Showing posts with label ASU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ASU. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2021

UCLA douses Sun Devils in OT 81-75. Bruins now 8-2, 4-0.

UCLA IS TOP DOG IN THE PAC-12!!! 

CTTO 

2-min highlight


27-min highlight

Q & A's

The Box (click on box to enlarge)

Postgame Quotes – UCLA at Arizona State

POSTGAME QUOTES
UCLA 81, Arizona St. 75
January 7, 2021
 
Mick Cronin, The Michael Price Family UCLA Men’s Head Basketball Coach
on Cody Riley
“Well obviously, not only his buckets, we got a lot of inside-out 3s. I dispute that he only had two assists. I’m just frustrated with the fact that we didn’t go to him. We worked on going to him all week, especially in this game. I thought we got away from that early on, and we were over-dribbling, taking hard shots. We gave Arizona State life and almost paid the price, being sloppy with the basketball, sloppy with our shot selection. It’s why we shot 35 percent in the first half – bad shot selection and too many turnovers. Cody does a great job in the low post. We need to do a better job of feeding him all the time when he’s in the game, to be honest with you. But David Singleton stepped up, made some big plays as well.”
 
on Arizona State playing shorthanded
“I told you guys this when Chris [Smith] went out, it’s still 5-on-5. Still 0-0, 40-minute game and 5-on-5, and they have two guys going in the first round of the draft on every board. [ASU’s] Verge is as tough to guard off the dribble as there is in college ball. They’ve got weapons. In my opinion, teams play really well when they’re under adverse circumstances because they know they have to rally and give everything they got. That’s a credit to Coach Hurley, I would have expected nothing less from a team he coaches and their kids. So it didn’t surprise me that they rallied around their lack of depth tonight.”
 
on junior guard David Singleton
“I’ve been trying to get him back off the ball. Trying to evaluate his minutes, and too many of his minutes are at point guard. Trying to get him in there with Tyger or let Jules play some point and get him off the ball. Because he’s our best shooter right now, the numbers bear it out. Didn’t surprise me, Dave is an experienced guy. I’m really happy for him, great kid, and he’ll run through a wall for you. Hopefully he can keep it up, I give our guys some credit – especially Cody – not only was he dominant down low but he was finding the open man versus doubles as well.”
 
on UCLA not turning the ball over in overtime
“You know what, if I had the answer to that, I’d have some big rings on and be headed for Springfield, Massachusetts [Hall of Fame]. I really don’t know. I’m a stickler for taking care of the ball. My dad taught me that, that was his big thing as a great high school coach in Ohio. I worked for Bob Huggins and Rick Pitino, and they hammered it home for 18 years. I hammer it home because my team’s always offensive rebounding  – you can’t rebound a turnover. I wish I knew why we started taking care of the ball in overtime. If we would have tried that the whole game, we might not have been in overtime. But that said, Arizona State, I thought they played really hard. Their activity and their quickness caused some of that, we’ve got to do a better job on that. We’ll watch the film and keep trying to get better.”
 
Bobby Hurley, Arizona State Head Coach
opening statement
“I’m proud of my team’s effort. I think we battled extremely hard. UCLA is going to try and grind you up. They’re a really defensive-minded, tough team on both ends of the floor. They had a great inside game. I think we held our own in the paint. We held our own on the backboards and those are points of emphasis we are trying to get better at. I like how our guys stepped up, it’s been a tough stretch and to be shorthanded and have four guys play over 40 minutes in a game and still compete the way we did was very honorable despite all the adversity we were facing.”
 
on rebounding and defensive effort
“I thought we did a good job especially through the regulation to dig in the post, get some post trapping, we generated 18 turnovers in the game without pressing UCLA as much during the game, I thought we were feisty in that regard. I’m not sure if [Cody] Riley slowed us down, as we got to overtime, we couldn’t handle him as well. Marcus and Josh having double-figure rebounds was important for us because if we can do that well, we have guys that can play in the open court and it’s going to be really beneficial for us moving forward.”
 
on senior guard Alonzo Verge Jr.
“He took it personally, took it as a chip on his shoulder how he played. He had a good rhythm taking the mid-range shots, getting to the basket well, and six defensive rebounds in the first half which is really good from the guard spot. He did a lot of things that were positive for us tonight.”
 
on the difficulty with missing players
“It’s tough. When I mention four guys playing over 40 minutes that rarely happens. I think we have a good foundation under us in terms of conditioning, it’s a very physical game and these guys battled through it really well. As far as other players, they are still day to day, and I’ll try to get updates as they know more.”
 
on his team’s defensive effort
“It’s been a lot of film sessions, communication with the guys, and showing them the breakdowns. We’re trying to show them the importance of it and showing them the success we do have when we’re better in that department and what that means to our chances of winning games. It’s going to be critical for us to play with that physicality and to have multiple guys focused on doing it, and we’ll have more success moving forward.”


Current Team Stats (click table to enlarge)









Next: @Arizona on Saturday, Jan 9. Let's go, 4-0 Bruins!!! 

Monday, February 12, 2018

UCLA cannot hang with ASU. Loses in Tempe 88-79.



feb 10, 2018 | UCLA MEN'S BASKETBALL PAGE | POST LINK


TEMPE, Ariz. – Aaron Holiday scored 20 points and Thomas Welsh added 14 as UCLA dropped an 88-79 decision at Arizona State before 14,025 at Wells Fargo Arena on Saturday.

