By SCOTT M. REID
TUCSON - It's only fitting that Kyle Fogg is majoring in psychology at Arizona. After all, the Wildcats guard has been in UCLA's head for four years.
UCLA got lost in Fogg City one last time Saturday. Owning both ends of the McKale Center court when it mattered, Fogg, playing his final home game, willed Arizona to a 65-63 victory against the Bruins on an afternoon that was critical to both teams' postseason plans.
Having shut down UCLA guard Lazeric Jones from the opening tip, Fogg, with the game and perhaps Arizona's NCAA Tournament hopes fading, took over the offensive end as well in the closing minutes. He scored 13 of his game-high 20 points in the final 6:01, and five points in last 53 seconds.
?He brought them back,? UCLA forward Travis Wear said.
And shut down UCLA. In addition to holding Jones to two points, the former Brea Olinda High standout also pulled down nine rebounds, another a game high, and handed out a team-high three assists.
?To have the plays that he had on defense,? Arizona coach Sean Miller said, ?and to do what he did on offense today, he was clearly the best player in the game.?
?It was one game I will never forget,? Fogg said.
Neither will UCLA (16-13, 9-7 Pac-12).
For all of Fogg's Senior Day heroics, the Bruins still had a chance to win, or at least send the game into overtime, in the final seconds. But Jerime Anderson's jumper on what both Anderson and UCLA coach Ben Howland later admitted was an ill-conceived play, bounced off the rim as the buzzer.
?We were looking for a fake handoff and go, and it just wasn't there,? Howland said. ?It was my fault.?
?In retrospect we should have come down and run an iso or a flat screen up top,? Anderson said.
There will be plenty of second-guessing about a season in which the underachieving, dysfunctional Bruins have gone from preseason Pac-12 favorites to needing to win four games in four days in next month's conference tournament and sneak into the NCAA Tournament with the Pac-12's automatic berth.
?We had the game,? UCLA guard Tyler Lamb said. ?It went down to the wire, and we made some costly mistakes.?
Certainly, Saturday's ending looked all too familiar to the Bruins after blowing sizable leads in losses at Oregon and Washington earlier this season. Of UCLA's seven road losses, five have been by three or fewer points.
Less than 48 hours after lighting up Arizona State for 20 points, Jones was reduced to a non-factor from the opening tip by Fogg. Jones was 1 for 12 from the field and didn't earn a single foul shot.
?Fogg did a great job of defending him,? Howland said, referring to Jones. ?He got him a little bit out of his rhythm.?
Even so UCLA took a 45-39 lead with 10:09 remaining on an Anderson layup. Anderson, who battled Fogg in the Orange County high school wars while playing for Canyon, also finished with 20 points. But it was Fogg who owned the day.
Coming out of a timeout after Anderson's basket, Fogg stepped up and nailed a 3-point jumper.
?I wanted to give the guys energy,? Fogg said. ?We picked it up a notch.?
The 3-pointer, Howland said ?was key.?
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