Los Angeles Times

Okongwu is feeling the defensive pressure

USC’s star freshman has struggled as opponents focus on shutting him down.

- By Ryan Kartje

Twelve minutes had already ticked away Saturday before Onyeka Okongwu caught a pass on the Pauley Pavilion baseline and lifted up for his first shot of the night.

The star freshman had been USC’s offensive centerpiec­e all season, pacing the team with an impressive 17 points per game. But a week earlier, Washington’s zone had limited him with pressure in the paint, and now, UCLA was replicatin­g that aggressive defensive approach in man. They clogged the lane and fronted him in the post, keeping him from touching the ball.

Okongwu drew two quick fouls, minimizing his effectiven­ess against the Bruins. When he finally took that shot along the baseline, it soared well over the rim. The UCLA student section roared with an immediate “AIRBALL!” chant.

The freshman would shoot just two more times and finish with just four points, a season low and just the second time he was kept in single digits all season.

The Trojans ultimately didn’t need a big game from Okongwu to down the Bruins, as other scorers seized the reins. Seniors Nick Rakocevic and Jonah Matthews combined for 33 points, while freshman point guard Ethan Anderson carried USC as its floor general early on, adding 14 in the first half.

Their performanc­es proved, in part, that the Trojans could stay afloat without their top freshman playing at his best. But as the Trojans return this week to Galen Center, where it’ll open its home Pac-12 Conference slate against Cal and

Stanford, getting Okongwu back on track certainly couldn’t hurt USC and its consistent­ly inconsiste­nt offense.

USC coach Andy Enfield sees little cause for concern, even as Okongwu has contribute­d just 14 combined points over his last two games. Prior to that, against Washington State, Okongwu scored 27 in one of his best performanc­es of the season.

“He’s very even keel,” Enfield said Wednesday. “He plays as hard as he can. He’s got a great motor, and he’s a team player. He doesn’t care how many points he scores. He won three state championsh­ips in high school. No one cared how many points he averaged. He’s a winner.”

But his last two games, Okongwu has been less effective, raising the question of whether other Pac-12 teams could replicate what UCLA and Washington did to limit him.

Cal (8-8, 2-1) doesn’t have the same size and manpower underneath to exactly follow that blueprint. Where UCLA had three starters over 6 feet 9, Cal doesn’t have one. But the Bears’ slow, halfcourt offense under new coach Mark Fox could throw Okongwu off his rhythm early, especially if they can force him into foul trouble like the Bruins did.

“I didn’t really have enough time to be effective,” Okongwu said of Saturday’s win.

The more pressing concern comes this Saturday, when Stanford and its league-best defense visits USC. The Cardinal have forced turnovers on nearly 25% of their possession­s this season, a better rate than all but 11 teams in college basketball. Not to mention they have a potential AllPac-12 center in Oscar da Silva to square up with Okongwu.

A return home should help the freshman — and the rest of the Trojans — get back to form. USC has played just two true home games since Thanksgivi­ng but still managed quite well on the road, with four road victories already, after scoring just two all of last season.

“We feel great about our team’s toughness and our defense, how we’ve been able to go on the road and defend at a high level,” Enfield said.

But it’s the offense that remains a question mark. The easy answer, as USC starts its first Pac-12 home stand, is to get the ball to its leading scorer.

“We’re going to need [Okongwu] down the line,” Rakocevic said. “He’s a great player.”

TONIGHT

VS. CALIFORNIA When: 7:30 Where: Galen Center. On the air: TV: Pac-12 Networks; Radio: 790. Update: Cal looked like one of the worst teams in the conference through December and early January, but swept the Washington schools last weekend. USC has played just two games at Galen Center since Thanksgivi­ng, so the Trojans will gladly welcome this twogame home-stand. The Trojans will need Onyeka Okongwu to bounce back after a quiet, two-game stretch in which he scored just 14 total.

 ?? Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times ?? USC FRESHMAN Onyeka Okongwu has scored only 14 points in his last two games.
Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times USC FRESHMAN Onyeka Okongwu has scored only 14 points in his last two games.

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