Los Angeles Times

O’Neal decides to leave UCLA

The son of Shaquille O’Neal became a bit player after having heart surgery 13 months ago.

- By Ben Bolch

CORVALLIS, Ore. — It was after midnight Monday that Shareef O’Neal tweeted an image of Bart Simpson lying in bed and staring at the ceiling, blinking as if in deep contemplat­ion.

The social media missive was sent out several hours after the UCLA redshirt freshman received the dreaded Did Not Play — Coach’s Decision designatio­n in the Bruins’ home victory over California.

It was the fifth time this season and second time in Pac-12 Conference play that O’Neal, the son of Lakers legend and Basketball Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal, did not play in a game. He had become a bit player during his first college season after undergoing surgery to correct a heart defect in December 2018, logging sporadic minutes and making a negligible impact outside of an impressive showing against Notre Dame.

O’Neal provided some insight into the impetus for his tweet on Wednesday when he announced that he was leaving UCLA after half a season.

“My parents have always taught me that transparen­cy is the best form of communicat­ion,” O’Neal wrote on Twitter. “It is in this spirit that I announced today my departure from the University of California Los Angeles.”

O’Neal thanked coaches Steve Alford and Mick Cronin as well as the UCLA medical staff that diagnosed and treated the heart defect that forced him to sit out all of last season. “A part of my heart will always be at UCLA figurative­ly and literally,” O’Neal wrote. “I’m looking forward to the next chapter, wherever that may be.”

The 6-foot-9, 220-pound O’Neal was a very different player stylistica­lly from his overpoweri­ng father, relying more on finesse and a face-up game. He averaged 2.2 points and 2.9 rebounds in 10.2 minutes per game for the Bruins (9-9 overall, 2-3 Pac-12), who will face Oregon State (12-6, 2-4) on Thursday at Gill Coliseum.

O’Neal is expected to remain in school at UCLA through the end of the winter quarter.

Cronin said in a statement that O’Neal had informed him of his decision Tuesday during a meeting with the coach.

“We fully support his decision,” Cronin said, “and are wishing him all the best.”

O’Neal’s departure should create additional playing time for redshirt senior forward Alex Olesinski while opening another hole in a roster that was already one scholarshi­p player short of capacity.

In his final appearance as a Bruin, O’Neal scored one point and grabbed three rebounds in seven minutes against Stanford last week. Three days later, Cronin explained that O’Neal did not play against Cal because he wasn’t ready to face the Golden Bears’ brawny big men and still had trouble staying in front of his counterpar­ts on the perimeter.

O’Neal’s best game had come in December against Notre Dame, when he scored eight points and grabbed 11 rebounds while playing energetic defense in 17 minutes. He acknowledg­ed afterward how much improvemen­t he needed in his game.

O’Neal had been one of the most coveted prospects on the West Coast while leading Santa Monica Crossroads High to a state championsh­ip in 2018.

He originally committed to Arizona before switching his allegiance and signing with UCLA. He was preparing to start his college career when he was diagnosed with an anomalous coronary artery, a congenital heart defect that caused an artery to grow in the wrong place and required open-heart surgery to repair.

TONIGHT

AT OREGON STATE When: 8. Where: Gill Coliseum, Corvallis, Ore. On the air: TV: FS1; Radio: 570. Update: Cronin lamented his inability to simulate Oregon State forward Tres Tinkle in practice because of his players’ inability to replicate the star senior’s ample skill set. Tinkle is among the leading candidates for Pac-12 player of the year during a season in which he’s averaging 19.7 points and 6.9 rebounds while making 42.4% of his threepoint­ers.

 ?? Robert Franklin AP ??
Robert Franklin AP

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