Tuesday, January 31, 2012

USC BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK: Dedmon out for season with knee injury

USC FOOTBALL: Top offensive-line prospect Zach Banner commits to Trojans

Zach Banner chooses USC

by on Jan 30, 2012 3:30 PM PST in USC Football

Not exactly the best kept secret...

USC added a very large man to its offensive line on Monday afternoon.

Five-star, 6-foot-8, 295-pound offensive lineman Zach Banner announced on Monday that he has committed to USC. Obviously, this is big news for the Trojans both literally and figuratively, as Banner is one of the most coveted offensive lineman prospects in the country.

I will feel better when the LOI is actually signed and in the file, but either way, this kid is beast.

The more help on the O-line the better.

There is still a lot more work to do before signing day, but Lane Kiffin continues to pull in top talent. Kiffin won't get them all, especially with the sanctions, but it is hard to deny that this staff still has the magic touch.

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UCLA 76, UTAH 49: Bruins no longer blue, thanks to Utes' visit

Lamb helps UCLA bring Colorado to a stop

LOS ANGELES ? UCLA guard Tyler Lamb and Colorado backcourt ace Carlon Brown go way back.

"I've known him since middle school," Lamb said of his former AAU club teammate.

UCLA forward Travis Wear puts up a shot as Colorado's Austin Dufault, left, and Andre Roberson defend during the second half of a game Saturday in Los Angeles. UCLA won, 77-60.
MARK J. TERRILL, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Saturday afternoon, Lamb redefined the term "close friends."

Lamb's smothering defense all but totally shut down Brown, the Buffalos' leading scorer, setting the tone in a convincing 77-60 UCLA victory over Pac-12 co-leader Colorado at the Sports Arena.

Lamb held Brown to one field goal, none in the game's final 26 minutes-plus, and had team-highs in steals (3) and rebounds (7) plus a blocked shot on afternoon in which the Bruins limited Colorado to 34.8 percent shooting from the field in a second half in which UCLA led by 19.

Lamb, the sophomore out of Mater Dei High, was just as impressive on the offensive end, connecting on 3 of 5 shots from behind the 3-point arc on the way to 13 points while also handing out six assists.

"His best game as a Bruin," UCLA coach Ben Howland said of Lamb's performance.

The victory kept UCLA (12-9 overall, 5-4) within two games of the Pac-12 lead at the halfway point of a conference race that so far has failed to produce a front-runner.

"That was a very solid win for us against a very good team," Howland said.

The question now is can UCLA replicate the form it showed against Colorado (14-7, 6-3) and in blowing out Utah 76-49 Thursday night on the road?

UCLA travels to Washington on Thursday and then Washington State on Saturday. The Bruins have only two road triumphs this season: a 92-60 victory against tiny Chaminade Nov. 21 on Maui and a 66-47 romp Jan. 15 against USC, the only team winless in Pac-12 play. Washington is tied with Cal and Oregon atop the Pac-12 in the loss column, and the Bruins haven't won at Hec Edmundson Pavilion since 2004, and the Huskies are 10-6 in the rivalry since then.

UCLA over the weekend at least addressed an area that proved fatal in losses at Oregon State and Oregon a week earlier: the Bruins failure to put two quality halves together.

The Bruins didn't panic when Colorado jumped to a 9-2 to open the game. UCLA came back with an 18-1 run of its own to take a 26-16 lead on a Norman Powell 3-point jumper and then counter a second Colorado run with 3-point jumpers from Lamb and Powell at the end of the half to take a 40-36 lead into halftime.

"We knew they were a good team, we just needed to stay calm," UCLA's David Wear said. "We knew this was going to be a game of runs and they made their run and then we made our run and we never really looked back after that."

Four Bruins scored in double figures led by guard Lazeric Jones with 17. Travis Wear added 14 points, his twin brother David 11. Bruins point guard Jerime Anderson had eight assists on a day when he, Jones and Lamb combined for 23 assists. UCLA's 26 assists were the most by a Bruins team since 2006.

