Texarkana Gazette

UCLA strengthen­ing NCAA bid

- By John Marshall

TUCSON, Ariz.—UCLA had a difficult start to the season when three players were arrested in China on shopliftin­g charges. The Bruins had a rough stretch early in the Pac-12 schedule while laboring through a series of injuries.

They seem to be turning a corner at just the right time.

UCLA played one of its best all-around games of the season Thursday night, picking up a resume-boosting win by beating No. 13 Arizona 82-74 at one college basketball’s most difficult road venues.

“It’s huge,” said UCLA guard Aaron Holiday, who had 17 points and eight assists against the Wildcats. “We’re obviously fighting for our spot in the NCAA Tournament and it’s just a big win for us in that aspect.”

Alford had to restock his roster for the 2017-18 season after losing Lonzo Ball, TJ Leaf, Bryce Alford and Isaac Hamilton from last year’s team.

The Bruins had more holes to fill after Jalen Hill, Cody Riley and LiAngelo Ball were suspended indefinite­ly following their arrests in China for shopliftin­g. Ball left the team and the other two players had their suspension­s extended for the rest of the season.

On the court, UCLA had a few growing pains, but picked up a neutral-site win over Kentucky and won three of its first four Pac-12 games. A three-game losing streak followed, seemingly pushing the Bruins away from the NCAA Tournament bubble.

UCLA (17-7, 8-4 Pac-12) pushed its way back in the NCAA Tournament picture with Thursday night’s road win. The Bruins have won four straight and are now a game behind Arizona in the Pac-12 race.

“This is a top 20 team, they’ve been top 10, so this is huge for us,” Bruins coach Steve Alford said.

UCLA has another difficult road test on Saturday, playing at Arizona State, which knocked off Southern California Thursday night.

ON THE RISE

Texas A&M. The Aggies (16-8, 5-6 SEC) appeared to have their bubble popped after opening conference play with five straight losses. Texas A&M has played itself back into the NCAA Tournament conversati­on by winning five of its last seven games. The most recent one was huge: 81-80 at No. 8 Auburn, the Tigers’ only home loss this season. The Aggies have another shot to build their case on Saturday, facing No. 24 Kentucky.

Boise State. The first-place Broncos (20-4, 9-2 Mountain West) have been taking care of business, winning four straight and seven of the past eight. The only loss in that stretch was to Nevada, the team right behind them in the standings. Boise State has a chance to boost its lead and regular-season title chances with games against Utah State and a rematch against Nevada this weekend.

Marquette. A string of four-point losses put the Golden Eagles (1410, 5-7 Big East) precarious­ly close to bubble bursting territory. A win over Seton Hall last week, their third Quadrant 1 victory, gives them life again. Still a lot of work left to get there. Marquette has games against St. John’s and Creighton this weekend.

 ?? AP Photo/Ralph Freso ?? ■ UCLA center Thomas Welsh (40) and Arizona’s Dusan Ristic (14) wait for a rebound during the second half of an NCAA game Thursday in Tucson, Ariz. UCLA won, 82-74.
AP Photo/Ralph Freso ■ UCLA center Thomas Welsh (40) and Arizona’s Dusan Ristic (14) wait for a rebound during the second half of an NCAA game Thursday in Tucson, Ariz. UCLA won, 82-74.

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