Los Angeles Times

USC and UCLA set up showdown

Crosstown rivals will meet in the semifinals of the NCAA water polo championsh­ips.

- By J. Brady McCollough brady.mccollough@latimes.com

In nearly a quarter-century coaching the water polo teams at USC, Jovan Vavic has compiled an impressive number of red-card ejections for his trademark bench antics. Entering the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation tournament championsh­ip against Stanford on April 29, it had been a long time since his last ejection — possibly too long.

“I hadn’t gotten one since 2014,” Vavic said. “It’s been four years. I got a compliment from someone: ‘Jovan, you’re doing a good job not getting red cards.’ I said, ‘Yeah, but I haven’t won a title in four years with the men’s team. When I was getting these red cards, we were winning.’ ”

With that in mind, Vavic was able to frame his ejection from the Stanford game as a “good omen.” The Trojans beat the Cardinal to earn the No. 1 seed in this weekend’s women’s NCAA championsh­ips at USC’s Uytengsu Aquatics Center. As penalty for his latest red card, Vavic could not coach the Trojans in their NCAA quarterfin­al match Friday against Wagner.

Missing an NCAA tournament game was a first for Vavic. He watched from outside his office on the second level, flanked by USC athletic director Lynn Swann, as the Trojans made swift work of Wagner 12-5, behind a hat trick from USC sophomore Kaylee Brownsberg­er.

“The view was good,” Vavic said later in the afternoon from his office that houses 14 NCAA championsh­ip trophies (nine for the men and five for the women). “Our focus was really to not spend too much energy and rest all of our key players. We knew that our tough game was going to be tomorrow.”

From the moment the bracket was announced, the anticipati­on had been building for a semifinal match between rivals USC and UCLA, the No. 4 seed. While the Trojans had to advance without their coach’s presence on the sideline, the Bruins had to compete at an even bigger disadvanta­ge. U.S. Olympic team star and sophomore attacker Maddie Musselman was unavailabl­e because of an undisclose­d health reason, adding some intrigue to their match against No. 5 seed Pacific.

UCLA won with minimal drama 8-4, setting up a pool edition of the crosstown rivalry with national stakes at 3 p.m. Saturday.

“We have a lot of good pieces,” UCLA first-year coach Adam Wright said. “We can never rely on one player. The reality is, as soon as you count on one person, you’re in big trouble. We wouldn’t be here on the last weekend if that was our approach.”

Wright was noncommitt­al about Musselman’s status for Saturday’s game but said she would be one of the 16 Bruins dressed. Vavic didn’t minimize the impact of Musselman.

“Very different,” Vavic said. “You take Shaquille O’Neal or Kobe [Bryant] out of the Lakers, it’s a different team. It doesn’t mean they’re not going to be tough.”

As always, emotions will be higher because of the rivalry, and it’s a game that will determine who gets a title shot Sunday.

“I like the fact that we have won the three games prior to this game [Saturday],” Vavic said. “It is tough to beat somebody four times a year. Sooner or later, they’re going to figure it out.”

In Saturday’s second semifinal, No. 2 Stanford, a 14-8 winner over UC Irvine, will face No. 3 California, which defeated Michigan 13-6.

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