M. basketball: Bruins struggle for win sans injured forward

He may have just arrived in Westwood, but the Bruins miss him
already.

Starting freshman forward Trevor Ariza did not play in the
Bruins’ one-point victory over Vermont on Saturday night
after being diagnosed with spontaneous pneumothorax this past
Friday.

“You can’t stop it, you can’t prevent it, it
just happens,” Ariza said regarding his condition.

Nicknamed SP in the medical community, spontaneous pneumothorax
occurs when air collects inside the chest region but outside the
lung, causing the lung to collapse without apparent trauma. SP
occurs most commonly in athletic males, between 17 and 25 years of
age, who are tall and thin.

Ariza first noticed pain during Thanksgiving Day practice and
was examined at the UCLA Medical Center on Friday. He will miss at
least the next four games to ensure adequate recovery.

Saturday night, Ariza watched the game in jeans and a T-shirt
instead of his Bruin uniform, alongside similarly dressed senior
forward T.J. Cummings, who is academically ineligible for the
remainder of the fall academic quarter.

“It was very difficult to watch,” Ariza said.
“I can’t wait to get back to where I left
off.”

With Ariza and Cummings unable to play, the only remaining
forwards on the Bruin roster are juniors Dijon Thompson and Josiah
Johnson. Thompson, who started the last two games with Ariza and
finished last year as the team’s leading scorer, ended the
night with 18 points and nine rebounds. But Johnson, who started in
place of Ariza, struggled to match up to the freshman’s
17-point, 12-rebound performance against EA Sports All-Stars or his
16-point, seven-rebound game against the Southern California
All-Stars during the exhibition season.

“We have to pick up without Trevor in rebounding,”
Thompson said.

Johnson struggled not only in that respect, but also on the
defensive end of play. The night didn’t begin any easier for
him with what started as a man-to-man scheme, which found him
guarding Vermont’s Taylor Coppenrath, who finished his night
in Pauley Pavilion with a career-tying high of 38 points.

“The minutes Josiah played he did some good things, he
rebounded well,” Ariza said. “He tried to contain their
big guy, but I can’t really say if it was a fair
match-up.”

Going into the second half, keeping Coppenrath at bay was key if
the Bruins wanted to end the night with a win, so Howland started
sophomore center Ryan Hollins instead of Johnson at forward
alongside Thompson.

The dynamic of having both Hollins and fellow center Michael Fey
on the court at the same time, however, was a situation which the
Bruins were not accustomed to, and the team clearly missed the
presence of Ariza.

“You could see we were a little confused out there,”
Howland said. “If we get T.J. and Trevor back and we can keep
those guys healthy, we can really be a team better than what people
are expecting out of UCLA this year.”

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