But more than anything it was Lamb's defensive intensity that stood out Saturday. Brown came into the game averaging 14.1 points per game in Pac-12 play. Saturday through the game's first 13 minutes he had as many turnovers and shot attempts (1).

Contact the writer: sreid@ocregister.com

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UCLA BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK: Howland plans to limit minutes of Jones, Anderson

Monday, January 30, 2012

USC's Dedmon likely out for season

Dedmon injured as USC routed by Colorado

The Trojans lose their ninth in a row, 74-50. The 7-foot center is set to have an MRI exam Friday after suffering a sprained left knee.

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LOS ANGELES ? This is how preposterous USC's season has become:

After Coach Kevin O'Neill finished his postgame address following Thursday night's 74-50 loss to Colorado at Galen Center, 7-foot center James Blasczyk walked gingerly to the front of the interview room with a boot on his right foot; he has been playing through a Lisfranc sprain for weeks.

Article Tab: USC's James Blasczyk, left, puts up a shot as Colorado center Shane Harris-Tunks defends during the first half Thursday.
USC's James Blasczyk, left, puts up a shot as Colorado center Shane Harris-Tunks defends during the first half Thursday.
MARK J. TERRILL, AP
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When Blasczyk finished, he yielded to fellow 7-footer Dewayne Dedmon ? who had a brace on the left knee he sprained early in the first half. Dedmon couldn't continue, and the already struggling Trojans were lost without him.

Dedmon will have an MRI exam today. He didn't think the injury was severe, but with this team, you never know.

"I've never had this many injuries, major injuries," said O'Neill, whose team has lost four players to season-ending surgeries, including two starters.

"The compilation of all those things brings us to where we are now."

Where the Trojans are now is a place no team ever wants to be. USC has lost nine in a row, its longest losing streak since a 13-game skid during the 1988-89 season. (The 1995-96 Trojans lost 10 in a row, but a loss to Cal later became a forfeit.)

Thursday's defeat dropped USC to 3-9 at Galen Center. The Trojans hadn't lost more than five home games in any of their first five seasons in the building.

By the end of this night, the Colorado fans in the sparse crowd of 3,147 were chanting "Let's go Buffaloes!" USC was down to five healthy scholarship players, with Blasczyk unable to finish because of cramps.

"We're pinned," O'Neill said. "There's no moves right now. There's no quick fix."

O'Neill is hopeful that Dedmon won't be out long and that his team will continue to work hard and carry itself with dignity. O'Neill made sure his players got that message in the postgame locker room, where he chastised freshman Byron Wesley for leaving the court with his shirt off.

"Those kind of things can't be changed," O'Neill said. "Those kind of things can't be compromised. ... You carry yourself the same way."

For the first time this season, the injuries really seemed to rattle USC. When Dedmon got hurt ? a Colorado player fell into his leg after drawing a charge on Wesley at the 15:43 mark of the first half ? three Trojans lingered on the court, oblivious to O'Neill's request to huddle near the bench. USC played much of the rest of the game in a fog. The 24-point margin was its largest of the season.

"It's hard to stay encouraged," Blasczyk. "(But) a lot of it should be self-discipline. We should get ourselves going. Losing by 24 every game is not OK."

NOTES

Forward Aaron Fuller underwent successful surgery Thursday morning to repair a torn labrum in his left shoulder. He is expected to be out 4-6 months.

Contact the writer: mlev@ocregister.com

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Grading UCLA?s 2009 recruiting class

Third in a five-part series of slideshows grading recent UCLA recruiting classes. Click on the photo to find out how they fared. More recruiting classes: 2007 I 2008

Grading UCLA?s 2009 recruiting class

The largely disappointing play of quarterback Richard Brehaut is only one of the reasons UCLA's 2009 recruiting class has been a bust.
The largely disappointing play of quarterback Richard Brehaut is only one of the reasons UCLA's 2009 recruiting class has been a bust.
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UCLA bounces back, rolls over Utah

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LOS ANGELES ? Jerime Anderson's halftime speech to his UCLA teammates Thursday night was brief was to the point.

