Los Angeles Times

For Bruins, it’s different kind of March madness

UCLA turns focus to online finals, limited recruiting in aftermath of season ending early.

- By Ben Bolch

The questions will transcend who’s coming and going during this offseason of unpreceden­ted uncertaint­y.

UCLA players had more on their minds than basketball Thursday after learning their season was over upon the cancellati­on of the Pac-12 Conference and NCAA tournament­s.

“Part of them, it’s like, ‘Hey, can I even go outside, coach?’ ” said Bruins coach Mick Cronin, who advised everybody to wash their hands and stay away from large crowds amid the coronaviru­s outbreak.

It was a new March madness at the end of a season in which UCLA finished 19-12, securing second place in the Pac-12 and earning a shot at an at-large berth in the NCAA tournament. ESPN analyst Joe Lunardi projected the Bruins among the last four teams selected for the tournament, requiring a theoretica­l play-in game against North Carolina State next week in Dayton, Ohio.

While some coaches called for the official release of the tournament bracket as a reward for their players, Cronin said there were more important things to worry about such as the academic implicatio­ns of campus shutdowns and dorms being closed.

“We’ve all got to worry about academics right now,” Cronin said. “Audibles were called on how to do their finals. There’s no in-class finals, so everybody’s got to do their finals online . ... Right now, I’m worried about finishing strong academical­ly. That’s important.”

On- and off-campus recruiting was suspended until further notice, though it might not matter considerin­g California called off its high school state championsh­ips. Cronin joked that FaceTime had become his best friend.

In a brand new basketball world, the hope is that UCLA’s roster will look essentiall­y the same next season. Fifth-year seniors Prince Ali and Alex Olesinski will be gone and highly touted freshmen Daishen Nix and Jaylen Clark will arrive, but that might not be the extent of the roster churn.

Junior guard Chris Smith has to decide whether to return for one more season or make himself available for the NBA draft after becoming the Pac-12’s most improved player and the Bruins’ go-to scorer. Redshirt sophomore forwards Jalen Hill and Cody Riley face the same decision after vastly enhancing their games.

“When we have our banquet,” Cronin said, “you could give most improved to Chris Smith, Jalen Hill or Cody Riley.”

The balance of UCLA’s roster should return intact, barring transfers, providing a deep rotation that already is well acquainted with the style its coach wants heading into his second season. “I’m optimistic that we would have a great core group of guys returning next year; extremely optimistic,” Cronin said.

Nix is expected to orchestrat­e it all as a high-end point guard whose college stay likely will be short. Clark is a tenacious defender and natural scorer who should complement the returning players.

There’s a chance UCLA could add more newcomers if proposed NCAA legislatio­n that would allow immediate eligibilit­y for one-time transfers passes this spring. The Bruins will have at least one open roster spot to fill after the midseason departure of redshirt freshman forward Shareef O’Neal for Louisiana State.

UCLA hopes to hold on to the camaraderi­e that was built by a team that started the season 8-9 before finishing on an 11-3 run, the early adversity forging an ironclad resolve by season’s end.

“They became a team. They cared about each other. They weren’t a group of individual­s wearing the same jersey,” Cronin said. “They became a team in every sense of the word.”

Freshman shooting guard Jake Kyman alluded to the bond in a farewell-tothe-season tweet accompanie­d by photos of players celebratin­g and huddling, arms around one another.

“Not how I would of liked it to end,” Kyman tweeted, “but easily the best team I’ve ever been a part of and am so thankful for the knowledge and memories. Definitely was nothing short of amazing and what we accomplish­ed and did was special. Thank you seniors. I’ll be back!”

‘They became a team. They cared about each other. They weren’t a group of individual­s wearing the same jersey.’

— MICK CRONIN, on his first UCLA basketball team

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? MICK CRONIN overcame a slow start to coach the Bruins to a 19-12 mark and second place in the Pac-12.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times MICK CRONIN overcame a slow start to coach the Bruins to a 19-12 mark and second place in the Pac-12.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? CHRIS SMITH, going against Hofstra’s Jalen Ray in November, became the Bruins’ go-to scorer and the Pac-12’s most improved player. He’ll decide whether to return for another season or declare for the draft.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times CHRIS SMITH, going against Hofstra’s Jalen Ray in November, became the Bruins’ go-to scorer and the Pac-12’s most improved player. He’ll decide whether to return for another season or declare for the draft.

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