Saturday, December 31, 2016

SLAM: WATCH: We Spent Christmas Day With The Ball Brothers



Lonzo, LiAngelo and LaMelo all under one roof: See how the most talked-about family in hoops celebrated the holiday.


dec 29, 2016 | slam | ARTICLE LINK
In 2016 no group of players captivated the basketball universe the way the Ball Brothers did. Everything from their unique names to their unique style of play just seemed perfectly crafted for greatness. Leading an unknown Chino Hills HS to a perfect 35-0 undefeated season in 2016, brothers Lonzo, LiAngelo and LaMelo gradually became the talk of hoops.
And it wasn’t just about three brothers being the top three players for a team that finished untouched and with the No. 1 ranking spot in America, it was just as much about how they did it. The Huskies averaged 98 points per game, reached 100 or more points in over half of their bouts and their margin of victory for the season surpassed 30 points. There were no plays drawn up on offense, expect for a screen and roll and a clear-out for Lonzo, as their dad LaVar informed us this summer, everything was pretty much straight on-the-fly pick-up style.
With that freedom on offense came pull-up halfcourt shots from ‘Melo and some sick football-esque full-court outlet passes from everyone. The kids were clearly having fun with it. And those that argued bad shots and no structure had little merit as the wins and dominance continued to pile up.
This season, Lonzo moved on to UCLA, where he’s emerged as a candidate for the No. 1 spot in the 2017 NBA Draft. LiAngelo and LaMelo, who are both slated to arrive at UCLA in 2017 and 2019 respectively, have picked up from where they left off last season, currently riding a perfect 14-0 season which has extended their winning streak to 49 games. LiAngelo is posting 72-point and 65-point outings and LaMelo is still pulling up from halfcourt.
They’ve done it their own way, staying away from playing in the ever-political sneaker-circuit and sticking by their local school. They’ve now formed their own clothing brand—Big Baller Brand—as you can see them all rocking in the video above. Pioneers on and off the floor in their own right, we went out to Chino Hills on Christmas Day to see if the Ball family has as much fun during the holidays as they do on the court. And we sure got our answer. Check the vid out at the top of this post.

Thanks to NYBruin for sharing this video on BZ!!!

UCLA vs Oregon St: TJ Leaf after the game

from UCLA Athletics
still no word from Taylor Swift?

UCLA vs Oregon St highlight videos (Zo, TJ)

Zo on Frankie Vision

Zo on SQUADawkins


TJ on Frankie Vision

TJ on SQUADawkins

No. 2 UCLA Earns 76-63 Win at Oregon State

from UCLA Athletics 

dec 30, 2016 | ucla men's basketball page | ARTICLE LINK



CORVALLIS, Ore. – Lonzo Ball scored a career-high 23 points and TJ Leaf had a double-double, totaling 21 points and 10 rebounds, to lead No. 2 UCLA past Oregon State, 76-63, on Friday night at Gill Coliseum.

Ball made 7 of 14 shots, including four 3-pointers, logging at least 20 points for the second time this season. Ball also added seven assists and six rebounds. Leaf tallied his sixth double-double of the season and his sixth 20-point performance.

Aaron Holiday (14 points) and Bryce Alford (12 points) rounded out the Bruins' list of double-figure scorers.

"After losing the game on Wednesday when we thought we had it, it can be tough to respond in a 48-hour period," UCLA head coach Steve Alford said. "But I thought our guys really responded. I thought we really grew defensively in this game. They slowed the tempo after playing a game 48 hours ago where the team ran with us. We missed some shots we normally make, but that happens on the road. I give Oregon State credit on how they guarded us."

Oregon State (4-11, 0-2 Pac-12) was led by Stephen Thompson Jr., who scored a game-high 25 points. Drew Eubanks added 18 points and nine rebounds for the Beavers.

UCLA (14-1, 1-1 Pac-12) led by eight points at halftime, 34-26, before Oregon State tied the contest, 38-38, after having opened the second half with a 12-4 scoring run in a four-minute stretch.

