Alexander: First-round upset? Not on the Bruins’ watch

0

SACRAMENTO — Were UCLA’s players paying attention to Thursday’s early results? Or here’s a better question: Did they really need other people’s upsets to motivate them at this time of year?

Hours before the second-seeded Bruins stepped on the Golden 1 Center court to face No. 15 UNC Asheville in the first round of the NCAA tournament, there was a vivid illustration of the perils of overlooking a low seed at the very same site. And when No. 15 Princeton knocked off Arizona, marking the third straight year a 15 had eliminated a No. 2, and No. 13 Furman pulled off a 68-67 victory over No. 4 Virginia in the final seconds earlier in the day in Orlando, the warning bells should have been clanging loudly.

But no, UCLA coach Mick Cronin said, he didn’t bring it up before the Bruins took the floor. His players knew of the upsets, certainly, but there was a more elemental motivation.

“It has no bearing on us,” UCLA’s coach said. “We don’t believe in false motivation, so we don’t believe that you need your home crowd to win. We don’t believe you need two starters to win. We believe that you need toughness and togetherness, playing hard and smart. There’s always a way to win.”

Evidently, the motivation did come from Arizona, but last weekend at the Pac-12 tournament. When the Wildcats beat the Bruins in the championship game, the sting didn’t go away quickly.

“I wasn’t happy, but I knew it was going to help us,” Cronin said. “There’s no question it was going to help us. I know these guys. Like, I know how upset this guy (Jaime Jaquez Jr., sitting next to him at the dais) was that we didn’t win that game Saturday. He was as upset as I’ve ever seen him. So that helps.”

Jaquez was asked how that turns from a negative into a positive.

“I try not to dwell on it ’cause if we lose now, my entire season’s done,” he said. “I don’t think it’s very hard to get me going, or any of the rest of the guys for that matter. … We try to get the young guys to understand this, that this is a one-and-out tournament and we don’t want this to end.”

It was to UCLA’s advantage that for Thursday’s tournament opener it wasn’t playing Princeton, or Princeton Lite, or really any team with any sort of NCAA tournament resume. Instead, Asheville’s players looked like first-timers. They seemed absolutely petrified at the prospect of sharing the court with the Bruins, chucking airballs and throwing passes away.

“I give them (UCLA) a ton of credit,” Asheville coach Mike Morrell said. “They were the aggressors early, and they took it to us. You got to give them credit for that because they were not going to be caught sleeping.

“I thought they were really good defensively. They just kind of really pushed us around all over the floor.”

And with the Bulldogs rattled, and the Bruins coolly doing what they do, the 86-53 result shouldn’t have been a surprise at all.

Drew Pember, Asheville’s best player and the guy Cronin had lauded (hyped?) the day before, was the only prominent member of the Bulldogs who had even been on an NCAA tournament team, at Tennessee before he transferred to Asheville. But he’d never played a tournament game, and Thursday’s debut didn’t go well. Pember had one more field goal in the first half (two) than he had airballs, he had six of his team’s 16 turnovers and he finished with 13 points, well below his average of 21.2.

The rest of the Big South Conference champs were similarly inefficient. They gave up 56 points in the paint and 30 off turnovers, shot 37.3% and were 7 for 17 on layups. Clearly, they were not ready for prime time.

The Bruins, meanwhile, shot 54% and had 24 assists on their 34 field goals.

There is a difference between low seeds that have been here before and understand how to use the unpredictability of March Madness in their favor, and those who have no idea what it’s all about until it hits them. As Morrell described it, the latter is what his team faced Thursday night, and he acknowledged he probably didn’t do enough to help.

“You can talk about it, but you don’t really know, you can’t really understand it, until you experience it,” he said. “You can’t really experience it until you understand it. That’s like a vicious cycle, right? But it’s the truth.

“We tried, man. We tried to explain what the experience was going to be like. I would say these guys probably would agree that it’s a little bit different when you actually get out there and those emotions are flowing. I wish I’d done a better job of helping them with it, though.”

In contrast, Princeton has done this before. It was 27 years since the Tigers took out UCLA in a first-round upset – a 45-43 shocker one year after the Bruins had won the school’s 11th and most recent NCAA championship – in what turned out to be Jim Harrick’s last game as coach. That was a 13th seed knocking off a No. 4, but the message was, and remains, the same: Overlook an NCAA tournament opponent at your peril.

Stay connected with us on social media platform for instant update click here to join our  Twitter, & Facebook

We are now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@TechiUpdate) and stay updated with the latest Technology headlines.

For all the latest Sports News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Rapidtelecast.com is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.
Leave a comment