Los Angeles Times

Two Bruins ace their auditions

Big second halves from Jaquez, Singleton snap UCLA out of its funk in Hawaii.

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LAHAINA, Hawaii — Mick Cronin is holding inseason auditions, the UCLA coach seeking what he described as competitiv­e fight and fire from young players who sometimes play as if they expect the four letters across their chest to do all the work.

Jaime Jaquez Jr. and David Singleton earned callbacks Tuesday.

Jaquez infused some much-needed grit and Singleton

put on a shooting display inside Lahaina Civic Center, helping the Bruins avoid infamy with a 74-48 victory over Chaminade in a consolatio­n round of the Maui Invitation­al.

It looked like UCLA might be headed for the college basketball equivalent of a cliffside dive into some jagged rocks when it opened the second half with back-toback-to-back turnovers.

“That’s impressive, isn’t it?” Cronin said dryly afterward.

The Bruins tipped off 121⁄2 hours after they had left the arena following a loss to Brigham Young in the opening round, and it showed when they committed 15 turnovers in just more than 21 minutes. The sloppy stretch allowed tiny Chaminade, the NCAA Division II

from Honolulu and longtime darling of this tournament, to pull into a tie with its far more storied counterpar­t early in the second half.

That’s when a seldomused freshman made a case for top billing.

Jaquez, inserted into the lineup to start the second half in place of struggling teammate Chris Smith, went from bit player to breakout star. He took a pass from Cody Riley for a layup to break the tie. He leaped high into the air to steal an inbounds pass before scoring on a give-and-go layup involving Smith.

By the time Jaquez blocked a shot and got fouled going after the loose ball, UCLA (5-2) was up by 10 points and comfortabl­y on the way to breaking its twogame losing streak. Jaquez was on the way to scoring a career-high 17 points on eight-for-11 shooting to go with 12 rebounds, three steals and one block while playing every second of the second half.

“He’s not afraid to cross the line and tell his teammates, ‘We need to man up and play like grownups,’ ” Cronin said of Jaquez, who played a career-high 30 minutes. “I’m trying to build a program, so like I told the guys, it’s tryout time. Everybody’s in an audition, the way I see it. And he plays with a lot of heart.”

For the first time this season, Singleton resembled the sharpshoot­ing whiz he had been a year ago while making all of his career-high five three-pointers in the second half. It gave him a cafense. reer-high 15 points and helped the Bruins move into the fifth-place game Wednesday morning against No. 3 Michigan State, a program that Cronin said he was trying to emulate as part of his rebuilding efforts.

Singleton acknowledg­ed having played tight in the season’s early going while recovering from a broken foot but said the Bruins found a common sense of purpose in the second half.

“We started playing to win and not for ourselves,” said Singleton, who made five of six three-point attempts, “and I think that was the main difference.”

Riley added 15 points and Prince Ali had 10 had for the Bruins, who straighten­ed out their errant ways, committing only three turnovers over the game’s final 181⁄2 minutes. What changed?

“Take the guys out that turn the ball over,” Cronin said. “Put guys in that don’t.”

UCLA also bounced back defensivel­y, holding Chaminade to 23.3% shooting and an opponent season low for points, after giving up an average of 83 points over its previous two games. Eliet Donley scored a team-high 10 points for the Silverswor­ds (2-2), who fell to 8-94 all time in the Maui Invitation­al, including an 0-35 record on the second day of the tournament.

Cronin continued his habit of yanking players quickly after they made mistakes, pulling forward Jalen Hill only 40 seconds into the second half following a turnover. The coach later called Smith over and loudly informed him he played no deschool Some of the messages appear to be sinking in; Smith eventually forced a turnover by diving for a ball near the sideline.

Singleton said he didn’t have to play in fear of being removed for mistakes, only a lack of resolve and smarts.

“If you don’t let your team down, he won’t pull you out,” Singleton said of his new coach. “You just have to show effort and show hustle and show toughness.”

Cronin might have just found two players who fit that descriptio­n.

 ?? Marco Garcia Associated Press By Ben Bolch ?? UCLA’S David Singleton, defended by Chaminade’s Eliet Donley, scored a career-best 15 points.
Marco Garcia Associated Press By Ben Bolch UCLA’S David Singleton, defended by Chaminade’s Eliet Donley, scored a career-best 15 points.
 ?? Darryl Oumi Getty Images ?? UCLA FRESHMAN GUARD Jaime Jaquez Jr. battles Chaminade’s Tyler Cartaino for position. Jaquez finished with 17 points, 12 rebounds and three steals.
Darryl Oumi Getty Images UCLA FRESHMAN GUARD Jaime Jaquez Jr. battles Chaminade’s Tyler Cartaino for position. Jaquez finished with 17 points, 12 rebounds and three steals.

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