Los Angeles Times

Hot Bruins go cold but win Pac-12 opener

UCLA goes on without Jaquez, who strikes his head on the court during first half.

- By Ben Bolch

NO. 5 UCLA 73 COLORADO 61

It seemed like old times for about an hour inside Pauley Pavilion, and not just because Bill Walton was wiggling his fingers at a courtside camera and Russell Westbrook was tossing Tshirts into the crowd.

The fun carried over to the court, UCLA’s Jaylen Clark driving for a vicious one-handed dunk that was reminiscen­t of a Westbrook move and Myles Johnson showing he could be a twoway force by finally unleashing some offense to go with his active defense.

But the fifth-ranked Bruins’ dominance and the parallels to yesteryear ended amid a role reversal early in the second half of their Pac-12 Conference opener Wednesday night, UCLA going cold while Colorado turned what was shaping up as a blowout into an uncomforta­bly close game.

When Colorado’s Jabari Walker made two free throws with 9½ minutes to go, the Buffaloes were down by only four points and the Bruins were on the way to missing eight consecutiv­e shots. The unease inside the renovated arena was palpable.

If UCLA wanted to assure itself of remaining unbeaten at home, it needed to find a way to end all the empty possession­s and find some offense. The Bruins got the big plays they needed from the

player on the court, Tyger Campbell powering a push that lifted his team to a 73-61 victory that qualified more as a sigh of relief than any sort of proclamati­on of greatness.

The 5-foot-11 Campbell provided a driving layup, a three-pointer and a jumper to fuel an 11-3 run that significan­tly lowered the anxiety level for the Bruins (7-1, 1-0). Campbell added another three-pointer and finished with one of his strongest across-the-board showings, tallying 21 points to go with seven rebounds and five assists while receiving some encouragem­ent from Westbrook in his courtside seat.

“He was just telling me to keep shooting and be aggressive,” said Campbell, who made eight of 16 shots and four of seven three-pointers. “It means a lot coming from him, because he’s such a great player and obviously the legacy he left here — all the Final Fours. It means a lot for him to even come back and just watch us play.”

The Bruins persevered without guard Jaime Jaquez Jr., their second-leading scorer who played only seven minutes after hitting his head on the court in the first half and being held out the rest of the game as a precaution­ary measure.

Johnson provided a pickme-up with a season-high 12 points on five-for-six shooting and 10 rebounds as part of his first double-double as a Bruin.

He was even more prolific on defense, continuall­y deflecting passes and twice preventing the Buffaloes from inbounding the ball while relegating Colorado counterpar­t Evan Battey to a nonfactor.

One game after leading his team with a career-high 22 points in a victory over Stanford, Battey fouled out with four points and two rebounds in only 15 minutes while being overwhelme­d by Johnson.

“He’s got 12 points, 10 rebounds and 14 deflection­s, so he’s got a UCLA triple-double,” said UCLA coach Mick

Cronin, who has continuall­y challenged Johnson to be more assertive. “What I told him was, that’s what I want to see every game.”

There was major concern midway through the first half when Jaquez fell hard underneath the basket after getting fouled, his head hitting the hardwood with a thud that reverberat­ed throughout the arena. Jaquez eventually rose with a hand from Cronin and a trainer before heading toward the locker room.

It was the second consecutiv­e game in which Jaquez was forced out after having absorbed a stray elbow from Johnson on Saturday that required five stitches.

Cronin said doctors cleared Jaquez to return after assistant coach Michael Lewis watched him take some warmup shots at halftime, but Cronin decided to hold him out in a protective move.

“I’m always going to err on the side of safety when it comes to my players,” Cronin said, “so I just didn’t feel comfortabl­e about it.”

UCLA held a 39-23 halftime lead after what was easily Johnson’s best half as a Bruin. He backed down Battey on the game’s opening possession before commencing a spin move that led to a jump hook. It wasn’t long before Johnson was going at Battey again with another move that drew a foul and sent Johnson to the free-throw line, the big man fulfilling his coach’s demands.

“Coach Cronin is always pushing me — ‘You’re in the paint, it’s your time,’ ” Johnsmalle­st son said. “I’m definitely thankful he pushes me.”

Battey struggled mightily, airballing a three-pointer and coming out of the game with only two points and two turnovers in the first half after picking up his second foul. Walker led the Buffaloes (6-2, 1-1) with 22 points.

Fans who chanted “We want Westbrook!” were rewarded in the first half when the former Bruin and current Laker took a ball from onetime UCLA hero Tyus Edney as the honorary captainand received a standing ovation. Westbrook had an excellent view of Clark’s signature dunk that the Bruins followed with a Jules Bernard three-pointer that gave them a 33-16 lead.

Things took a dramatic turn before UCLA won comfortabl­y enough that the students unveiled a “We want Russell!” chant in the final minute, alluding to walk-on Russell Stong, who did not get off the bench to satisfy the demand.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? UCLA GUARD Tyger Campbell manages to get a pass off while falling down as Colorado guard KJ Simpson guards him. Campbell had 21 points and five assists.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times UCLA GUARD Tyger Campbell manages to get a pass off while falling down as Colorado guard KJ Simpson guards him. Campbell had 21 points and five assists.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? UCLA GUARD Tyger Campbell, who made eight of 16 shots and four of seven three-pointers, shoots over Colorado guard Elijah Parquet late in the second half.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times UCLA GUARD Tyger Campbell, who made eight of 16 shots and four of seven three-pointers, shoots over Colorado guard Elijah Parquet late in the second half.

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