Albuquerque Journal

No. 3 seed UCLA pulls away late for victory

- JOURNAL STAFF AND WIRES

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — UCLA raced out for layups, dropped in 3-pointers, piled up the points. The Bruins are the nation’s top-scoring team, so no surprise there.

The defense? That still could use a little work.

UCLA raced out to a big lead and held on through numerous defensive lapses, pulling away late for a 97-80 victory over scrappy Kent State on Friday night in the NCAA Tournament South Region.

“We were obviously very efficient on offense and at times were efficient on defense, just had some lapses there,” said UCLA coach Steve Alford, whose postseason experience has been forgettabl­e as a No. 3 seed. He lost to a No. 14 as a player at Indiana (vs. Cleveland State), as coach at Iowa (vs. Northweste­rn State), and as coach at New Mexico, whose opening-round loss to Harvard in 2013 remains one of the most disappoint­ing defeats in school history.

Alford’s Lobos beat Montana in 2010 as a No. 3 seed, but lost to Washington in the next round.

Bryce Alford, UCLA senior guard and La Cueva graduate, had a quiet night with six points, no assists and no turnovers.

On Friday, UCLA (30-4) jumped out to a 14-point lead in the opening minutes, only to have its defensive issues rise up again. The Bruins had numerous breakdowns and let Kent State claw back into it by halftime, eventually stretching the lead midway through the second half.

TJ Leaf scored 23 points and Thomas Welsh 16 for UCLA. Aaron Holliday added 15 points and 11 assists for the Bruins, who face No. 6 seed Cincinnati in the second round on Sunday

in what should be a pressure-packed and entertaini­ng game.

“If you lose, you’re done until next year, so that makes it a lot more pressure on you,” Leaf said.

Kent State (22-14) appeared shell shocked in its first NCAA Tournament since 2008, falling into a deep early hole. The Golden Flashes, who beat the top three seeds in the MAC Tournament, showed a bit of resiliency by fighting back, keeping the mighty Bruins close until late.

Jaylin Walker had 23 points and Jimmy Hall Jr. added 20 for Kent State.

“Couldn’t be more proud of our guys in terms of how we fought the entire game and during the season we had this year,” Kent State coach Rob Senderoff said.

On a day of upsets in the NCAA Tournament — namely over No. 6 seeds — Kent State was hoping to pull off the biggest one of the tournament. The Golden Flashes know a bit about NCAA upsets; this is the 15th anniversar­y of the 2002 Kent State team that reached the Elite Eight.

The Bruins appeared as if they weren’t going to give them much of a shot, dominating at both ends.

UCLA held Kent State to 1-of-11 shooting to open and raced out to a 16-2 lead behind Lonzo Ball and Leaf.

Ball had 10 points in the first 10 minutes and Leaf had 16 by halftime as the Bruins stretched the lead to 17.

Once the Golden Flashes found their bearings, they started to fight back, whittling away at UCLA’s lead.

By the time halftime arrived, they were back within striking distance, down 47-39.

“Where we weren’t poised is when we got up 16 in the first half and kind of let up,” Steve Alford said. “Our shot selection wasn’t the best.”

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