"Two words," the Bruins senior point guard recalled later.

Utah guard Chris Hines, left, looks to pass as UCLA's David Wear (12) and Lazeric Jones defend in the first half Thursday.
JASON REDMOND, AP

"The first was something I can't repeat. The second word was 'Oregon.'"

Anderson's speech was both a reminder of how the Bruins blew a game Saturday in Eugene and also a rallying cry for UCLA as it kept its foot on the gas in the second half and rolled over Utah, 76-49, at a less than two-thirds full Sports Arena on Thursday night.

UCLA (11-9, 4-4 Pac-12) turned a 15-point halftime lead into a 36-point advantage in the second half by shooting 73.7 percent from the field and maintaining its defensive intensity in the final 20 minutes.

"This game was a real confidence booster for us," forward David Wear said. "We focused for a full 40 minutes defensively."

Wear and the Bruins believe they can still get back into the Pac-12 race with a victory against Colorado (14-6, 6-2), one of four schools tied for the conference lead, on Saturday.

"With the Pac-12 still wide open this year," said UCLA center Joshua Smith, who led four Bruins in double figures with a game-high 14 points. "There's not really a team that has really established itself as a dominant team. We know this was a very big week for us."

The weekend looms even larger after UCLA wasted a pair of winnable games last weekend in the Willamette Valley. The 75-68 loss at Oregon was particularly difficult to get over after UCLA led by 15 late in the first half only to lose control of the game in the opening moments of the second half.

The memory was still fresh as UCLA took a 36-21 lead into the locker room Thursday after the Bruins broke the game open with a 14-4 run over the final 6:33 of the first half.

"We felt the first five minutes of the second half were really huge," said Coach Ben Howland, who picked up his 200th victory at UCLA. "I didn't talk about last Saturday (at halftime) but that was exactly what was going through my mind."

This time there was no let up.

After Utes center Jason Washburn scored the opening basket of the second half, the Bruins rattled off six quick consecutive points, capped by a David Wear 3-point jumper to go out, 42-23. Another Wear 3-pointer and a 3-point play by Jerime Anderson found the Bruins ahead, 53-32.

Moments later, UCLA sophomore guard Tyler Lamb picked up a steal on one end, and then nailed a 3-pointer on the other and then freshman guard Norman Powell converted another Utah turnover to stretch the gap to 58-32.

Anderson played what Howland characterized as his "best game as a Bruin," scoring 13, and adding three assists, three steals and a blocked shot.

David Wear finished with 13 points. Guard Tyler Lamb had 10 points, four assists and three steals on perhaps UCLA's most balanced game of the season. UCLA's other point guard,

Lazeric Jones, scored just seven points but was still pivotal to the offense dishing out six assists.

But perhaps the most encouraging performance came from Smith, who rebounded from a disastrous game against Oregon in which he didn't score a field goal until the final 37.9 seconds of the loss.

"I thought he was really motivated after last week," Howland said.

Contact the writer: sreid@ocregister.com

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UCLA BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK: Howland watching usage of guards Jones, Anderson

USC Basketball: Dewayne Dedmon's season is finished

Images_tiny by Paragon SC on Jan 27, 2012 2:45 PM PST in

Add Dewayne Dedmon to injury list...

USC sophomore center Dewayne Dedmon will likely miss the rest of the season with an MCL tear in his left knee suffered during the first half of Thursday night's loss to Colorado. The injury does not require surgery, so the seven-footer will begin a rest and rehabilitation program immediately.

The MCL is pretty important in regards to knee stability in flexion.

It wasn't enough that USC got dump trucked by Colorado, they had to lose Dedmon too.

USC just can't catch a break...

