Los Angeles Times

Bruins can’t keep up:

UCLA gets pounded on the boards by athletic Oregon.

- By Zach Helfand zach.helfand@latimes.com Twitter: @zhelfand

EUGENE, Ore. — UCLA did not have much hope remaining with about two minutes left against Oregon on Saturday. Jordan Bell extinguish­ed any that might have lingered.

A Ducks player drove into the lane and three UCLA defenders moved to cover him. Nobody saw Bell. He sneaked up the baseline, soared and slammed in a rebound. He flexed and yelled.

No one had come within several feet of Bell, so it was an apt close to UCLA’s 86-72 loss. Oregon’s athleticis­m was too much, UCLA’s defense too shaky and the rebounding margin too wide.

The Ducks outrebound­ed UCLA, 42-32, the Bruins’ biggest deficit all season. Eighteen of Oregon’s rebounds were on the offensive boards. UCLA gave up 17 second-chance points.

“We just got killed on the glass,” UCLA Coach Steve Alford said. “You give somebody like this on their home court 18 extra possession­s or shots, it’s disastrous.”

UCLA (12-8, 3-4 in Pac-12) had earned its first conference road victory Wednesday at Oregon State. But the Bruins continue to flirt with exclusion from the NCAA tournament. They were one of the last four teams in ESPN’s latest tournament projection­s.

UCLA believed Wednesday’s game signaled a step forward defensivel­y. Saturday halted the progress. UCLA gave up 1.3 points per possession, its worst mark this season.

The problems, Alford said, began with the missed rebounds. Oregon (16-4, 5-2) stole too many secondchan­ce points. And the extra opportunit­ies wore on the UCLA defense.

“It’s demoralizi­ng,” Alford said. “And it breaks you down defensivel­y,”

Oregon’s athleticis­m punished those breakdowns. UCLA has struggled against smaller, quicker teams for much of the season. On Saturday, center Tony Parker was forced to guard Dillon Brooks, who led Oregon with a game-high 25 points.

“Brooks is a 6-6 guard,” Alford said. “And Tony’s a 6-9, basically, center. Those are hard matchups.”

The Ducks penetrated easily and found clear airspace above the rim. They had nine dunks or tip-in baskets.

“Our help defense was not good at all,” Parker said.

Oregon used two runs, 8-0 and 9-0, early in the first half to build a cushion, but the Ducks’ break came when UCLA guard Isaac Hamilton picked up his third foul with about five minutes remaining before halftime.

Hamilton has been UCLA’s hottest player in conference play. Without him, the Bruins tried using three big men, with 6-foot-10 Gyorgy Goloman at small forward. Oregon ran past them.

UCLA called timeout. It quickly abandoned the big lineup.

Hamilton didn’t earn another foul, but he attempted only eight shots, fewer than any other starter, and managed 10 points. Guard Bryce Alford had another off night, shooting three for 13 and scoring 10 points. Thomas Welsh had 16, Parker 11.

Guard Aaron Holiday’s performanc­e kept the Bruins close. Hamilton and Alford had drawn Oregon’s best defenders. They offered little help on Holiday. So the freshman attacked, scoring a career-high 19 points, with five rebounds and five assists. He took defender Tyler Dorsey into the lane often, and he finished with confidence at the rim.

“You just try to feel it out,” Holiday said. “If them two aren’t scoring, I try to fill their stats for them.”

In the first half, after Welsh was blocked as the shot clock ticked down, Holiday scooped up the ball and fired a three-pointer. It went in as the timer buzzed.

Holiday drew UCLA within four points in the second half. And the Bruins’ seven-for-14 shooting from behind the arc provided a boost.

It was not enough. The Ducks did not relent, and UCLA had no answers for Oregon’s athletes.

 ?? Ryan Kang Associated Press ?? FRESHMAN GUARD Aaron Holiday fends off Oregon’s Chris Boucher while attempting a layup in the second half. Holiday led UCLA with 19 points.
Ryan Kang Associated Press FRESHMAN GUARD Aaron Holiday fends off Oregon’s Chris Boucher while attempting a layup in the second half. Holiday led UCLA with 19 points.

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