Bruins make use of full court press
UCLA finally decided to press the issue.
That is, they finally decided to use the much talked about but little
used full court press defense in their 81-58 win over Long Beach State.
“We wanted to up the tempo and get more steals and turnovers,” said
forward Dijon Thompson.
After using the press sparingly in the first half, the Bruins came out with full pressure after halftime. The tight defense helped expand their lead from seven at halftime to 25 with just under 10 minutes remaining in the game.
“They really started going off (with the press) after halftime,” said 49er guard Tony Darden. “And all year, we’ve been coming out sluggish in the second half.”
Long Beach State point guard Darnell Thompson blames himself for the
breakdown of the 49er offense in the face of the full court pressure.
“We didn’t know our spots, where we were supposed to be, in the second half,” he said. “I’m personally responsible, because I am the point guard.”
One reason for the success of the press was Bruin point guard Ryan
Walcott, who made his season debut in the game after being suspended for UCLA’s first two contests.
“The Waterbug”, as head coach Steve Lavin commonly calls him, brought the quickness and depth needed to execute the press successfully.
“We are a quick team, so we used that to try to make Long Beach State rush,” Walcott said.
“They weren’t very good with the ball,” added Thompson. “Once we started pressing, they were turning it over a lot more.”
Long Beach State head coach Larry Reynolds said he expected UCLA to use the press against his squad, because other teams have already used it successfully against the 49ers this season.
“I’m sure (UCLA) looked at the film from our games against Charlotte and Pepperdine, because both these teams did a good job of pressing us.”
However, multiple Bruin players said that the game plan coming in wasn’t to press, and that using it was a halftime change the team felt it needed to make.
“At the half, we only had two transition points,” Walcott said. “So we got the press going, and we got a lot of easy buckets.”
Senior guard Ray Young agreed, saying the team went with the press to try to change the tone of the game.
“It was a gametime adjustment,” he said. “We tried to throw them off
balance, and it worked.”


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