Los Angeles Times

Rough road continues for Trojans

USC loses its third game in a row to a team ranked in the top six in the nation.

- By Zach Helfand

TUCSON — The most frustratin­g part of playing at Arizona, where the Wildcats have won 70 of their last 71 games after USC’s 90-77 loss on Thursday, is not when a visiting team is playing poorly.

That is to be expected. Wait until a team has a chance to play well here. Then futility can be understood.

USC learned this late in the first half. The Trojans were shooting the lights out. They were making smart cuts and scoring easy baskets. They packed the paint to fluster Arizona’s imposing frontcourt.

At one point, the Trojans led by nine points, and some in a rabid student section began to pull Arizona bucket hats — the night’s giveaway — over their eyes.

Then, with a little more than two minutes left, the lead began to disappear. Arizona made four three-pointers right before the half. USC (21-7, 8-7 in the Pac-12 Conference) had mostly outplayed the Wildcats. They still trailed by five at the break.

Playing first-place Arizona (26-3, 15-1) anywhere is a challenge. Playing Arizona at the McKale Center, where 14,644 ornery partisans gathered to scream for two hours on Thursday, is like trying to wrestle a boa constricto­r. Every mistake is hammered.

That was how USC shot 53% from the field, earned more free throws and battled Arizona to a near draw on the boards — and still lost by 13 points.

Arizona squirreled away points every time USC gave it an opening. USC turned the ball over 14 times; Arizona just eight. USC scored nine points off turnovers. Arizona scored 23.

“The difference in the game was the extra possession­s,” Trojans Coach Andy Enfield said.

Arizona used those extra possession­s to shoot threepoint­ers. The Wildcats made 11 of 20, led by Allonzo Trier, who made four and scored 25 points. When USC pressed out, Arizona then could feed inside.

“We were trying to take the three away,” Enfield said. “Then we tried to double the post. Then they kick it out and make another three.”

With three minutes left in the game, the Trojans were nearing strange statistica­l territory. At the time, USC was shooting 58%, on pace for its best shooting performanc­e of the season. Yet Arizona led by double digits.

USC pulled within seven points with less than two minutes left, but Arizona’s Lauri Makkanen burst past Jonah Mathews for a layup to extinguish any late rally. Markkanen finished with 11 points and seven rebounds.

For USC, Chimezie Metu scored 15 points with 12 rebounds, and forward Bennie Boatwight led the team with 23 points.

USC’s players walked to their bus afterward without much visible anger. At least their schedule would turn more friendly. Over the past two weeks, USC has played and lost to No. 6 Oregon, No. 5 UCLA and No. 4 Arizona.

“It’s tough playing the top four, five six teams,” point guard Jordan McLaughlin said. “Nobody else in national college basketball is doing that.”

But he noted: “My freshman year we lost a lot of games. I mean, I’ve been there. So we haven’t witnessed anything like that.”

The skid does inch USC into a slightly more precarious position for an NCAA tournament bid. The Trojans aren’t yet on the bubble. But a loss to Arizona State on Sunday would ratchet up the pressure for the Trojans’ final homestand, against Washington State and Washington.

Still, the most likely consequenc­e of Thursday’s loss isn’t a lost bid, but a lost opportunit­y to improve USC’s seeding. USC has avoided any bad losses, but it has yet to convince pollsters and amateur bracketolo­gists.

At different times after the game, Enfield remarked that, “We’re right there.”

“We’re close,” he said a few minutes later.

“We thought we would’ve had a chance if we just played a little better defensivel­y,” he said at another point.

McLaughlin scored 13 points and played 34 minutes, despite applying a pillowsize­d heating pad to his lower back during every timeout.

“My back’s been killing me a little bit,” McLaughlin said. The pain began earlier this week, “but it should be all right,” he said.

The pain made worse an already brutal week of practices, the fallout from a 32point loss to UCLA. McLaughlin said Enfield stressed competitio­n, oneon-one duels, “different drills that question your heart.”

Losing after such a week, Boatwright said, “It's frustratin­g. But we got better this week. And we’ve got to keep getting better.”

 ?? Rick Scuteri Associated Press ?? KADEEM ALLEN, right, of Arizona tries to get Jordan McLaughlin of USC out of position.
Rick Scuteri Associated Press KADEEM ALLEN, right, of Arizona tries to get Jordan McLaughlin of USC out of position.
 ?? Rick Scuteri Associated Press ?? ARIZONA’S Parker-Jackson Cartwright, left, and Allonzo Trier celebrate the Wildcats’ victory over USC. Trier scored a game-high 25 points.
Rick Scuteri Associated Press ARIZONA’S Parker-Jackson Cartwright, left, and Allonzo Trier celebrate the Wildcats’ victory over USC. Trier scored a game-high 25 points.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States