Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

It’s heartbreak­er No. 2 by Trojans

Last shot stuns UCLA for second year in row and keeps USC’s Pac-12 title hopes alive.

- By Ben Bolch

USC 64, UCLA 63

Scanning his players from the sideline, desperate for a play that could change the arc of a story that seemed destined for an unsatisfyi­ng ending, Andy Enfield signaled what he wanted on the inbounds pass.

“It was called Hail Trojan,” the USC coach said afterward.

He was free to joke given the way it worked out.

Down by two points in a rivalry game his team had trailed nearly the entire way, Enfield wasn’t getting greedy. He wanted point guard Ethan Anderson to throw an alley-oop pass to Evan Mobley, his best player, for a dunk.

As Anderson stood along the baseline with 3.7 seconds left and no timeouts remaining Saturday afternoon at Pauley Pavilion, UCLA took that option off the table. Forward Cody Riley fought off the screen that was supposed to free Mobley, staying with his man and sending the Trojans into scramble mode.

Anderson pump-faked a pass one way, then another. He was running out of time to get the ball inbounds. Trojans guard Tahj Eaddy, marked by Jaylen Clark, the

Bruins’ best defender, faked toward the top of the key before flashing into the corner.

Anderson flung Eaddy the pass. Eaddy rose for a three-pointer over the outstretch­ed arm of Clark. It rattled into the basket with 1.4 seconds left.

It was a shot straight through the heart of the Bruins, sending the Trojans to a pulsating 64-63 victory that propped up their oncefading Pac-12 Conference title hopes.

“We cut it pretty close there,” Eaddy said after being swarmed by teammates. “I’m just thankful that it went in.”

After ending UCLA’s 18game winning streak on its home court, USC (21-6, 15-5 Pac-12) is assured of finishing no worse than second in the conference and could win it if Oregon State beats Oregon on Sunday in Corvallis.

For the Bruins, it was more of the same sad refrain. A third consecutiv­e collapse in a game that was theirs for the taking. A second unfathomab­le loss on an inbounds pass after a previous nightmaris­h finish against Stanford. A fourth consecutiv­e loss to their hated rivals, even if it did come with leading scorer Johnny Juzang sidelined with an ankle injury.

Most improbably, it was a second loss to the Trojans on a final shot in the span of a year. Jonah Mathews had the honors last March, burying the Bruins on his stepback three-pointer at Galen Center.

UCLA coach Mick Cronin lamented mostly what came before the final shot. His team lost an 11-point halftime lead and an eight-point advantage with five minutes left. The Bruins (17-8, 13-6) went into what could be described as a prevent offense, forcing tough shots late in the shot clock, and missed the front end of two one-andone situations at the freethrow line in the final 44 seconds.

Guard Jules Bernard, who missed a free throw with 11 seconds left with his team leading by two as well as a desperatio­n heave at the buzzer, apologized to his teammates in the locker room afterward.

But Cronin said those free throws were needed only as result of the egregious

defensive breakdowns and “ridiculous shots” that preceded them.

“We had three or four offensive trips that were just awful — God-awful — that resulted in a layup at the other end,” said Cronin, who noted that it was USC’s secondary options who were the biggest culprits in his team’s undoing. It didn’t matter that Mobley was held to 13 points because he received more than enough support, Eaddy and Chevez Goodwin adding 12 points apiece and Drew Peterson chipping in 10.

USC shot 51.7% in the second half and made four of 10 three-pointers after missing all six of its shots from long range in the first half.

Having squandered its 8-0 start in conference play and a one-game lead as recently as a week ago, UCLA assured itself of finishing fourth in the standings. The Bruins will play fifth-seeded Oregon State in a Pac-12 tournament quarterfin­al Thursday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, needing to quickly purge the memory of the last two weeks.

UCLA lost late leads

against Colorado, Oregon and USC in succession, potentiall­y jeopardizi­ng its NCAA tournament hopes.

“We’ve got to have a short memory — that’s kind of a phrase I’ve been using — and go into this tournament and you know, give it everything we got and then try to come out with a championsh­ip,” said Bruins guard Jaime Jaquez Jr., who led his team with 12 points but missed the front end of a one-and-one with 44 seconds left.

Given a repeat of the final sequence, many UCLA fans likely would take their chances. Clark had been a defensive menace all game, forcing Mobley into an airball in the second half, and got his hand up to contest Eaddy’s last shot.

But even that effort went astray. Cronin said Clark should have made Eaddy dribble inside the threepoint line to protect his team’s two-point lead and ensure that, at worst, the game headed to overtime.

Eaddy, who like Mathews wears No. 2, had a different take on the final play. Just like last year, it was destiny for a team surging into the

Pac-12 tournament.

“It’s funny for that to happen,” Eaddy said. “We both wear the same number. It’s funny how things come full circle like that.”

SINGER DUA LIPA REPRESENTS THE ‘DAWNING OF A NEW SUPERSTAR.’ SHE’S ALSO SOMETHING OF A MYSTERY.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? TAHJ EADDY is lifted after his three over UCLA’s Jaylen Clark, foreground, with 1.4 seconds left won it.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press TAHJ EADDY is lifted after his three over UCLA’s Jaylen Clark, foreground, with 1.4 seconds left won it.
 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? USC GUARD Tahj Eaddy drives against UCLA forward Kenneth Nwuba. In addition to hitting the winning shot, Eaddy was one of four Trojans in double figures.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press USC GUARD Tahj Eaddy drives against UCLA forward Kenneth Nwuba. In addition to hitting the winning shot, Eaddy was one of four Trojans in double figures.
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