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Mourners back Joe Paterno at memorial service

NEWSWIRE

Mourners back Joe Paterno at memorial service

Penn State football stars and friends pay tribute to the longtime coach. Nike Chairman Phil Knight defends Paterno's handling of child sex abuse allegations involving a former assistant coach that led to Paterno's firing.

Phil Knight

Nike chairman Phil Knight takes a moment to gather himself while speaking at a memorial service for former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno on Thursday. (Nabil K. Mark / MCT / 26)

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Crediting him with building not just better athletes but better men, former Penn State football stars and others paid tribute to Joe Paterno in a huge campus memorial service Thursday that exposed a strong undercurrent of anger over his firing.

In a 21/2-hour gathering that capped three days of mourning on campus, Nike Chairman and Chief Executive Phil Knight instantly brought the near-capacity crowd of 12,000 to its feet in thunderous applause when he defended the coach's handling of child sex abuse allegations leveled against former assistant Jerry Sandusky. Paterno was fired over the episode on Nov. 9.

"This much is clear to me: If there is a villain in this tragedy, it lies in that investigation and not in Joe Paterno's response," Knight said. Paterno's widow, Sue, was among those rising to their feet.

Later, Paterno's son Jay received a standing ovation when he declared: "Joe Paterno left this world with a clear conscience."

The ceremony at the university basketball arena was filled with lavish praise that probably would have embarrassed Paterno, who died of lung cancer Sunday at 85 after racking up more wins ? 409 ? than any other major-college football coach and leading his team to two national championships in his 46 seasons.

He was saluted for his commitment to sportsmanship, loyalty, teamwork, character, academics and "winning with honor."

ETC.

No charges against Welch

A spokeswoman for the Orange County District Attorney's office said Thursday that no charges would be filed against Santa Margarita High football Coach Harry Welch stemming from an anonymous tip that prompted an investigation by the Orange County Sheriff's Department into allegations that Welch pushed or shoved a player in December.

Spokeswoman Farrah Emami said the D.A.'s office didn't believe it could present a case that would prove a criminal act occurred.

Welch was put on administrative leave last Friday by the school and the Diocese of Orange pending outcome of a review. He guided the Eagles to the Pac-5 Division championship and a CIF state championship Division I bowl victory last season.

"Something came to the attention of the diocese and the Santa Margarita administration, and they're looking into it," diocese spokesman Stephen Bohannon said Thursday.

?Eric Sondheimer

Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw accepted the Warren Spahn Award in Oklahoma City on Thursday night as the best left-handed pitcher in baseball.

Kershaw, the National League Cy Young Award winner, led the NL with a 21-5 record, 248 strikeouts and a 2.28 earned-run average. He also was selected to his first All-Star game and won his first Gold Glove.

The Spahn award is based on a pitcher's wins, strikeouts and ERA. Spahn won 363 games in his Hall-of-Fame career. He died in 2003.

===

Free-agent reliever Brad Lidge agreed to a one-year contract with the Washington Nationals.

Last season, the right-hander pitched only 191/3 innings for the Philadelphia Phillies, finishing 0-2 with a 1.40 ERA and one save. He didn't pitch until late July because of elbow and shoulder problems in his right arm.

===

Milwaukee Bucks center Andrew Bogut is out indefinitely after breaking his left ankle Wednesday night in Houston.

Bogut's left foot came down awkwardly on a Houston player's foot after Bogut tried to block a shot in the first quarter. The Bucks said Thursday that an MRI exam found Bogut fractured his ankle.

===

Texas football Coach Mack Brown is getting a contract extension through 2020.

University regents voted to give Brown four more years on his current contract, which was set to expire in 2016.

Brown is paid $5.2 million per year. He will keep getting annual raises of $100,000 that are in his current contract.
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Battered Trojans take a turn beating up Utes

Battered Trojans take a turn beating up Utes

LOS ANGELES ? USC finally won a basketball game Saturday night. In an unrelated note, Trojans coach Kevin O'Neill received a vote of confidence from his boss.