The Bruins regained their lead with a 10-2 run midway through the second half, when Holiday scored five of his 14 points. UCLA pushed its margin to 14 points with 6:13 remaining, as Ball totaled seven straight points over a 59-second span.

Both teams were evenly matched early in the first half, but back-to-back 3-pointers from Ball gave UCLA a five-point lead with 13:02 left before halftime. UCLA led by as many as 11 points in the opening half after a 3-pointer by Alford and an alley-oop dunk by Leaf, on an assist from Ball, with three minutes left before the intermission.

Just two days after seeing their season-opening 13-game win streak snapped with an 89-87 loss at No. 21 Oregon, the Bruins finished Friday night's game having shot 44 percent from the field. UCLA's defense limited the Beavers to 42 percent shooting from the floor.

The Bruins outscored Oregon State, 33-11, in points off turnovers and won the rebounding battle, 36-33.

UCLA wil return to action against California (9-4, 0-1 Pac-12) on Thursday, Jan. 5, in a nationally-televised contest from Pauley Pavilion. Game time is 6 p.m. UCLA's game will be televised by ESPN, with Dave Pasch and Bill Walton on the call.

->Box


Friday, December 30, 2016

No. 2 UCLA Plays at Oregon State on Friday

dec 29, 2016 | ucla men's basketball page | ARTICLE LINK
The Bruins will close the 2016 calendar with a game at Oregon State on Friday evening.


Story Links


CORVALLIS, Ore. – No. 2 UCLA (13-1, 0-1) returns to action at Oregon State (4-10, 0-1) on Friday evening at Gill Coliseum. The Bruins saw their season-opening 13-game win streak snapped on Wednesday, dropping an 89-87 decision at No. 21 Oregon. After Friday night's game, the Bruins will return home with games on the schedule next week against California (Jan. 5) and Stanford (Jan. 8) in Pauley Pavilion.

GAME INFORMATION
Venue: Gill Coliseum (9,604)
Tipoff Time: 8:05 p.m. (PT)
Television: Pac-12 Network
TV Talent: Greg Heister (play-by-play), Bill Walton (analyst)
Radio: AM 1150
Radio Talent: Josh Lewin (play-by-play), Tracy Murray (analyst)

FRIDAY'S MATCHUP
The Bruins game on Friday, Dec. 30, will be televised by Pac-12 Network and is set for tipoff at 8:05 p.m. (PT). Greg Heister and Bill Walton will have the call on Pac-12 Network. The Bruins lead the all-time series against Oregon State, 93-37, with the two programs having split a pair of regular-season games last year. In fact, UCLA won at Oregon State (Jan. 20, 2016), before the Beavers evened the season series by winning at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion (March 5, 2016).

BRUINS VERSUS BEAVERS
Prior to UCLA's win in Gill Coliseum last January, the Bruins had lost three consecutive games at Oregon State since their 62-57 victory on Jan. 13, 2011. UCLA's three-game losing streak in Corvallis came after the Bruins had won six consecutive games in Oregon State's home arena (2006-11).

LAST TIME OUT
UCLA lost its first game of the season at No. 21 Oregon on Wednesday night, dropping an 89-87 decision. Oregon's Dillon Brooks nailed a game-winning three-pointer in the final second of regulation – with 0.8 seconds left on the clock – to help the Ducks erase an 82-74 deficit in the game's final four minutes. Bryce Alford and Thomas Welsh each scored 20 points for the Bruins, who had opened their season with 13 consecutive victories. Welsh also had a team-leading 10 rebounds in his first game back since suffering a bruised right knee in practice on Dec. 7.

NOT THE FIRST TIME
UCLA saw its season-opening 14-game win streak end during the 2006-07 season with a two-point loss at Oregon during the opening weekend of Pac-10 play (Jan. 6, 2007 – Oregon won, 68-66). In addition, the Bruins' 1994-95 team dropped its first (and only game) of the season at Oregon, ending a six-game win streak, before that team won the 1995 NCAA title (Jan. 5, 1995 – Oregon won, 82-72).

