UCLA barely escapes with win vs. Cougars attack
Friday, January 29, 1999
UCLA barely escapes with win vs. Cougars attack
MHOOPS: Bruins squander lead, hang on with tenacious defense, feeding off mistakes of WSU
By AJ Cadman
Daily Bruin Staff
PULLMAN, Wash. -- The Bruins found themselves fortunate to have escaped Friel Court - not because of the snow-trodden roads that blanket the state and surround Washington State's basketball complex, but for dodging another bullet Thursday night.
UCLA (15-4, 6-2 Pac-10) narrowly defeated the Cougars (8-11, 2-6) 69-66, in a game that should have been decided long before it was. Much of this is due in part to preparation and uncontrollable circumstances.
"You play the way you practice," said UCLA head coach Steve Lavin. "We did not practice well on Tuesday and I could sense it (the poor performance) coming."
"We were sluggish today," said point guard Baron Davis, who finished the night with 11 points on two of 10 shooting and seven of 13 from the charity stripe in 34 minutes. "We missed our flight and didn't get to bed until around 5 a.m."
The lack of sleep did not seem to affect the Bruins early as they got off to a terrific start. They found themselves ahead by as many as 17 points more than midway through the first half, even though they averted an early disaster when Earl Watson missed an alley-oop pass from JaRon Rush.
UCLA then proceeded to rally off a 26-9 run on the Cougars. Washington State struggled early as their perimeter and long-range shooting, statistically at the top of the Pac-10, went as ice cold as the temperature outside the arena. Washington State shot under 27 percent from the field in the game's first half.
During the Cougar drought, the Bruins shot well. UCLA was four of seven from the three-point line and shot 55 percent from the floor heading into the intermission. Three-point goals late in the first half by Brandon Loyd and Matt Barnes helped the Bruins take a 35-24 lead at halftime.
But the second half told the other side of the game's storyline. Washington State stormed out of the gates with a 17-6 run, knotting the score at 41 apiece with 13:44 remaining in the game. Yet, the underlying positive for UCLA throughout the game was the performance of freshman Dan Gadzuric.
Returning to the lineup Thursday, Gadzuric checked in the game midway through the first half and scored five straight points. A two-handed tomahawk slam four minutes into the second session silenced the deceivingly boisterous crowd praying for an outcome similar to that which occurred when the Bruins visited Oregon State exactly three weeks ago.
"Gadzuric's performance was one of the few positives tonight that we (the coaches) searched for on the blackboard tonight," said Lavin. "He came back and got into a flow."
A seesaw battle ensued for the remainder of the game as both sides endlessly traded baskets. The Cougars first lead in the contest at 51-49 with under 10 minutes remaining in the second half. Jan-Michael Thomas finished the evening with 16 points on four of seven shooting from behind the arc.
"Give Washington State credit," said Lavin. "They were quick and hit the boards. They played with a lot of energy, intensity and togetherness. We were fortunate to get the win up here."
The defensive play of the trio of Watson, Davis and freshman Ray Young played vital roles late in the game. Inducing turnovers for easy scores was essential, including Young's dunk - created by Rush's defense on Thomas - with 16.1 seconds left, which preserved the victory for UCLA.
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