The two aren't connected because USC athletic director Pat Haden isn't judging O'Neill on his win-loss record this season. The Trojans are just 6-16 after beating Utah, 62-45, to end a nine-game losing streak.

Article Tab: Utah's Jason Washburn, left, and USC's Alexis Moore battle for the ball in the first half of a game Saturday.
Utah's Jason Washburn, left, and USC's Alexis Moore battle for the ball in the first half of a game Saturday.
LORI SHEPLER, AP

"I think everybody's disappointed," Haden said at halftime. "We don't like the way the season has gone. But there are reasons it's gone badly."

USC has been decimated by injuries, the latest befalling 7-foot center Dewayne Dedmon, who likely will miss the rest of the season after injuring his left knee Thursday.

With Dedmon watching from the bench in sweats, USC faced Utah with only six healthy scholarship players. But the Trojans still overwhelmed the Utes (5-16, 2-7 Pac-12) to pick up their first conference victory of the season.

Sophomore forward Garrett Jackson scored a career-high 16 points. Sophomore guard Maurice Jones matched that total, adding five assists and five rebounds.

USC shared the ball (16 assists on 24 baskets) and defended well (36.7 percent shooting by Utah). O'Neill liked the play he saw on the court and enjoyed the vibe he felt in the locker room.

"These guys are happy to win," O'Neill said. "I think they're relieved too. I'm relieved. Towson (State) just broke their streak (a Division I-record 41 games). I thought we were headed for 20."

USC actually is headed to Washington State for a Thursday night game in Pullman. The Trojans venture north with something to feel positive about after a seemingly endless run of injuries and defeats.

"It's definitely been frustrating to see your teammates go down with injuries and everything we've gone through so far," Jackson said. "But we know we can't fall apart. We know we have to stick together."

Utah beat Washington State earlier this season, but that was in Salt Lake City. The Utes are 0-11 away from the Huntsman Center and clearly weren't ready to make the jump to the Pac-12 Conference this season.

Utah allowed notoriously slow-starting and low-scoring USC to jump out to a 16-4 lead. Byron Wesley's banked 3-pointer at the buzzer made it 32-14 at halftime, and the advantage grew as large as 22 points in the second half.

"I'm glad this losing streak is over," O'Neill said. "I've been through many losing streaks in my life. They're hard to deal with. They're especially hard for young people to deal with."

They aren't easy for athletic directors, either. But when asked if O'Neill would be back next season, barring some sort of off-court incident or NCAA violation, Haden didn't hesitate.

"Yes," he said.

Contact the writer: mlev@ocregister.com

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Sunday, January 29, 2012

Another 8 Clap As Devin Fuller Hops On Bruin Bandwagon, Commits To UCLA

UCLA getting small contributions from Smith

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By SCOTT M. REID / THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

LOS ANGELES ? This isn't what UCLA guard Jerime Anderson envisioned for his senior season in Westwood.

"I thought we had a really good team," the former Canyon High standout said, "and thought we'd do a lot of things to make a lot of noise here on the West Coast and maybe nationally, but you know that's not where we're at right now."

Article Tab: 'I'd probably say I'm thinking too much, and I just need to go out there and just relax and play with a smile on my face,' said UCLA's Joshua Smith, center, assessing his play.
'I'd probably say I'm thinking too much, and I just need to go out there and just relax and play with a smile on my face,' said UCLA's Joshua Smith, center, assessing his play.
RICK BOWMER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Bruins, preseason Pac-12 favorites, head into a crucial homestand with Utah (tonight) and Colorado (Saturday) 10-9 overall, 3-4 in the Pac-12, tied with Washington State for seventh in the conference. UCLA probably needs to go 10-1 through the remainder of the Pac-12 schedule to have any shot at the regular-season title.

There has been plenty of noise coming out of Westwood in recent weeks, most of it escalating criticism of sophomore center Joshua Smith, perhaps the biggest disappointment a Pac-12 season full of them.