RECORD KEEPING
With a 13-0 start this season, UCLA had raced to its best start to any season since 2006-07, when the Bruins won 14 straight games. UCLA has opened a season with at least 13 straight wins 12 times (nine of those campaigns ended with UCLA winning the national title). Since John Wooden retired at the conclusion of the 1974-75 season, UCLA has posted win streaks of 10 games or longer 14 times (including this year's streak).

BALANCING ACT
Through 14 games, the Bruins have six players who have averaged in double-figure scoring (Leaf, Hamilton, Alford, Holiday, Ball and Welsh). TJ Leaf (17.2), Bryce Alford (16.6) and Isaac Hamilton (15.7) all rank among the top 10 in the Pac-12 in scoring (through Dec. 28). Seven of UCLA's eight regular contributors have recorded more assists than turnovers, with the only exception being freshman forward/center Ike Anigbogu. Six of those eight Bruins have assist-turnover ratios of 1.6 or higher (Lonzo Ball's 3.5 ratio leads all Pac-12 players).

NO ORDINARY FRESHMEN
Freshmen TJ Leaf (17.2 ppg 8.9 rpg) and Lonzo Ball (13.7 ppg, 5.6 rpg, 8.1 apg) rank among the top 10 in multiple categories in the Pac-12. Leaf has twice been named the conference's player of the Week (Dec. 5, Dec. 19) and ranks first among all Pac-12 players in overall field goal percentage (65.4%). Ball, named Pac-12 Player of the Week on Nov. 28, is the nation's only player averaging at least 10 points, five rebounds and eight assists per game. Ball and Oregon guard Payton Pritchard are the nation's only freshmen to have recorded at least 13 assists in one game this season.

SENIOR LEADER
Senior Bryce Alford ranks No. 12, nationally, among all active players in career points (1,597), through Dec. 28. In fact, Alford is the only player on that list's "top 20" who competes in a Power 5 conference. Alford, who has scored at least 20 points in the Bruins' last three games, ranks No. 18 on UCLA's career scoring list. As a senior in 2016-17, he has averaged 16.6 points, 2.6 rebounds and 2.6 assists per game, shooting 85.5 percent from the free throw line and 47.1 percent from the field. He has scored in double figures in 13 of UCLA's 14 games this season.

VETERAN PRESENCE
Senior Isaac Hamilton is one of 99 active players who has scored at least 1,100 career points. The former standout at nearby St. John Bosco High School (Bellflower, Calif.), Hamilton has scored at least 11 points in 13 of UCLA's 14 games this season. In fact, Hamilton has scored in double figures in 42 of UCLA's last 46 games, dating to the start of the 2015-16 campaign. He has registered five or more assists in five games and five or more rebounds in five contests. He finished with 17 points and eight rebounds in UCLA's 86-73 win over Ohio State in Las Vegas (Dec. 21).

TALENTED DISTRIBUTOR
Freshman Lonzo Ball has nearly as many assists (114) as he does shot attempts (127). Ball ranks second in the nation in assists per game (8.1), trailing Creighton senior guard Maurice Watson Jr. (9.0 apg). Ball, a 6-foot-6 guard from Chino Hills, Calif., set UCLA's single-game freshman assists record (13) against UC Riverside on Nov. 30, surpassing Pooh Richardson's 12-assist total from Jan. 11, 1986 in a double-overtime win at Washington State. Richardson owns the school's single-season assists per game record (7.6 apg as a senior in 1988-89).

HIGH MARKS ... 
- Through games played Dec. 28, UCLA ranked first in the nation in field goal percentage (54.9), total assists (326) and assists per game (23.3) and second in points per game (95.1) and assist-turnover ratio (1.9). In addition, the Bruins were fourth in the nation in 3-point percentage (42.8) and fifth in scoring margin (20.1 ppg).
- With a 102-84 win over Michigan on Dec. 10, the Bruins improved their all-time record against the Wolverines to 12-5. In fact, UCLA became the first team since Duke on Dec. 8, 2001, to have eclipsed the 100-point mark against the Wolverines. UCLA has compiled a 3-0 record this season against teams from the Big Ten Conference.
- The Bruins shot 67.2 percent against Michigan (39/58), the highest mark by any UCLA team since Dec. 23, 2005, when the team shot 67.3% (37/55) against Sacramento State. UCLA's 62.5 three-point percentage against Michigan was its highest since Nov. 29, 2013, when the team shot 76.5% from downtown (13/17) against Northwestern.

