Los Angeles Times

Rivalry more like a war of attrition

Latest Bruins-Trojans duel could give either beleaguere­d team big boost toward NCAAs.

- By Ben Bolch

A coach has been fired, three players have been held out for the season and a fourth player withdrew from school before his punishment could be determined.

Otherwise, things haven’t wildly strayed from the script since basketball players and coaches from UCLA and USC last convened in the same building four months ago for Pac-12 Conference media day.

The Trojans are second in the conference standings, matching their predicted finish in the preseason media poll. The Bruins are in a tie for fourth place, one slot worse than projected.

Both teams are unranked heading into the rivalry game Saturday afternoon at Pauley Pavilion, after USC opened the season at No. 10 and UCLA at No. 21, but their season-opening goals remain within reach.

USC, 17-6 overall and 8-2 in Pac-12 play, is riding a sixgame conference winning streak that might be nine if

not for a buzzer-beating heave at Stanford. Still, the streak is its longest since Harold Miner led the Trojans to nine consecutiv­e victories in 1992. UCLA, 15-7 and 6-4, has won two consecutiv­e games to put itself back into the NCAA tournament conversati­on.

The Trojans and Bruins are touting themes of perseveran­ce amid an FBI bribery probe and an internatio­nal shopliftin­g incident that drained their rosters of expected contributo­rs.

Said UCLA coach Steve Alford: “We had a tough thing to hit us in China to start the season and I think these guys have battled and worked and done everything they could possibly do each day and each week to get better.”

Said USC point guard Jordan McLaughlin: “After everything that happened we talked about just controllin­g what we can control and that’s us playing basketball, playing as hard as we can.”

The Trojans’ sustained effort has eased concerns about the absence of sophomore guard De’Anthony Melton, who will miss this season because of eligibilit­y concerns related to the FBI’s investigat­ion into college basketball payoffs. USC fired associate head coach Tony Bland last week in the wake of his September arrest in connection with payments he allegedly received for steering Trojans players toward an agent and financial advisor.

UCLA has been without forwards Jalen Hill and Cody Riley as well as shooting guard LiAngelo Ball after the freshmen stole luxury goods from three stores at an upscale mall during the team’s trip to China to play Georgia Tech in November.

Hill and Riley eventually were suspended for the season; Ball departed UCLA to play profession­ally in Lithuania before learning his fate.

The punished players have not been completely barred from their teams, however. Melton, Hill and Riley are allowed to practice with their teammates and have sat on the bench for some games. UCLA forward Kris Wilkes recently credited Hill with helping to prepare him to face power forwards after the Bruins juggled their starting lineup to include an extra guard.

Sometimes the reminders of the sidelined players aren’t as pleasant. Students at Michigan and Oregon wielded signs poking fun at UCLA for the shopliftin­g incident, including mugshots of the players involved. UCLA students could have something similar planned for the Trojans, unless they develop some unexpected empathy for their rivals.

“I never wish ill will on anybody’s program,” Alford said, “so we’ve got enough that we have to deal with on a daily basis of just making our young men getting better and understand­ing how to play this game at a high level, and I think our young men have done that. I think they’ve really responded well.”

Alford recently moved freshman point guard Jaylen Hands back into his starting lineup, improving his team’s ball movement and transition play.

USC also has benefited from a change to its starting lineup, mostly because it has given the Trojans another valuable contributo­r off their bench. Sophomore guard Jonah Mathews’ new status as a reserve seems like a misnomer considerin­g he led the team in scoring with 18 points against Stanford last week and rescued his team from a sluggish start against California with 16 points.

The Trojans’ resurgence also has been sparked by improved defense. During its current winning streak, USC has held its opponents to 70 points or fewer. The last two victories have come without forward Bennie Boatwright, whose status for the UCLA game remains a game-time decision because of a blister on his foot.

Saturday’s game could have added significan­ce for the Bruins given their NCAA tournament projection­s. Neither ESPN’s Joe Lunardi nor CBS Sports’ Jerry Palm included UCLA in their most recent tournament brackets. Both prognostic­ators have USC seeded at No. 10.

“The only reason it would be special is because we have to get this win,” UCLA point guard Aaron Holiday said of facing the Trojans. “That would put us in a great position moving forward, so I’m not really worried that it’s against USC, I’m just worried about getting the win.”

The Trojans continue to have a little extra motivation every time they take the court.

“We’re playing for De’Anthony,” McLaughlin said. “He did nothing wrong, we still see that he did nothing wrong … so he definitely sparked our fire.”

TODAY

UCLA VS. USC When: 3 p.m. Where: Pauley Pavilion. On the air: TV: ESPN2; Radio: 1150, 710. Update: UCLA persevered through some sloppy stretches to defeat California and Stanford last week, but the Bruins know that kind of inconsiste­ncy won’t put them in a position to beat USC. “We can’t be naïve to think that we’re going to be on our C, D game and think we’re going to win,” UCLA coach Steve Alford said. “We have to be at the top of our game both offensivel­y and defensivel­y.” The Bruins won two of three against the Trojans last season, including in the Pac-12 tournament. The Trojans’ 8-2 start in Pac-12 play is their best since the 2001-02 season.

 ?? Michael Owen Baker Associated Press ?? JAYLEN HANDS’ return to the starting lineup has helped the Bruins’ ball movement and transition play.
Michael Owen Baker Associated Press JAYLEN HANDS’ return to the starting lineup has helped the Bruins’ ball movement and transition play.

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