

Colorado forward Dallas Walton was given a technical foul after slamming the ball into the floor in reaction to a shooting foul. UCLA made four straight free throws for the largest lead of the half, 32-24. It seemed UCLA was ready to make its move before halftime, but it was Colorado that did instead — well, McKinley Wright IV, really.

Wright made four of the Buffs’ six field goal attempts in the final five minutes to pull Colorado to within one point at halftime, 35-34.

“When we had that eightpoint lead, he just said, ‘we ain’t losing on my senior night,’” Cronin said of Wright’s effort.

Wright, who became the first player in conference history to tally 1,600 points, 600 rebounds and 600 assists, had 17 of his 26 points by halftime. He shot 10 of 16 from the field with five rebounds and six assists.

“We did a bad job defending him,” Cronin said. “He’s a great player, he made a lot of tough shots.”

Tournament talk

ESPN bracketolo­gy expert Joe Lunardi was interviewe­d during Saturday night’s broadcast, and was asked about what the Pac12’s contributi­on was going to be to the NCAA Tournament.

As of Saturday night, Lunardi has USC (projected No. 5 seed), Colorado (No. 7), UCLA (No. 8), and Oregon (No. 9) as locks for the national tournament, but said Stanford’s most recent losses to Oregon and Oregon State (the Cardinal playing without injured leading scorer Oscar da Silva) has Stanford on the outside looking in. Stanford is listed on Lunardi’s “First Four Out”.

During such a wild year that’s had over 1,000 games canceled due to COVID-19, Lunardi says that’s not a huge factor in selection.

“When I look at it, I don’t look at the 1,000, I look at the 4,000 that have been played,” Lunardi said. “That’s the on only logical way to approach the selection and seeding process”

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? UCLA forward Cody Riley goes up for a shot between Colorado forward Jeriah Horne, left, and guard McKinley Wright IV during the first half of Saturday night’s Pac-12 game.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS UCLA forward Cody Riley goes up for a shot between Colorado forward Jeriah Horne, left, and guard McKinley Wright IV during the first half of Saturday night’s Pac-12 game.

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