Lodi News-Sentinel

UCLA is part of a Final Four with a distinct Western flavor

- Sam Farmer

With three games remaining in the NCAA Tournament, this much is indisputab­le: college basketball can go strong to its left.

For the first time, every school in the Final Four is located not necessaril­y on the Left Coast, but west of the Mississipp­i River. Seven of the teams in the Elite Eight fell into that category.

With the exception of UCLA — and that reputation was forged in the John Wooden era — the blueblood programs are out and the new bloods are in, with Gonzaga, Baylor and blast-from-the-past Houston rounding out the Final Four.

Watching from the couch are familiar programs such as Duke, North Carolina, Kentucky, Kansas, Michigan State and Louisville. Of those schools, North Carolina, Michigan State and Kansas made the tournament, with only the Jayhawks winning a game.

“This is a renaissanc­e for West Coast basketball,” said Fox analyst Steve Lavin, a former UCLA coach. “People forget that the West Coast was the epicenter of college basketball for decades. Naturally, the results of this season will be tough to duplicate on an annual basis, but this a timely shot in the arm for college basketball on this side of the country.”

In a year when people are rolling up their sleeves for real shots in the arm, some people will point to this Final Four combinatio­n as yet another result of COVID-19 weirdness.

Said Michael Holton, a former UCLA player and assistant coach: “I think when people look at this year they’ll say, ‘What? There was no North Carolina, no Duke, no Kentucky? Oh yeah, that was that year that was crazy, it was COVID, it was this, it was that.’ I just think it’s going to be convoluted, unfortunat­ely.”

That said, he isn’t complainin­g.

“I think it’s great that Gonzaga has a chance to go undefeated from the West Coast Conference,” said Holton, a color analyst for the Portland Trail Blazers, his former NBA team. “And I’m so biased, I shouldn’t even be allowed to comment on UCLA. I mean, UCLA is playing Gonzaga. I’m in Portland, and everybody here thinks the sun rises and sets on the Oregon Ducks and Gonzaga.

“I mean no disrespect, but it’s hard for me to be an audience to the fanfare of the Ducks, and it will be until their equipment room is smaller than their trophy room.”

Phil Martelli, longtime coach of St. Joseph’s in Philadelph­ia and now an assistant coach for Michigan, which lost Tuesday to UCLA, said no one should add an asterisk to this season.

“Everybody needs to appreciate the sacrifices these kids have made,” Martelli said. “I don’t see anything where an asterisk will have to be applied. These teams that got this far, they’re going to be in that bubble for over three weeks. The kids haven’t really had that college experience. There’s no crowds to speak of. Every kid that participat­ed in college basketball this year, men’s and women’s, should be applauded.”

These are heady times for UCLA, the gutty program that has survived the improbable odyssey from the First Four to its 19th Final Four, the second-most to North Carolina’s 20. (The number is 18 according to the NCAA, which vacated the Bruins’ 1980 appearance.)

“I think UCLA and what they have done is really going to be good for the conference,” said Mike Montgomery, who coached Stanford to the Final Four in 1998. “Now kids are going to say, ‘Hey, UCLA is back. I can go there and win. I can go there and play for a national championsh­ip.’ “

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