This post was updated March 11 at 12:10 a.m.
LAS VEGAS – UCLA’s sweet shooting stroke just disappeared.
This was a team that entered the semifinals of the Pac-12 tournament fourth in the nation in 3-point shooting, hitting 41.3 percent of its 3s.
Suddenly, the Bruins couldn’t hit a shot from deep. UCLA couldn’t buy a bucket but just kept hoisting them up. Down double-digits for most of the second half, the Bruins desperately needed to rekindle the fire to stage a comeback.
But it never sparked.
“We’ve been making shots all year,” said freshman guard Lonzo Ball. “Today was just not one of our days.”
No 3. UCLA men’s basketball (29-4, 15-3 Pac-12) bowed out of the Pac-12 tournament in a 86-75 loss to No. 7 Arizona (29-4, 16-2).
A 16 percent 3-point outing couldn’t cut it, not when the Bruins allowed the Wildcats to hit 50 percent of their 3s and 50 percent overall.
Senior guard Bryce Alford hoisted up 10 prayers from deep but only connected on one of them, and Ball hit just 1-of-6 of his 3-point attempts.
“I thought we got our shots tonight, to be honest,” Alford said. “I feel like we got a lot of the shots we normally get, and we just missed them. I don’t really have an answer of why we’re not shooting the basketball well in the last couple of games.”
Senior guard Isaac Hamilton led the Bruins with 20 points but still just hit 1-of-4 from deep. Sophomore guard Aaron Holiday couldn’t do any better, shooting just 1-of-5 from 3.
The defense that UCLA keeps claiming is improving was nowhere to be found. Wildcat forward Lauri Markkanen shredded the Bruin defense, scoring 29 points in front of an overwhelmingly pro-Arizona crowd.
“They made shots,” said coach Steve Alford. “They made 3s. They started early in the game and just continued to make 3s. So anytime a team can make shots, you get in a pretty good rhythm.”
The loss ends all hopes for UCLA to improve its seeding for the NCAA Tournament, which will be revealed Sunday.
That was disappointing. The last 3 games, UCLA has played horribly. They were mentally not in the game. Against USC and Arizona in a tournament game, the Bruins were choking.
There was: No attitude. No aggression. No will to win. No concentration. No sharpness. No teamwork.
The players were a step slow. They totally looked disorganized on offense. They were simply standing around, not moving. They weren’t passing the ball enough. There was a lot of one-to-one play. No screens were set. It was disgusting.
The Bruins have mental problems. I hope they can turn it around for the real NCAA Tournament.