SHARING THE BALL
UCLA has recorded a season-high 29 assists in three games this year (vs. Pacific on Nov. 11, vs. Portland on Nov. 24 and vs. UC Riverside on Nov. 30). Previously, UCLA had not had as many as 29 assists since Dec. 31, 2006 (vs. Washington). UCLA last reached the 30-assist total in a game on Feb. 23, 1995, recording 32 assists at California (UCLA won, 104-88). The Bruins also had 32 assists on Nov. 27, 1993 (against Loyola Marymount) and on Feb. 23, 1989 (versus Washington). UCLA totaled 38 assists on Dec. 2, 1990 in the team's 149-98 win over Loyola Marymount.

Thursday, December 29, 2016

No. 2 UCLA Edged at No. 21 Oregon, 89-87

from College Hoops


dec 28, 2016 | ucla men's basketball page | ARTICLE LINK
EUGENE, Ore. – Thomas Welsh scored 20 points and grabbed a team-high 10 rebounds as No. 2 UCLA dropped its first game of the season, losing at No. 21 Oregon, 89-87, on Wednesday evening.

Oregon snapped UCLA's season-opening win streak at 13 games before a sellout crowd of 12,364 at Matthew Knight Arena, as Dillon Brooks drilled a game-winning three-pointer with 0.8 seconds to play in the second half for the Ducks (12-2, 1-0 Pac-12).

Brooks' last-second shot helped the Ducks erase an eight-point deficit in the game's final four minutes. Last season's Pac-12 Player of the Year, Brooks finished Wednesday's Pac-12 opener with 23 points, nine rebounds and four assists. He was one of five Oregon players to score in double figures.

UCLA's Bryce Alford scored 20 points, connecting on 7 of 11 shots and 6 of 10 three-point attempts, while Lonzo Ball totaled 14 points and TJ Leaf added 13.

Oregon extended its home win streak to 34 games with the win on Wednesday, in what was the Pac-12 opening game for both teams.

"This is an outstanding [Oregon] team," UCLA head coach Steve Alford said. "We're not going to end everybody's home streaks over the course of the year, obviously. I thought that we fought like crazy and had a really good second half. We shot the ball at a high level, again. This was an Oregon defense that was top 30 in the country. We got 87 [points] and shot it well. But we did it at Kentucky, and we just weren't able to close this one."

Trailing 65-57 with 13 minutes left in the second half, Ball helped UCLA (13-1, 0-1 Pac-12) fuel a 15-0 scoring run as the freshman nailed three consecutive three-pointers over a two-minute span. Ball's three-point spree pushed UCLA ahead by a 72-65 margin with 8:02 to go in the game.

The Bruins led, 82-74, after a jump shot on the wing by Welsh with 3:32 to go before Oregon rallied with a three-pointer from Chris Boucher and a tip-in from Brooks with 2:43 remaining to cut UCLA's advantage to 82-79.

After a pair of free throws from Oregon's Dylan Ennis pulled the host Ducks to within two points (85-83), Ball made a layup for UCLA. With Oregon trailing 87-83, Pritchard made a three-pointer with 16 seconds left before Alford missed a free throw at the nine-second mark. Oregon corralled the loose ball before Brooks hit the game-winner in the game's final moments.

The Bruins trailed by a season-high 12 points in the first half before reducing Oregon's early cushion to 52-47 by halftime.

UCLA returns to action at Oregon State on Friday, Dec. 30. Game time at OSU's Gill Coliseum is 8 p.m. (PT). The Bruins' game will be televised by Pac-12 Network.

