San Diego Union-Tribune

BRUINS SEEKING MORE MAGIC

- BY BEN BOLCH Bolch writes for the L.A. Times.

The magic stretched deep into the night, accompanyi­ng UCLA from a comeback win completed after midnight on John R. Wooden Drive through a 75-minute journey into the heart of Hoosier basketball country.

At the end of the trip early Friday, the Bruins gathered in their hotel lobby around a giant NCAA Tournament bracket.

Senior guard Chris Smith, accompanyi­ng his teammates despite having been lost for the season with a knee injury, was given the honor of affixing a white sticker reading “UCLA” onto the line opposite Brigham Young in the first round of the East Region.

“Yeeeeaaaah­hhh!” the players cheered with gusto, nobody caring that it was 3:05 a.m. EDT.

After gutting his way through all 45 minutes of the First Four game to score a career-high 27 points in the 86-80 overtime triumph over Michigan State, guard Jaime Jaquez Jr. fielded a congratula­tory text message from Lorenzo MataReal, himself once a fearless Bruin.

“Yeah, I got a lot of love and support after that game,” Jaquez said after finally

enjoying a few hours of sleep.

It was madness the Bruins could fully endorse after a March that had been filled with heartache. It also stirred the soul of fans who had been deprived of their NCAA Tournament fix when the event was canceled a year ago, UCLA’s epic rally inside Mackey Arena generating a record average of three million viewers for this round on TBS.

“It was the best First Four game in history,” coach Mick Cronin said after his first NCAA Tournament victory with the Bruins.

UCLA’s tour of historic Indiana basketball venues now moves to Hinkle Fieldhouse, home of the climactic scene in the basketball movie “Hoosiers.” Coach Norman Dale’s tape measure won’t be needed to gauge how much Jaquez and the 11th-seeded Bruins (18-9) want to sustain what they hope will become a fairy-tale run against the sixth-seeded Cougars (20-6) tonight.

“I’m definitely prepared to play all 40 minutes if necessary, 45, whatever it takes to win,” Jaquez said.

The Bruins spent Friday assessing which body parts were sorest and what to do about them. Cronin said he was hopeful that sophomore guard Johnny Juzang could play tonight after having been carried off the court with a sprained right ankle in overtime against the Spartans. In a promising sign, Juzang was able to hobble around in celebratio­n with his teammates after they rallied from five points down in the final 1½ minutes of regulation.

Given that the Bruins were confined to one floor of their hotel equipped only with showers, the team tried to assemble a makeshift cold tub for Jaquez to soak his weary limbs.

“We got to check some old ‘Animal House’ videos, some way maybe to try to somehow turn something into a cold tub so we can get Jaime an ice bath,” Cronin said. “Maybe we get a big garbage can that he can sit and take it up there or something. And I’m being serious, by the way. It’s funny, but I am being serious.”

If nothing else, the victory over the Spartans soothed a psyche that had been wounded by four consecutiv­e defeats entering the NCAA Tournament, all via second-half collapses. Cronin told his team it had to be the aggressor after falling behind by as many as 14 points in the first half and 11 at the game’s midpoint.

“I told the guys at halftime, ‘This isn’t us,’ ” Cronin said. “‘If we lose, we’ve got to lose our way, OK? Just worry about playing our way.’ ”

It will likely take a stronger start-to-finish effort to beat BYU, a steady, veteranlad­en team that nearly knocked off top-seeded Gonzaga in the West Coast Conference Tournament championsh­ip. Three of the Cougars’ losses came to the Bulldogs. They split December games against a pair of No. 6 seeds in this tournament, losing by 26 to USC before defeating San Diego State.

UCLA won’t need any more lengthy bus rides after making it to the NCAA Tournament’s central hub. Everything is now within walking distance, more magic within the Bruins’ grasp.

“The job’s not finished,” Jaquez said. “We’ve got more games to play, more experience­s to have.”

 ?? GREGORY SHAMUS GETTY IMAGES ?? Jaime Jaquez Jr. (4) of UCLA goes up for two of his career-high 27 points in Thursday’s First Four game.
GREGORY SHAMUS GETTY IMAGES Jaime Jaquez Jr. (4) of UCLA goes up for two of his career-high 27 points in Thursday’s First Four game.

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