Los Angeles Times

Bruins turn up the defense

They force the Golden Eagles into 18 turnovers as a late scoring run seals it.

- By Ben Bolch

UCLA 69 MARQUETTE 60

Mick Cronin was hopping mad in the game’s opening minutes, the UCLA coach repeatedly jumping on the sideline after his team had given up two offensive rebounds leading to a threepoint­er.

Into the game came Jaylen Clark and Jalen Hill, out went Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Cody Riley.

The message was clearly conveyed. It was going to take more grit to match a tough, physical opponent such as Marquette on Friday night at Pauley Pavilion.

It wasn’t long before three Bruins dove on the court chasing a loose ball. Chris Smith and Jaquez stepped in front of driving players to take charges. Jules Bernard came up with a steal that led to his own layup.

UCLA was starting to show the resolve it would need to emerge with a 69- 60 victory over the Golden Eagles that qualified as the Bruins’ most impressive of the young season.

It was the first meeting in Los Angeles between these storied programs and, given the riveting display, might be worthy of developing into an intersecti­onal rivalry.

Jaquez shrugged off late foul trouble to tie his career high with 18 points and Bernard added 15 points and seven rebounds for the Bruins ( 5- 1), who closed the game on a 13- 4 run and won in large part by playing lockdown defense and committing only seven turnovers to Marquette’s 18.

“I just wanted to come out and be myself, play aggressive, make plays for the team,” Bernard said after coming off the bench for the first time this season.

Cronin called Bernard the game’s most valuable player because of his toughness, rebounding and efficiency, noting that he took just seven shots.

“He’s becoming a very, very good player in front of our eyes,” Cronin said.

Smith, who entered the game averaging a team- high 15 points per game, didn’t log his first points until two free throws with 5: 54 left. It was part of a 7- 0 run for the Bruins that gave them a 63- 56 lead on another Smith free throw as the Bruins made a sustained effort to get him the ball down low on a night he missed all eight of his shots.

“You know, it’s late game, shots aren’t going in for us, so tried to do some things to get Chris into the post,” Cronin said on a night his team made only 41.1% of its shots and 26.1% of its three- pointers. “Get him close, tried to do some things to get a switch and get a mismatch and post him up. It worked out for us.”

Smith showed the other ways he could contribute by grabbing three offensive rebounds and saving a ball going out of bounds with a behind- the- back pass to Hill. It started a trend as Smith and Hill blocked two more shots in the final minutes.

Smith f inished with four points, seven rebounds and two steals to go with his block.

“He showed a lot of maturity tonight,” Cronin said, “because he could have hung his head and he went and got himself to the foul line got us some big points and had a huge block and got a couple of big- time rebounds down the stretch.”

Cronin also credited his players for ceasing their habit of fouling the Golden Eagles ( 4- 2) and sending them to the free- throw line. Marquette made more free throws ( 10) than f ield goals ( eight) in the second half but did not make one trip to the foul line after the undereight- minute timeout.

“Our defense got really smart late in the game,” Cronin said. “We did a great job and played intelligen­t defense in the last 7 ½ minutes.”

Guard D. J. Carton scored 18 points to lead Marquette, which could not capitalize on outrebound­ing the Bruins by six.

The Bruins endured an epic cold stretch early in the second half, missing seven consecutiv­e shots, before Bernard found Jake Kyman in the corner for an open three- pointer that gave UCLA a 47- 45 lead.

Winning on a night that his offense struggled so mightily reinforced Cronin’s belief in his team’s need to thrive in other areas to be successful.

“You’ve got to continue to improve and I think that we’re improving in certain areas, especially our defense,” Cronin said, “and that’s going to give us a chance to win a lot of games.”

 ?? Ashley Landis Associated Press ?? UCLA GUARD Johnny Juzang, left, charges into Marquette guard Koby McEwen during the second half. Juzang scored nine points on three- for- 12 shooting.
Ashley Landis Associated Press UCLA GUARD Johnny Juzang, left, charges into Marquette guard Koby McEwen during the second half. Juzang scored nine points on three- for- 12 shooting.

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