->Box


Monday, December 26, 2016

UCLA Bruins 2016-17

Top row (left to right): assistant athletic performance coach Jordan Jackson, video coordinator Kory Alford, director of administration Doug Erickson, director of player development and personnel Kory Barnett, Alex Olesinski, Ike Anigbogu, Thomas Welsh, György Goloman, Ikenna Okwarabizie, TJ Leaf, Lonzo Ball, athletic performance coach Wes Long, athletic trainer Shane Besedick, assistant athletic performance coach Duval Kirkaldy. Front row (left to right): Armani Dodson, Prince Ali, Aaron Holiday, Bryce Alford, director of operations Tyus Edney, assistant coach Ed Schilling, head coach Steve Alford, assistant coach Duane Broussard, assistant coach David Grace, Isaac Hamilton, Alec Wulff, Jerrold Smith, Isaac Wulff.
courtesy of UCLA Men's Basketball link

#21 Oregon Ducks

Pre-season profile from Athlon Sports

Current info from ESPN.com link

The #21 Ducks are 11-2. 





No. 2 UCLA to Open Pac-12 Play at No. 20 Oregon


The Bruins (13-0) will play at No. 20 Oregon on Wednesday evening (TV: ESPN2).

Story Links

dec 24, 2016 | ucla men's basketball page | ARTICLE LINK
LOS ANGELES – No. 2 UCLA (13-0) opens its Pac-12 schedule at No. 20 Oregon (11-2) on Wednesday, Dec. 28, in a game that will be nationally televised by ESPN2. The Bruins lead the all-time series against Oregon by an 86-34 margin and have lost their previous two games at Matthew Knight Arena (Jan. 24, 2015 and Jan. 23, 2016). UCLA has compiled a 5-0 mark away from home this season, including one win at then-No. 1 Kentucky and four neutral-site victories.

GAME INFORMATION
Venue: Matthew Knight Arena (12,346)
Game Time: 6 p.m. PT
Television: ESPN2
TV Talent: Roxy Bernstein (play-by-play), Bill Walton (analyst)
Radio: AM 1150
Radio Talent: Josh Lewin (play-by-play), Tracy Murray (analyst)

PRESEASON FAVORITE
Last season's Pac-12 regular season and tournament champion, Oregon entered 2016-17 as the favorite to win the Pac-12 (as voted in the Pac-12's preseason media poll). Winners of their last nine consecutive games, Oregon was selected No. 5 in each of the preseason AP and USA Today Coaches polls.

UNDEFEATED
The Bruins (13-0) are off to their best start since opening the 2006-07 campaign with 14 consecutive wins. UCLA has opened the season with at least 13 straight victories 12 times, with nine of those campaigns ending with the Bruins winning the NCAA title – and four of those nine championship teams going undefeated (1964, 1967, 1972 and 1973). Since head coach John Wooden retired at the conclusion of the 1974-75 season, UCLA has posted win streaks of 10 games or longer 14 times (including this season's 13-game win streak).

DID YOU KNOW?
UCLA has opened its season with a record of 13-0 or better just four times since Coach Wooden retired after the 1974-75 season – 2016-17, 2006-07, 1993-94 and 1991-92.

BALANCING ACT
Through their 13 non-conference games, the Bruins have six players who have averaged in double-figure scoring (Leaf, Hamilton, Alford, Holiday, Ball and Welsh). TJ Leaf (17.5), Isaac Hamilton (16.8) and Bryce Alford (16.4) all rank among the top seven in the Pac-12 in scoring (through Dec. 23). Seven of UCLA's eight regular contributors have recorded more assists than turnovers, with the only exception being freshman forward/center Ike Anigbogu. Six of those eight Bruins have assist-turnover ratios of 1.6 or higher (Lonzo Ball's 3.4 ratio leads all Pac-12 players).