"I'm always in Josh's ear," Anderson said. "I'm always trying to get his motor going a little bit more and try to get him really being aggressive about getting the ball because when he does that, and he does assert himself, that's when we're at our best as a team because that's when he's at his best."

Others have been less diplomatic in their criticism of Smith, who has shown only brief glimpses this season of the player who was described as a freshman by USC coach Kevin O'Neill as the league's top NBA prospect.

Smith did nothing to diminish the already XXXL target on his back with a pair of poor performances as the Bruins lost winnable games at Oregon State and Oregon last weekend.

Smith scored 10 points in an 87-84 loss to the Beavers on Thursday but finished without an offensive rebound.

He was even worse in a 75-68 loss at Oregon on Saturday when UCLA blew a 15-point lead. Smith was limited to 12 minutes because of foul trouble, and when he was on the court he was ineffective on both ends, not scoring a field goal until the final 37.9 seconds of the game.

"He played probably as poor of a game as he's played all year on Saturday and didn't play particularly great on Thursday," Coach Ben Howland. "And so I think he's very motivated right now, he wants to do better."

Smith on Wednesday said nothing to dispute Howland's assessment.

"I was pretty disappointed," he said. "If you look back, they were two winnable games. I wasn't really excited about how I played. I didn't play well and I have to accept that. I'm not going to make excuses."

Smith has only occasionally played well this season, and while he is not offering excuses there are plenty of people serving up explanations, with Howland at the front of the line.

"Conditioning," Howland said.

Smith, 6-feet-10 and more than 300 pounds, began the season in nowhere near the shape he was in down the stretch last season when he was arguably the Pac-10's dominant center.

The lack of fitness has led to fatigue, and foul trouble, resulting in fewer minutes and lower numbers. This week he also acknowledged an early-season complacency.

"It started with the whole beginning of the season, with me personally, and we were ranked and I was already kind of looking past those first two games to Maui, looking forward to Texas and Pac-12," he said, "and our record is where it is right now."

Smith is averaging 9.5 points, 5.2 rebounds and 17.7 minutes per game. He is still looking for his first blocked shot in Pac-12 play. It looked like he had finally broken out of an early-season slump when he posted a 21-point performance in a 75-68 victory against Arizona State on Jan. 7. But in the three games since he has averaged 7.3 points, 4.3 rebounds and 16 minutes.

"We've seen glimpses of him being the Josh Smith he can be, but I just think he's a little off balance right now and he just really has to find his groove," Anderson said. "We were hoping that he could push some momentum into his play, but I just think that Josh needs to it take on himself to focus in, be assertive out there and just demand the ball."

It isn't just Smith's dwindling numbers that have the Bruins camp and friends and family concerned. His slumping body language in recent games has been just as telling.

Smith said his parents told him after the Oregon loss "I didn't look happy so I just have to have a better attitude."

So while UCLA waits for Smith to finally flip a switch, he and his teammates are wondering if his best move isn't to turn off his brain and just play.

"I'd probably say I'm thinking too much," Smith said, "and I just need to go out there and just relax and play with a smile on my face."

Contact the writer: sreid@ocregister.com

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No solo artists (you can put in Jimi Hendrix though, since he was with "The

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Colorado at UCLA Basketball Roundup: Silliness

by on Jan 29, 2012 5:57 AM PST in

UCLA offensive execution was a thing of beauty Saturday afternoon. It made Colorado, look, well silly:

The Buffs, who fell out of a tie for first-place in the Pac-12, had been holding opponents to 38.8 percent shooting entering the game. The Bruins made 31-of-52 shots (59.6 percent) and finished with 26 assists.

"They played better than us. Period," CU senior guard Carlon Brown said after being held to six points. "They shot the ball well, they executed better, and they made our defense look pretty bad. . . .

"We're the best field-goal percentage defensive team in the league," Boyle noted. "And they made us look silly."

