Men’s basketball eliminated from Pac-12 tournament after loss to Arizona State

The Bruins may have walked off the court for the final time this season.

No. 2-seeded Arizona State (22-9, 12-6 Pac-12) eliminated No. 7-seeded UCLA men’s basketball (17-16, 9-9) in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 tournament Thursday night, handing the Bruins an 83-72 defeat in Las Vegas.

UCLA kept the contest within arms reach for much of the first half, but let things get out of control in the final 3 minutes, 28 seconds. Arizona State rattled off a 12-0 run fueled by four 3-pointers to take a 16-point advantage into the break.

The Sun Devils extended their lead to as much as 23 points around the 15-minute mark of the second half, but the Bruins responded with a 13-0 run to cut the deficit to 10. From that point on, however, UCLA never came within nine points.

Arizona State finished the night with five different scorers in double figures and shot 49 percent from the floor as a team. The Sun Devils also converted 13 Bruin turnovers into 20 points in comparison to just the 12 points UCLA was able to score on 10 Arizona State miscues.

The Bruins managed to shoot a respectable 45 percent from the field, but only received significant contributions from sophomore guards Jaylen Hands and Kris Wilkes. After the pair combined to shoot just 6-of-17 in the first half, it rebounded to go 11-of-18 in the second half to finish the night with 46 points.

Freshman center Moses Brown – who missed the team’s finale last week due to a suspension – played a team-low 11 minutes in the loss. The 7-footer spent most of the night in foul trouble, finishing with just two points and seven rebounds while not making a single field goal.

UCLA will now await Selection Sunday to see whether or not it will get a bid for the NCAA tournament. Bracketology gives the Bruins just a 6 percent chance at earning an at-large bid, but there is still a possibility UCLA receives an invite to the National Invitation Tournament.

The program has not yet indicated whether it would be open to accepting a bid to the NIT, however.

 

Men’s basketball unable to catch up to Sun Devils at half, falling behind 45-29

The Bruins have 20 minutes to save their season.

No. 7-seeded UCLA men’s basketball (17-15, 9-9 Pac-12) trails No. 2-seeded Arizona State (21-9, 12-6) 45-29 at halftime in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 tournament.

The Sun Devils not only took better care of the basketball in the first half, but they also converted seven Bruin turnovers into 11 points. Arizona State also shot 47 percent from the field in the opening 20 minutes, doing damage inside and out.

The Sun Devils dominated down low, outscoring the Bruins 16-8 in the paint and hauling in five more rebounds. Arizona State even matched UCLA from beyond the arc with five 3s, including four in the final 3:06 of the half.

Sun Devil guards Remy Martin, Luguentz Dort and forward Kimani Lawrence combined for 25 points in the first half on a combined 10-of-22 shooting. In the only other meeting between the two schools this season, the trio combined for 46 points.

As for the Bruins, sophomore guards Jaylen Hands and Kris Wilkes had a combined 17 points but needed 17 shots to get there. Wilkes struggled Wednesday night against Stanford as well, finishing that game 3-of-14 from the floor.

A loss Thursday would not only eliminate UCLA from the Pac-12 tournament, but it would likely mark the end of the team’s season given their resume this year.

The Quad: As more schools go test-optional, the debate on standardized exams expands

Standardized tests have been a cornerstone of college applications since the 1900s, but over the past few years, more and more institutions are allowing applicants to opt out of them and direct their efforts elsewhere.

There are plenty of prestigious four-year universities with test-optional policies, including the University of Chicago, The George Washington University, and Pitzer College. A recent uptick in discussion about the utility of standardized tests has left many considering the possibility of the University of California joining the ranks.

The conversation surfaced among students at UCLA in February after Beyond the Score, a student group looking to raise awareness about the disadvantages of standardized testing, held a town hall during which they called these tests racist and socioeconomically biased.

In fact, university administrators have been discussing the issue since the beginning of the school year. In September, UC leaders announced the launch of a study to better understand the predictive abilities of the SAT and ACT. UC President Janet Napolitano requested that the Academic Senate continue the study for the duration of the 2018-2019 academic year.

Central to the discussion – among both students and university officials – is the question of whether these tests continue to measure what they were originally intended to.

The Scholastic Aptitude Test has roots in World War I where it was originally used as an IQ test called the Army Alpha. Dr. Carl Brigham, a professor of psychology at Princeton University, adapted the test for use in college admissions. It was used nonexperimentally for the first time in 1926 for considering gifted boys for a scholarship program at Harvard, whose then-president approved of the test because it measured innate intelligence rather than efficacy of high school education.