NO ORDINARY FRESHMEN
Freshmen TJ Leaf (17.5 ppg 9.2 rpg) and Lonzo Ball (13.7 ppg, 5.8 rpg, 8.3 apg) rank among the top 10 in multiple categories in the Pac-12. Leaf has twice been named the conference's player of the Week (Dec. 5, Dec. 19) and ranks first among all Pac-12 players in overall field goal percentage (65.5%). Ball, named Pac-12 Player of the Week on Nov. 28, is the nation's only player averaging at least 10 points, five rebounds and eight assists per game. Ball and Oregon guard Payton Pritchard are the nation's only freshmen to have recorded at least 13 assists in one game this season.

SENIOR LEADER
Senior Bryce Alford ranks No. 13, nationally, among all active players in career points (1,577), through Dec. 23. In fact, Alford is the only player on that list's "top 20" who competes in a Power 5 conference. Alford, who has scored at least 20 points in the Bruins' last two games, ranks No. 18 on UCLA's career scoring list. As a senior in 2016-17, he has averaged 16.4 points, 2.5 rebounds and 2.7 assists per game, shooting 87.0 percent from the free throw line and 45.8 percent from the field. He has scored in double figures in 12 of UCLA's 13 games this season.

VETERAN PRESENCE
Senior Isaac Hamilton is one of 99 active players who has scored at least 1,100 career points. The former standout at nearby St. John Bosco High School (Bellflower, Calif.), Hamilton has scored at least 11 points in each of the Bruins' 13 games this season. In fact, Hamilton has scored in double figures in 42 of UCLA's last 45 games, dating to the start of the 2015-16 campaign. He has registered five or more assists in five games and five or more rebounds in five contests. He finished with 17 points and eight rebounds in UCLA's 86-73 win over Ohio State in Las Vegas (Dec. 21).

TALENTED DISTRIBUTOR
Freshman Lonzo Ball has nearly as many assists (108) as he does shot attempts (116). Ball ranks second in the nation in assists per game (8.3), trailing Creighton senior guard Maurice Watson Jr. (9.0 apg). Ball, a 6-foot-6 guard from Chino Hills, Calif., set UCLA's single-game freshman assists record (13) against UC Riverside on Nov. 30, surpassing Pooh Richardson's 12-assist total from Jan. 11, 1986 in a double-overtime win at Washington State. Richardson owns the school's single-season assists per game record (7.6 apg as a senior in 1988-89).

STARTING FIVE, PLUS TWO
Bryce Alford ranks No. 18 on UCLA's all-time scoring list. He enters this Wednesday's game having scored 1,577 points in 118 career games (13.4 ppg). Alford has scored in double figures in 12 of 13 games this season and ranks third on the team with 16.4 points per game. He ranks second in the Pac-12 in free throw percentage (87.0, 47/54).
Isaac Hamilton is tied for fifth in the Pac-12 in scoring (16.8 ppg) and is tied for eighth in assists per game (3.5). He has scored at least 11 points in all 13 games this year. Dating back to the start of 2015-16, he has scored in double figures in 42 of UCLA's last 45 contests. He crossed the school's career 1,100-point plateau earlier this month.
Lonzo Ball, regarded as a prolific passer, ranks first in the Pac-12 in assists per game (8.3) and assist-turnover ratio (3.4), ninth in three-point field goal percentage (43.3), seventh in made three-pointers per game (2.2) and 12th in field goal percentage (53.3). Ball ranks No. 16, nationally, in assist-turnover ratio (3.4).
TJ Leaf has scored at least 20 points in a team-best five games and ranks first on the squad and fourth in the Pac-12 in scoring (17.5 ppg). The freshman has five double-doubles, including a 17-point, 13-rebound game against Kentucky (Dec. 3) and, more recently, a 25-point, 10-rebound effort against UC Santa Barbara (Dec. 14).
Thomas Welsh has made 57.3 percent of his total shot attempts (43/5) and is just one block shy of cracking UCLA's top-10 career blocks list (currently at 91 blocked shots). Welsh has registered five double-doubles this season and has made all 14 free throw attempts. He missed UCLA's last four games nursing a bruised right knee.
- G.G. Goloman has started UCLA's last four games in place of Thomas Welsh (injury) and has played in all but one game for the Bruins during his junior campaign. Goloman, who had six points, six rebounds and three assists in UCLA's most recent game (vs. Western Michigan, Dec. 21), has averaged 5.2 points and 4.0 rebounds per game this year.
Aaron Holiday leads all Pac-12 players in three-point field goal percentage (51.0, 25/49) and ranks fifth in assists per game (4.3). Holiday, who has scored in double figures in 11 of 13 games, has become UCLA's first player since Jordan Adams in Nov. 2012 to score at least 20 or more points off the bench in back-to-back games.

