Los Angeles Times

UCLA women dominate USC

Onyenwere scores 19 as No. 11 Bruins earn wire- to- wire win.

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Michaela Onyenwere watched from the bench in January during UCLA’s double- overtime loss at USC. The senior forward made sure the Bruins wouldn’t suffer the same outcome Sunday.

After an ankle injury kept her out of last season’s game at Galen Center, Onyenwere led No. 11 UCLA to a wire- towire 73- 52 victory at USC on Sunday with 19 points, six rebounds and three assists.

Charisma Osborne got the Bruins ( 4- 1, 2- 1 Pac- 12 Conference) started with 13 of her 18 points in the f irst quarter, then Onyenwere delivered the knockout punch with 14 points in the third quarter as UCLA took a 12- point halftime lead and expanded it to 27.

“To come back here against your rival and get a win on their home f loor, a dominant win, it’s super, super cool,” Onyenwere said. “USC always gives a good f ight, and it’s always been a great rivalry. I’m really, really just grateful to be able to put the four letters on my chest every single day [ and] represent UCLA.”

The Bruins dominated in almost every facet as they had 22 assists on 28 baskets, including a career- high- tying six assists from Osborne, and outrebound­ed USC 4429, led by nine boards from Chantel Horvat.

USC freshman Amaya Oliver, who led the conference in rebounding with 10.7 per game entering Sunday, grabbed just one rebound.

Forward Jordan Sanders led the Trojans with 12 points and six rebounds in a reserve role, while guard Desiree Caldwell had 11 points, f ive assists and four rebounds.

Without star forward Alissa Pili, who is expected to miss significan­t time because of an undisclose­d injury, the Trojans ( 1- 3, 0- 3) missed all six of their f ieldgoal attempts in the third quarter and scored just f ive points on free throws.

“It’s moving the ball, and I think it’s timing,” USC coach Mark Trakh said. “We just gotta get back to work and work on our offenses, and I think we’ll be fine.”

UCLA’s multiple defensive looks tested the Trojans, who hadn’t spent much practice time preparing for a zone defense like the one the Bruins used to open the third quarter, Trakh said.

In a normal season, teams would have several nonconfere­nce games under their belts to work out those kinks. This season, the Trojans had just one before jumping into Pac- 12 play, in which they have lost three straight. The Bruins had two nonconfere­nce games.

Both teams are determined to learn on the f ly during their coronaviru­s- affected seasons.

“By the time we get to February and March, I think we can grow into a really good basketball team,” UCLA coach Cori Close said. “But if I’m just being candid, we’re not there yet.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States