Similarly, today’s tests are supposed to provide a point of comparison to equalize students from different academic backgrounds.

Beyond the Score and other opponents of standardized testing argue that the test is more indicative of socioeconomic status because students with means to pay for private tutoring will likely earn higher scores than those without.

[RELATED: Standardized testing fails to reflect holistic achievement of college applicants]

Kevin Carlson, an SAT/ACT tutor and mathematics doctoral student, said he believes eliminating the test completely and admitting students on the basis of their interesting high school experiences would not fix this disparity.

He said students who can’t afford test prep courses likely will be unable to afford other pricey means of bolstering their college applications either, such as traveling abroad or doing a pre-college program at a university. In this sense, the issue is much broader than simply taking standardized testing out of the mix – socioeconomic bias seems to be ingrained in the system.

On the other hand, Ozan Jaquette, an assistant professor of education in the division of higher education and organizational change, said other means, such as predictive analytics, would still allow universities to compare their prospective students even if the test was eliminated from the admissions process.

Designing a computerized system that spits out a numerical value according to data from a student’s transcript and information about their high school could allow admissions officers to maintain the speed with which they review without sacrificing comparison with other applicants, Jaquette said.

At an institution like UCLA that receives over 100,000 applicants per year, this would be instrumental in examining the demographic in a more comprehensive way.

Conversely, Carlson said standardized tests do a decent job of assessing a student’s ability to think originally and creatively.

“In college, rather than performing well on a task you’ve been prepared for very specifically, you have to perform well on tasks that are a little ill-defined, that are very novel to you,” Carlson said. “These tests do a pretty impressive job of asking students questions that require new thinking, not just stored thinking.”

Held at the mercy of the clock, however, many students don’t have enough time to perform the kind of thinking these tests require. Others suffer from test anxiety which turns otherwise coherent thoughts into a jumbled mess.

“I’ve seen numerous students get to a point where they should have been performing at a certain level,” Carlson said. “(They) drop a standard deviation more in performance on test day and that’s awful.”

Additionally, data shows that if students decide to forego the anxiety of the standardized test and apply to test-optional schools, they are not at a disadvantage.

A large 2018 study compared data from 28 test optional-colleges and universities to institutions that require testing and found that the tests failed to identify talent and potential.

Although those who elected not to submit scores received slightly lower first-year grades, they ended up graduating at equivalent or higher rates than their score-submitting peers.

In terms of race, the test-optional institutions found that minority communities were less likely to submit scores and that there was an increase in the number of African American and Latino students applying and being admitted.

However, Jaquette warned that colleges with test-optional policies may just be acting in their own self-interest.

“What appears to be an effort to increase access by not requiring the SAT/ACT is a cynical numbers game they’re playing to increase their average SAT score,” Jaquette said.

The U.S. News & World Report factors in standardized test scores when they rank colleges and universities. As a result, the institutions that de-emphasize scores would likely see a drop in ranking. In the case of test optional schools, rankings increase because it’s the students with the highest scores who choose to submit them.

Jaquette said if U.S. News & World Report would stop including test scores in their calculations, colleges would be able to reduce the importance of scores in the admissions process without denting their reputations.

As one of the largest, most prestigious university networks in the world, the UC certainly has a reputation to uphold. Not only that, but should they decide to head down the test-optional path, the number of applicants likely will skyrocket as those who previously felt unqualified by their scores contend for a spot.

Clearly, this issue can’t be solved with an answer sheet and a No. 2 pencil – it’s far more complex than trying to decipher which number comes next in an arithmetic sequence.

As spring practice picks up, football sees potential on both sides of the ball

The Bruins are a quarter of the way through their spring practice schedule, and coach Chip Kelly’s main focus remains on individual player development.

Kelly said that while he still holds his team to certain standards and expectations during drills and workouts, he is more interested in seeing his players improve every time they step out onto the practice field.

“We’re not a goal operation when it comes to spring ball,” Kelly said.

“It’s just: How does each individual become a better football player when they’re out here?”

One of UCLA’s youngest position groups is the defensive line. The Bruins have five players at the position heading into their second season with the program, including rising sophomore Otito Ogbonnia, who has caught the attention of Kelly and his staff this spring.

