Boston Herald

Juzang dreamed of this

UCLA star has Bruins defying the odds

- — Herald Wire serViCes

INDIANAPOL­IS — Every morning before school, and each night before bed, the eighth-grader would read the messages taped to his bedroom closet.

The words, and the handwritin­g, were familiar, Johnny Juzang having penned each letter to himself as an ode to his basketball ambitions.

Make a Final Four. Win a national championsh­ip. Win a title at the highest level.

It’s starting to play out as scripted, Juzang having commenced a celebrator­y jig, slipped on a commemorat­ive T-shirt and placed a freshly shorn net around his neck late Tuesday night inside Lucas Oil Stadium.

Juzang’s UCLA Bruins are going to the Final Four.

That’s not to say that the sophomore guard ever foresaw anything like this.

Even Juzang, who visualized success to push himself through hours of drudgery on the practice court and in the weight room, couldn’t have predicted the way he has carried his team on this deep NCAA Tournament run only one season after having averaged 2.9 points per game as a freshman at Kentucky.

Juzang exceeded his Kentucky season point total (82) exclusivel­y in the NCAA Tournament before halftime of the Bruins’ 51-49 victory over Michigan in the East Regional final. He has a tournament-high 108 points to go with a tournament-leading 21.6 points per game among the remaining teams.

All those points came with Juzang missing parts of two games with an ankle injury and the entire overtime against Alabama in a regional semifinal after having fouled out.

“It’s pretty surreal to be in the Final Four now,” Juzang told The Los Angeles Times by telephone Wednesday, having led the Bruins to their deepest NCAA Tournament run since 2008, “after I had written that down so many years ago.”

Being a breakout star on college basketball’s biggest stage has its privileges. UCLA legend Reggie Miller tweeted video footage of Juzang hugging teammate Cody Riley after Juzang scored 28 points during an upset of the topseeded Wolverines. Cleveland Cavaliers forward Kevin Love, a member of the Bruins’ 2008 Final Four team, tweeted his admiration.

Kentucky’s John Calipari, who spurned UCLA’s overtures for its coaching vacancy two years ago before Mick Cronin took the job, also passed along his congratula­tions on social media, telling Juzang to fulfill another of his goals and “win it all.”

The 11th-seeded Bruins (22-9) are only two victories away after having slayed the top two seeds in their region, setting up another colossal challenge against top-seeded Gonzaga (30-0) tonight in a national semifinal.

Juzang’s father, Maxie, figures to be hoarse before tipoff after having cheered his son’s team through five consecutiv­e victories, making UCLA only the second team after Virginia Commonweal­th to advance from the First Four to a Final Four.

“I’m trying to take some tea right now,” Maxie Juzang said Wednesday morning.

Johnny’s play has provided all the soothing his family needed, especially after frightenin­g everybody midway through the second half against the Wolverines. Juzang rolled his ankle after grabbing a rebound and hobbled off the court and onto a trainer’s table to have the ankle re-wrapped.

Having watched his leading scorer return only 10 days after being carried off the court because of the same bothersome ankle in a First Four game against Michigan State, Cronin figured Juzang would be back unless he was unable to walk.

“I needed him to hurry up, though,” Cronin said with a chuckle, alluding to Juzang having carried his team’s otherwise sluggish offense. “I told somebody, ‘Go get him or tell him I’m coming down there myself.’ “

Sure enough, only moments after the last piece of tape was ripped off and Juzang put his shoe back on, he pounded himself on the chest twice and re-entered the game.

Juzang is never one to take a play — or a day — off, routinely following his team’s practices and weightlift­ing sessions with a drive into the San Fernando Valley for additional work with a player developmen­t coach.

He hails from a basketball family, his father having played in high school and an uncle having made the team at Carnegie Mellon University. His uncle-in-law trumps them all in star wattage, Michael Cooper having won five NBA championsh­ips with the Lakers.

Juzang attended games at Pauley Pavilion during UCLA’s rocking Lonzo Ball season and envisioned himself similarly wowing fans when coach Steve Alford made Juzang a top recruiting priority.

But Alford’s firing midway through the 2018-19 season, combined with Juzang’s deciding to reclassify into an earlier graduating class, nudged Kentucky and Virginia into the lead among his suitors. By the time Cronin was hired and made his recruiting pitch, the Studio City Harvard-Westlake High standout was essentiall­y headed to Lexington.

That decision led to a rocky college debut, Juzang barely playing before a few promising performanc­es late in the season. Then came the pandemic that forced Juzang to reconsider what he wanted out of his experience.

Transferri­ng to UCLA seemed like the most attractive option given that it was near his home and the personal trainers that he could access during a time of heavy uncertaint­y. Juzang also liked the idea of Cronin transformi­ng him into the kind of player who could tick off those goals on the bedroom closet.

“I wasn’t thinking about the scoring at all, it just kind of happened,” Juzang said of his tournament bonanza, “but I definitely did visualize a run.”

 ?? Getty images file ?? ALL SMILES: UCLA’s Johnny Juzang, right, and Tyger Campbell celebrate after beating Michigan in the Elite Eight at Lucas Oil Stadium on Tuesday in Indianapol­is.
Getty images file ALL SMILES: UCLA’s Johnny Juzang, right, and Tyger Campbell celebrate after beating Michigan in the Elite Eight at Lucas Oil Stadium on Tuesday in Indianapol­is.

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