Leading the charge was Tyler Lamb, who had his best game as a Bruin according to Coach Ben Howland:

Lamb's smothering defense all but totally shut down Brown, the Buffalos' leading scorer, setting the tone in a convincing 77-60 UCLA victory over Pac-12 co-leader Colorado at the Sports Arena.

Lamb held Brown to one field goal, none in the game's final 26 minutes-plus, and had team-highs in steals (3) and rebounds (7) plus a blocked shot on afternoon in which the Bruins limited Colorado to 34.8 percent shooting from the field in a second half in which UCLA led by 19.

Lamb, the sophomore out of Mater Dei High, was just as impressive on the offensive end, connecting on 3 of 5 shots from behind the 3-point arc on the way to 13 points while also handing out six assists.

"His best game as a Bruin," UCLA coach Ben Howland said of Lamb's performance.

But this was more than a one man effort.

Star-divide

Even the normally depressing Sports Arena crowd was better.

"Our crowd got here today and supported us," UCLA coach Ben Howland said. "I think our players were very enthused by the support of our fans and the students today. That was really nice. I think this is by far the best crowd we've had at the Sports Arena this year."

The crowd of 9,253 was the largest for the Bruins at home this season, including games played at Honda Center.

But more than the crowd the team played a complete game on offense:

We were in the huddle and we were communicating in timeouts, coach Howland was asking us what we thought would work and our senior guards stepped up a lot."

Senior guard Lazeric Jones had a team-high 17 points and nine assists, Anderson added eight points and eight assists and Lamb added 12 points and six assists as UCLA finished with 26 on the afternoon. The sharp passing helped the Bruins erase an early deficit that was plagued by sloppiness.

As Howland said:

"That's how basketball is meant to be played," Coach Ben Howland said. "I love it that our players get joy out of making a pass that leads to a play."

And the UCLA offense is playing very efficiently. As Peter Yoon writes:

The Bruins were a well-oiled machine on offense, shooting a season-best 59.6 percent from the field for the game and getting 26 assists with only 12 turnovers. And this against the team that entered the game holding opponents to a Pac-12 leading 38.8 percent shooting. . . .

The 26 assists were a season high and the most for UCLA since Dec. 31, 2006, against Washington.

It was the second consecutive game that the Bruins set a season best in field goal percentage and the fifth time in six games that the Bruins have shot over 50 percent. They are now shooting 50.4 percent in Pac-12 games -- second in the conference. Over the last seven games, UCLA is shooting 52.5 percent.

"We're executing better and better as the season progresses," Howland said. "We really went back to work on it after the first road trip in conference."

But that is just it. UCLA is still 1-4 on the road and has not won a game against a Division I opponent outside of Los Angeles and only beat win-less U$C on the road this year. So that's why I don't like the sentiment that Jones shows here:

"Beating a team like this shows we can be in [the race]," Jones said. "If we continue to do that, who knows where we'll end up."

Because of the start the Bruins had this year and win-less trips to Northern California and Oregon, UCLA has to win for the first time since 2004 on the road at Washington to stay "in the race" and likely win the rest of their P

UCLA 77, COLORADO 60: Bruins have spring in their step in defeating Buffaloes

Grading UCLA?s 2008 recruiting class

Second in a series of slideshows grading recent UCLA recruiting classes. Click on the photo to find out how they fared. More: 2007 recruiting class I ocregister.com/sports

Grading UCLA?s 2008 recruiting class

An upset of Tennessee in his UCLA head coaching debut and a Top 10 recruiting class in 2008 had many convinced Rick Neuheisel would have plenty to celebrate in Westwood.
An upset of Tennessee in his UCLA head coaching debut and a Top 10 recruiting class in 2008 had many convinced Rick Neuheisel would have plenty to celebrate in Westwood.
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Coach Wooden's words reach war-torn nation of Uganda

USC's Dedmon likely out for season

Grading UCLA?s 2009 recruiting class

Third in a five-part series of slideshows grading recent UCLA recruiting classes. Click on the photo to find out how they fared. More recruiting classes: 2007 I 2008

