Los Angeles Times

Baylor captures NCAA hoops championsh­ip

Coach says Final Four defeat can’t wipe out glory of UCLA’s run in NCAA tournament.

- By Ben Bolch

The Bears earn their first men’s title, spoiling Gonzaga’s bid for a perfect season.

The long goodbye came after a celebratio­n subdued by a once-a-century pandemic. Airport personnel who recognized UCLA’s bus upon its return to Los Angeles clapped, and students who spotted the Bruins once they reached campus cheered.

After grabbing their belongings, suitcases and garbage bags stuffed with Final Four mementos, everybody gathered outside the team’s practice facility Sunday afternoon. Players stared at coach Mick Cronin. Cronin stared back.

Nobody stirred, as if budging might cause them to lose hold of this magical journey. UCLA had made it from one of the last teams into the NCAA tournament nearly all the way to the end, forced out only by a miracle shot.

Finally, piercing the reverie as only he could, Cronin spoke.

“Pool party at my house,” the coach said.

His players howled with delight at the thought of gathering once more, freed from their uneasiness to exchange farewell hugs and head home.

A formal celebratio­n will have to wait for UCLA’s first Final Four team since 2008 because of lingering health restrictio­ns related to COVID-19.

“Normal times, it would have been a tremendous welcoming committee for us,” Cronin said Monday by telephone, “but we couldn’t do anything on campus because of COVID.”

Having won a record 11 national titles, the Bruins have traditiona­lly honored only their championsh­ip teams with banners inside Pauley Pavilion. Breaking that custom to commemorat­e this team would please Cronin, so long as the school’s other Final Four teams were also celebrated.

“You do one, you’ve got to do all,” Cronin said. “I think it would be great.”

Sadness did not accompany the Bruins home from their loss to Gonzaga in a national semifinal Saturday night in Indianapol­is, even after Jalen Suggs’ 40-foot heave at the overtime buzzer pierced their hearts. Cronin reiterated his belief to his players that three agonizing seconds inside Lucas Oil Stadium should not wipe out the glory of what had preceded them.

Eleventh-seeded UCLA was considered a coin flip to beat Michigan State in its First Four game after entering the NCAA tournament on a four-game losing streak. The Bruins fell behind by 14 points, rallied to win in overtime and were on their way in the East Region.

Another taut victory over Brigham Young was next, followed by a rare breather over Abilene Christian. Even with its own miracle shot to force overtime, secondseed­ed

Alabama was no match for UCLA in a regional semifinal, the Bruins pulling away to win by 10 points.

Mighty Michigan was the next giant to be slayed, the Bruins outmusclin­g a supposedly tougher nemesis from the Big Ten Conference.

Two days later, they matched unbeaten Gonzaga, exchanging one memorable play for another, before the Bulldogs conjured the final magic.

Along the way, the Bruins formed an unbreakabl­e bond while spending three weeks marooned on the ninth floor of the Indianapol­is Marriott Downtown. Some took pictures of their rooms upon their departure Sunday. Cronin left his Under Armour gear behind for the cleaning crew, a nod to the team’s highly anticipate­d transition to Jordan Brand.

“Stuff that’s all going to be obsolete anyway,” he said.

Text messages and calls flooded everybody’s phones as they prepared to head home. Cronin heard from Rick Pitino, his former boss at Louisville who understood perhaps better than anyone else the heartache that his protege had just endured.

It was Pitino’s Kentucky Wildcats who were floored by Duke on Christian Laettner’s crazy shot in 1992.

“He talked about the Laettner loss and what that did for his Kentucky teams, how it helped them spring forward,” Cronin said, “and obviously what it did for their confidence going forward and recruiting.”

One year after Laettner’s shot, the Wildcats were in the Final Four. Three years after that, they were national champions.

The Bruins were feeling like winners as they returned home. Cronin said he was recognized at a store where he had once shopped anonymousl­y.

“I noticed real quick,” he said, “that people know who I am at the store versus a month ago.”

Cronin said he had 482 unopened text messages and might even start responding to some once he checked in with all of his recruits.

It remained unknown how many spots he might need to fill next season. Guard Johnny Juzang’s scoring spree over his last six games has made him an enticing NBA prospect, and guard Chris Smith could also decide to turn pro after sitting out the final three months of his senior season because of a knee injury.

“I’m pretty sure his plan is to go to the NBA, and I fully support him,” Cronin said of Smith, “but I’m not closing the door on him.”

As his team began to plot its encore, Cronin said he planned to meet with his players both individual­ly and as a team. There might not be any sad farewells, especially if everyone decides to return.

“My hope is everybody comes back,” Cronin said, “but you’ve got to talk to everybody and go from there.”

 ?? Robert Franklin Associated Press ?? MICK CRONIN said it would “be great” if these Bruins could be honored with a banner at Pauley Pavilion.
Robert Franklin Associated Press MICK CRONIN said it would “be great” if these Bruins could be honored with a banner at Pauley Pavilion.

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