HIGH MARKS ... 
- Through games played Dec. 23, UCLA ranked first in the nation in field goal percentage (55.0), total assists (307) and assists per game (23.6) and second in points per game (95.8) and assist-turnover ratio (1.9). In addition, the Bruins were fourth in the nation in 3-point percentage (42.0) and fifth in scoring margin (21.8 ppg).
- With a 102-84 win over Michigan on Dec. 10, the Bruins improved their all-time record against the Wolverines to 12-5. In fact, UCLA became the first team since Duke on Dec. 8, 2001, to have eclipsed the 100-point mark against the Wolverines. UCLA has compiled a 3-0 record this season against teams from the Big Ten Conference.
- The Bruins shot 67.2 percent against Michigan (39/58), the highest mark by any UCLA team since Dec. 23, 2005, when the team shot 67.3% (37/55) against Sacramento State. UCLA's 62.5 three-point percentage against Michigan was its highest since Nov. 29, 2013, when the team shot 76.5% from downtown (13/17) against Northwestern.

SHARING THE BALL
UCLA has recorded a season-high 29 assists in three games this year (vs. Pacific on Nov. 11, vs. Portland on Nov. 24 and vs. UC Riverside on Nov. 30). Previously, UCLA had not had as many as 29 assists since Dec. 31, 2006 (vs. Washington). UCLA last reached the 30-assist total in a game on Feb. 23, 1995, recording 32 assists at California (UCLA won, 104-88). The Bruins also had 32 assists on Nov. 27, 1993 (against Loyola Marymount) and on Feb. 23, 1989 (versus Washington). UCLA totaled 38 assists on Dec. 2, 1990 in the team's 149-98 win over Loyola Marymount.

ABOUT THE OREGON DUCKS
Currently in his seventh season as head coach, Dana Altman has led the Ducks to an 11-2 record through non-conference action. Senior Chris Boucher has averaged a team-leading 14.1 points per game (also second on the team with 7.8 rebounds per game), while sophomore Tyler Dorsey has registered 13.5 points per game in all 13 contests. Junior Jordan Bell, among five Ducks scoring in double figures, has grabbed a team-best 8.3 rebounds per game.

THAT'S IMPROVEMENT
Seniors Bryce Alford and Isaac Hamilton and sophomore Aaron Holiday have all seen increases in their shooting percentages. Alford has shot 45.8 percent this season, having shot 39 percent in his previous three seasons.  Hamilton is currently shooting 50.3 percent this season after having logged a 44.5 percentage over his first two years at UCLA. Holiday leads the trio this season (55.4 percent) after having made 39.4 percent of his total shots last season.

LAST TIME SINCE?
UCLA ranks second in the nation in scoring (95.8 ppg), through Dec. 23. The Bruins are averaging well above their league-record of 92.3 ppg, set in 1967-68. UCLA has not registered 85.0 ppg since 1994-95 (87.5 ppg) and have not averaged 90.0 or more points per game since 1990-91 (92.3 ppg). UCLA leads the nation in assists per game (23.6). The assist was not an official NCAA stat until 1983-84, but UCLA's school record (22.4 apg) came in 1973-74.