Grading UCLA?s 2009 recruiting class

The largely disappointing play of quarterback Richard Brehaut is only one of the reasons UCLA's 2009 recruiting class has been a bust.
The largely disappointing play of quarterback Richard Brehaut is only one of the reasons UCLA's 2009 recruiting class has been a bust.
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Colorado Buffaloes @ UCLA Bruins Gamethread

Arron_afflalo1_tiny by Tydides on Jan 28, 2012 12:45 PM PST in Basketball

Colorado Buffaloes at UCLA Bruins, Jan 28, 2012 1:00 PM PST


Today's riveting matchup between the mediocre-by-record UCLA Bruins and the mediocre-everywhere-but-the-record Colorado Buffaloes promises to be a exciting interesting important game.

The stakes are quite high...for Colorado. The Buffs will attempt to continue to outplay their metrics and stay in the hunt for an inaugural Pac-12 Championship with a second conference road victory at Chianti Dan Guerrero's Garbage Arena. Meanwhile, the Bruins will try to keep their heads above water in the conference standings. Sitting at 4-4 with the Ben Howland Bermuda Triangle Washington roadtrip on deck, UCLA needs to take advantage of this prime opportunity to pick up a win.

(Ancient) history will be on the Bruins' side today. From the official preview:

This is the sixth meeting between UCLA and Colorado with the Bruins leading the series 4-1. UCLA is 4-0 all-time in games contested in Los Angeles. The Bruins won the last meeting, 104-70 in Pauley Pavilion on Dec. 2, 1977.

UCLA comes into this game as 8 point favorites. Game will be shown on Prime Ticket.

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USC's Woods should be OK for spring after surgery

The star receiver expects to be available after having arthroscopic ankle surgery in mid-December.

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By MICHAEL LEV / THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

LOS ANGELES ? The USC football team began its voluntary winter workouts Tuesday without a healthy Robert Woods, who's on the mend from mid-December ankle surgery.

But Woods, a finalist for the 2011 Biletnikoff Award as the nation's top wide receiver, said he should be cleared by early February. He expects to be available for spring practice, which is tentatively scheduled to begin March 6.

Article Tab: Despite playing with an injured right ankle in 2011, USC's Robert Woods still broke the school's single-season receptions record.
Despite playing with an injured right ankle in 2011, USC's Robert Woods still broke the school's single-season receptions record.
PAUL RODRIGUEZ, THE REGISTER

"No doubt," Woods said. "I don't see why not."

Woods had arthroscopic surgery on his right ankle Dec. 19. He played the entire 2011 season with the ankle at less than 100 percent after originally injuring it playing pickup basketball on the eve of USC's April 23 spring game.

The projected recovery time from the surgery is six weeks, Woods said. He hasn't run since having the surgery, even though he believes he could.

"I'm just trying to play it safe," he said. "It's a long season."

Woods did not give himself enough recovery time after hurting the ankle, and that had long-term ramifications. He often sat out Thursday practices and was barely a factor in the Nov. 12 game against Washington, catching only two passes for 5 yards.

Woods still broke the USC single-season record with 111 receptions, good for 1,292 yards and 15 touchdowns.

BARKLEY'S BACK

After last season ended, quarterback Matt Barkley didn't expect to be working out with his USC teammates come late January. But there he was Tuesday, leading the troops after deciding to return for his senior season.

"It just feels natural ? like there's not even another option for me," Barkley said. "It's where I'm supposed to be and where I feel comfortable.

"I definitely thought I was going to be out of here. But things change."

Barkley announced Dec.22 that he would come back, citing "unfinished business" after enduring two seasons without a bowl game because of NCAA sanctions.

NOTES

Receiver Marqise Lee (jumps), tailback D.J. Morgan (hurdles) and cornerback Nickell Robey (jumps) are on the track team this semester. ... Redshirt freshman receiver Victor Blackwell (Mater Dei High) was among the most impressive performers at the workout.

Contact the writer: mlev@ocregister.com

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