UCLA (17-8, 8-5 Pac-12) had a four-game winning streak snapped and trailed the Sun Devils (19-6, 7-6) at halftime by a 40-32 margin. The Bruins never were able to tie the game or take the lead in the second half.

Gyorgy Goloman and Kris Wilkes rounded out the Bruins' list of double-figure scorers, recording 11 points each.

Arizona State's three starting guards – Tra Holder (22 points), Shannon Evans II (23 points) and Kodi Justice (17 points) – accounted for 62 of the Sun Devils' 88 total points.

"Those three [ASU] guards got away from us," UCLA head coach Steve Alford said. "Those three are very talented guards and they had it going. There was a stretch in the first half where we had a pretty good rhythm, and we then had a bad stretch in the first half, offensively. We took some quick shots instead of working on getting the ball inside."

Holiday recorded his ninth 20-point performance in 13 Pac-12 contests. The junior guard from Chatsworth, Calif., scored just three points in the first half before totaling 17 points after halftime. Holiday shot 6-for-15 from the field and 4-for-10 from three-point range.

UCLA never got any closer than eight points in the second half despite shooting 50 percent against Arizona State (17-for-34) after the intermission.

ASU led by as many as 16 points late in the second half (75-59, 3:54) before the Bruins used a 9-2 scoring run and consecutive three-point baskets by Holiday with roughly two minutes to play in the contest.

Arizona State withstood the Bruins' late run by making 11 free throws in the final two minutes. In all, ASU shot 89.3 percent from the free throw line (25-for-28).

The host Sun Devils led 40-32 at halftime after using an 11-0 scoring run on three consecutive three-pointers during a two-minute span, securing a 29-22 advantage with 7:33 to play. Evans II and Justice combined to score 22 first-half points, leading the way for Arizona State.

UCLA shot the ball well in the opening minutes of the first half, sinking seven of 10 field goal attempts. Welsh had seven of his 14 points in the game's first six minutes, helping the Bruins secure a 12-7 cushion with 15:39 to play before halftime.

The Bruins shot 45 percent from the field on Saturday (30-for-66), but made just 31 percent (8-for-26) of their three-point shots.

UCLA will return home next week to play its final two regular-season home games, before embarking upon a three-game road trip. The Bruins host Oregon State on Thursday in Pauley Pavilion, before taking on Oregon on Saturday, Feb. 17.

UCLA's game against Oregon State will begin on Thursday at 8 p.m. That game will be nationally televised by FS1.

The Bruins' final regular-season home game on Saturday, Feb. 17, will begin at 7:15 p.m. (TV: ESPN).

The Box


Thursday, March 14, 2013

First look: UCLA vs. Arizona State


First look: UCLA vs. Arizona State

March, 13, 2013
MAR 13
3:58
PM PT
What: No. 21 UCLA Bruins (23-8) vs. Arizona State Sun Devils (21-11), Pac-12 tournament quarterfinal

When: Thursday, 12 p.m. PT

WhereMGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas

TV: Pac-12 Networks

Radio: AM 570

Scouting the Bruins: Top-seeded UCLA enters the tournament having won five of its past six games and seven of its past nine en route to the Pac-12 regular season title. It was the 31st conference title for the Bruins and the fourth in the past eight seasons. The Bruins led the conference in scoring (75 points per game) and field-goal percentage (45.8), but those numbers are down to 68.8 and 42 percent over the past four games. Shabazz Muhammad, a freshman All-American and conference co-freshman of the year, is averaging a team-best 18.3 points for UCLA. Point guard Larry Drew II continues to run the offense effectively and set the UCLA single-season record for assists (239) Saturday in the regular-season finale.Jordan Adams is averaging 15.2 points and should have some extra motivation after getting snubbed in the all-conference voting. Kyle Anderson is averaging close to a double-double over the past four games, but scored only eight points on 4-of-13 shooting (30.7 percent) in two games on the Washington trip last week. Travis Wear appeared to regain form after missing significant time with a foot injury. He played 31 minutes and scored 10 points against Washington. Those were his most minutes played since Feb. 7, and his most points since Feb. 14.

Scouting the Sun Devils: Arizona State stumbled to the regular-season finish line with four consecutive losses and six losses in its last eight games, but bounced back with a nice 89-88 overtime victory over Stanford Wednesday in the opening round of the Pac-12 tournament. The late-season slide by the Sun Devils removed them from the NCAA tournament bubble, and they are now in the unenviable position of needing to win the conference tournament to make the big dance. A player such as conference co-freshman of the year Jahii Carson should help. He’s averaging 18.3 points and had a career-high 34 on 14-of-22 shooting Wednesday in the tournament opener against Stanford. Carson is averaging 23.5 points in his past four games. Wing Carrick Felix, a second-team all Pac-12 selection, is averaging 14.4 points and 8.3 rebounds and had 19 and 12 against Stanford. The Sun Devils are the No. 2 shooting team in the conference at 45.7 percent, but they are last in the conference in free throw shooting at 61.7 percent. The latter stat could haunt them at this time of the year when games tend to be close down the stretch.

The series: UCLA leads the all-time series, 62-18. They split two regular-season games this season with each team winning at home. The Sun Devils handed UCLA its largest margin of defeat this season in a 78-60 ASU victory Jan. 26 in Tempe. The Bruins defeated the Sun Devils, 79-74, in overtime Feb. 27 at Pauley Pavilion. The teams have not met in the conference tournament since UCLA’s 79-78 semifinal victory in 1990. Their only other conference tournament meeting was the second round in 1987, which UCLA won, 99-83.