Los Angeles Times

USC’s Aaron doesn’t rest after breakout game

The guard scored a career-high 23 points against UCLA then worked on shooting.

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

In case there were any doubt that he was serious, USC guard Shaqquan Aaron retreated to a side gym inside the Galen Center late Wednesday night, not long after USC’s upset win over No. 8 UCLA.

Aaron brought a basketball to the postgame news conference, an unusual prop. He said he was planning to work on his shooting, and that’s exactly what he did.

Maybe he needed it before Wednesday. It had been more than a month since Aaron made more than two field goals in a game. It had been longer since he scored 10 points or more. Once a starter, his playing time declined steadily, from 25 minutes per game during the nonconfere­nce schedule to 20 during Pac-12 Conference play.

But Aaron was a surprise against UCLA. Coming off the bench, he scored a gameand career-high 23 points. He made six of 12 shots and had no turnovers. By the end of the game, shooting guard Elijah Stewart, also shooting well, was passing up open three-pointers to find Aaron.

“I just thought he played a great game,” USC Coach Andy Enfield said.

Aaron’s breakout was a perk in one of the biggest wins during Enfield’s tenure. USC has jumped out to its best start in years, with an 18-4 record, 5-4 in Pac-12 play. It has done so without forward Bennie Boatwright, who has played in just four full games, and without Aaron finding consistenc­y.

Now, Boatwright could return as soon as USC’s next game, against Washington on Wednesday. And Aaron has rediscover­ed his shooting touch.

“He started out the year pretty well. He started a lot of games for us. Then he went on a little shooting slump,” Enfield said. “It was just a matter of time before some of the shots started falling for him.”

Aaron, who is playing his first season for the Trojans after transferri­ng from Louisville two years ago, figured to be one of USC’s key pieces. He was expected to fill the vacancy left by point guard Julian Jacobs, one of USC’s offensive leaders, who declared for the NBA draft.

Jordan McLaughlin assumed full point guard responsibi­lities. Aaron needed to score. At 6 feet 7, he added much-needed length. He was a hybrid who could play guard or forward on a team with plenty of guards but little frontcourt depth.

But Aaron was languishin­g by the middle of the season. His performanc­e Wednesday boosted modest totals: He is averaging 9.4 points per game and 3.8 rebounds. Freshman De’Anthony Melton supplanted him in the starting lineup. More recently, so did Jonah Mathews, another freshman.

“But he just made his mind up to start playing harder, to affect the game with his defense, his rebounding, his energy, his long arms,” Enfield said. “We try to tell our players you don’t have to score to have an impact on the game.”

Aaron said he’d always felt comfortabl­e in Enfield’s system. “But some games, shots weren’t falling,” he said. “But I keep shooting.”

He then left the news conference, ascended a flight of stairs, and shot some more.

 ?? Shotgun Spratling Los Angeles Times ?? SHAQQUAN AARON gets a breakaway layup in the final minutes of USC’s 84-76 victory over UCLA on Wednesday. Aaron scored 23 points coming off the bench.
Shotgun Spratling Los Angeles Times SHAQQUAN AARON gets a breakaway layup in the final minutes of USC’s 84-76 victory over UCLA on Wednesday. Aaron scored 23 points coming off the bench.

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