Miller: Despite losing starting role for Bruins, he's a happy Holiday


dec 23, 2016 | jeff miller |o.c. register | ARTICLE LINK
LOS ANGELES – His team is undefeated and ranked No. 2 in the nation and already has one RPI-boosting victory a season after the program absorbed way too many RIP-inviting defeats.
So, naturally, Aaron Holiday, UCLA’s sixth man, shares the same sort of delight being felt by the five men in the rotation before him.
“We’re just out there hooping pretty much,” he said. “We’re swinging the ball, shooting open shots. I thought we had a pretty good team last year. We just didn’t gel together like we have now. It’s a joy to play with this team.”
So, there you have it, Bruins fans. On Christmas Eve, no less.
Happy Holiday.
For a few moments, though, let’s consider just how easy it would be right now for this sophomore guard to be bah-humbug bumming as the grump of Christmas present.
See, Holiday started all 32 games for the Bruins last season.
He has two brothers – Justin and Jrue – who are in the NBA.
He has a sister – Lauren – who played basketball at UCLA and a sister-in-law – also named Lauren – who won two Olympic gold medals in soccer.
Generally speaking, when it comes to sports, the Holidays achieve. And then they achieve some more.
Suddenly this season, the baby of the family was being asked to do something he never had done before in a basketball career during which he has done so many things.
Aaron Holiday was being asked to sit on bench.
If you don’t think this is such a big deal, that anyone with the opportunity to play at a school like UCLA should just be thankful, consider that plenty of college athletes have transferred for reasons far less legitimate.
“I didn’t look at it as disappointing,” Holiday explained. “I felt like I did all right last year, but I still have a lot to prove. I still need to get better. This is just part of that process.”
The addition of program-reshaping freshman Lonzo Ball – along with the holdover presence of seniors Bryce Alford and Isaac Hamilton – meant the Bruins had too much backcourt for only one backcourt.
In October, Coach Steve Alford met with all four guards and explained that “it wasn’t ideal” for each of them to be a starter, that the Bruins also had enough inside talent to be more balanced than that.
“I said, ‘With the eliteness that you all have, it’s about being efficient,’” Alford recalled this week. “Their efficiency is way up from last year. It’s been a great rotation so far. They know the roles they’re playing are key.”
Almost all of Holiday’s statistics are up from a year ago, other than minutes per game, which are only slightly down.
He’s averaging 14.5 points, is second on the team to Ball in assists and has been UCLA’s most accurate 3-point shooter.
What’s more, Holiday’s most-impactful performances have come against then-No. 1 Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio State, three of the Bruins’ more notable victories.
He has been the embodiment of the team’s unselfish style, Holiday picking up an enormous assist before the games even tip-off.
He leads the Bruins in sacrifices, no question, and this is a team where almost everyone is giving up something.
A boost off the bench is a weapon UCLA has lacked the past couple seasons, Holiday’s instant spark not entirely surprising given that former Bruins big man Tony Parker once called him “a young, energetic energy bar.”
“I just come out and try to play,” Holiday said. “At first, it was a little iffy because I was sort of lackadaisical, not having come off the bench before. Now, I just try to bring fire and energy.”
As for incentive, there’s also the reality that, in college basketball, being benched is nothing like being banished, particularly for players who are talented.
Zach LaVine, for example, started one game during his single season at UCLA. Now, he’s starting for the Minnesota Timberwolves.
It certainly hasn’t hurt a potentially thorny transition that Holiday and the 2016-17 Bruins have yet to experience defeat.
“It’s obviously easier when you’re winning,” he said. “It lets you trust the process a little bit more.”
Still, this is a player who averaged 25 points and more than eight rebounds as a senior at Campbell Hall High in North Hollywood, Holiday twice earning player of the year honors from the Los Angeles Daily News.
NBC Sports’ website recently noted that he would start for all but “at most, five or six programs” in the country and would be the best player on maybe all but 20 teams.
And here Holiday is, coming off the bench, impressively helping the Bruins rise from his initial seated position, UCLA’s often-employed four-guard lineup, among other things, so far too much for the opposition.
“If somebody’s open, we’re going to find them,” Holiday said. “We run and we shoot threes, and that’s what every kid wants to do nowadays. We share the ball, which is key.”
The Bruins share more than that. They share minutes and status, too, the mix an unbeatable blend to date.
Happy Holiday, indeed, Bruins fans, during a UCLA season that has been all about giving.