Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alford: Shopliftin­g trio let a lot of people down

- BY BETH HARRIS

LOS ANGELES — Three UCLA freshman student-athletes detained for shopliftin­g at three high-end stores in China publicly apologized Wednesday before Bruins men’s basketball coach Steve Alford announced they were being suspended indefinite­ly.

LiAngelo Ball, Jalen Hill and Cody Riley won’t be allowed to suit up, practice or travel with the team while the university continues to sort out the circumstan­ces of last week’s incident in Hangzhou, China, Alford said during a news conference at Pauley Pavilion.

“These are good young men who have exercised an inexcusabl­e lapse of judgment, and now they have to live with that,” Alford said. “They let a lot people down in the process.”

“I’m confident that they have already begun to use this experience as a life lesson,” he added.

Ball, Hill and Riley took turns confessing to the theft and apologizin­g while also thanking President Donald Trump for intervenin­g on their behalf with his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping. The players had returned to Los Angeles on Tuesday after Chinese authoritie­s withdrew the charges against them.

“I’m sorry for stealing from the stores in China,” said Ball, the younger brother of Los Angeles Lakers rookie Lonzo Ball, who played last season at UCLA.

“I’ve learned my lesson from this big mistake and I’m a hundred percent sure I’ll never make a mistake like this again. It’s going to make me a better person from here on out.”

When it was his turn, Hill said: “I’m sorry for shopliftin­g. What I did was stupid. I don’t want to be known for this dumb mistake.”

“I hope you can forgive my stupid, childish actions,” he added.

Riley was the first to speak, and he thanked the Pac-12 Conference, several UCLA administra­tors and his teammates.

“You guys mean so much to me,” Riley said of his teammates. “I’m sorry for letting you down.”

Athletic director Dan Guerrero also spoke at the news conference, but no one took questions from a large group of media.

Alford didn’t specify what the indefinite suspension­s mean, saying only the three players would have to earn their way back onto the team. He said at some point, the trio may be permitted to join workouts, meetings and practices, but that timeline has yet to be decided.

“We will come to a resolution in short order,” Guerrero said.

Earlier Wednesday, Trump tweeted: “Do you think the three UCLA Basketball Players will say thank you President Trump? They were headed for 10 years in jail!” All three players did. “I’d like to thank President Trump and the United States government for the help that they provided us as well,” Ball said.

The players were detained in Hangzhou for questionin­g after allegation­s of shopliftin­g last week before the Bruins beat Georgia Tech in their season-opening game in Shanghai. The rest of the UCLA team returned home Saturday.

Guerrero said the incident occurred when the team was given 90 minutes of free time on Nov. 6 in Hangzhou.

“Those three visited several stores, took items from three stores and returned to the hotel,” he said, without revealing the items taken or their value.

The next day, Guerrero said, police arrived at the hotel shared by UCLA and Georgia Tech and interviewe­d both teams in an attempt to identify the culprits. Police searched the players’ personal belongings and the team bus before identifyin­g Ball, Hill and Riley, he said. No one from Georgia Tech was implicated.

 ??  ?? Cody Riley
Cody Riley
 ??  ?? LiAngelo Ball
LiAngelo Ball
 ??  ?? Jalen Hill
Jalen Hill

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