“(Ogbonnia’s) a sky’s the limit guy,” Kelly said. “He’s very explosive. You can look at what he does in track and field. Sizewise, he’s over 330 pounds right now and carries it really well. He can be a be a really disruptive force on the defensive line for us, but he’s smart, he’s an intelligent football player and we’re really, really excited about how he’s progressing in year two with us.”

Ogbonnia appeared in all 12 games for UCLA last season, and while he recorded just 21 total tackles, he said his familiarity with the defense in year two has him feeling good about the upcoming season.

“I was doing a lot of thinking last year, not coming off the ball as much just because of me trying to memorize the defense,” Ogbonnia said. “But now, I have a solid idea on how the defense works and I get to move a little bit faster.”

On the other side of the ball, rising redshirt junior quarterback Matt Lynch is getting acclimated to life at a different position – tight end.

The former signal caller, who has thrown just three passes in his three-year career with the Bruins, said the decision to switch came from an eagerness to contribute more to the team.

“I wanted to get on the field,” Lynch said. “Going into my fourth year, I wanted to do anything I could to get on the field so I approached coach Kelly after talking with my family and just kind of asked what the options were.”

While Kelly said he’s been impressed by Lynch’s ability to grasp all the information that has been thrown at him, Lynch said that his experience at the quarterback position has helped speed up the transition process.

“At quarterback you’ve got to know everything, and every install you’re having to know what every single person is doing,” Lynch said. “So already having that advantage and then switching to a receiver/tight end room, I kind of already know what to do. So now, it’s just working on little techniques to improve upon.”

If Lynch sticks at the tight end spot, he wouldn’t be the first UCLA player to successfully make the switch from quarterback. Former Bruin tight end Caleb Wilson played quarterback in high school before fully committing to being a tight end at the start of his collegiate career.

Men’s volleyball prepares bench for performance against BYU and Stanford on the road

The Bruins will begin their second round of conference play on the road.

No. 4 UCLA men’s volleyball (16-4, 6-0 MPSF) will face No. 9 Brigham Young (9-6, 4-3) and No. 8 Stanford (13-7, 1-1) on Thursday and Saturday, respectively.

“Both these games are going to be completely different than the ones when we faced them before,” said senior setter Micah Ma’a.

UCLA defeated BYU in four sets on February 9th, holding the Cougars to a .118 hitting percentage and forcing 21 attacking errors. The Bruins recorded 13 aces and 10 blocks and hit for .229 – compared to the Cougars’ seven aces and 10.5 blocks.

BYU holds a 7-1 home record this season and is led by opposite Gabi Garcia Fernandez, who posted 11 kills and three aces and hit for .097 in the Cougars’ loss against UCLA. Fernandez has recorded a team-high 238 kills and 21 aces this season.

The Bruins have not won a match at the Cougars’ George Albert Smith Fieldhouse since 2009.

“I’ve never beaten BYU at BYU and it’s probably the toughest place to play in the nation,” Ma’a said. “They’re a completely different team when they’re at home.”

UCLA won its matchup against Stanford in five sets on Feb. 7. The Bruins recorded 13 blocks, two aces and a .271 hitting percentage compared to the Cardinal’s 17 blocks, one ace and a .254 hitting percentage.

Stanford holds a 12-1 record at Maples Pavilion this season and has won six of its last eight games. Opposite Jaylen Jasper recorded 20 kills and hit for .395 against UCLA and has posted a team-high 261 kills and 17 aces this season.

Sophomore middle blocker Grant Maleski who recorded eight kills and seven blocks against the Cardinal said the Bruins hope to begin matches on the road with more energy.

“I think it’s having super good energy,” Maleski said. “(Coach John Speraw) always talks about being road warriors, so if we’re able to maintain our energy at BYU and same against Stanford, I think we’ll be successful.”

UCLA has a chance to continue to use its bench for both offensive and defensive contributions in the following matches because of a season-ending injury to junior outside hitter Austin Matautia who recorded 164 kills, 13 aces, and 29 blocks this season before suffering a lower-leg injury. Senior outside hitter Dylan Missry also has missed the Bruins’ last 10 games because of injury.

“We have such a big roster and at times it seems a bit absurd, but right now, when a lot of guys are injured, it just helps to have a bunch of guys on the team,” Maleski said.

Speraw said the Bruins have to remain resilient and versatile in order to continue their success throughout the rest of the season.

“I think we’ve been pretty adaptable. We’ve gone through several different lineups and we’re 6-0, ” Speraw said. “I’m really proud of the guys’ flexibility and patience. We need to continue to find new ways to win.”