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In Down Year for Most CBB Blue Bloods, UCLA Now Eyeing Historic Tournament Run

Mar 29, 2021
UCLA players celebrate after beating Alabama 88-78 in overtime of a Sweet 16 game in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Sunday, March 28, 2021. (AP Photo/AJ Mast)
UCLA players celebrate after beating Alabama 88-78 in overtime of a Sweet 16 game in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Sunday, March 28, 2021. (AP Photo/AJ Mast)

It wasn't too long ago that UCLA was an elite men's college basketball program. When the Bruins fell out of that conversation about a decade ago, the school hired a coach from a different historically elite program, former Indiana star Steve Alford, to restore its glory.

But the balance of power has shifted in college basketball. Indiana fell out of favor years ago and so did the Bruins, with smaller schools from smaller conferences like Butler and Gonzaga overtaking them on the national scene. Never has that power balance been more evident than this year, when Duke and Kentucky failed to make the NCAA tournament, Kansas was bounced out of the second round, North Carolina in the first and Michigan State lost its First Four game.

It was the Bruins that knocked out the Spartans in the play-in round, claiming the No. 11 seed in the East Region and reclaiming their spot among college basketball's elites once again as they advanced to the Elite Eight for the first time since 2008 after a thrilling overtime victory against No. 2 Alabama on Sunday in Indianapolis. UCLA will now face No. 1 Michigan with a chance for the program to reach its 19th Final Four. 

The Bruins are playing with a confidence and a swagger that few expected with a second-year head coach at the helm. It was the win against Michigan State in the First Four that coach Mick Cronin called a "turning point." UCLA avenging a 75-62 loss to Michigan State in the Maui Invitational in 2019 to show just how far the program has come under Cronin. 

"Literally, they got embarrassed against Michigan State," Cronin said in his postgame Zoom press conference. "... It was bad. And the guys, for them to come that far to where they could beat a program like Michigan State, I think it just did wonders for their confidence."

The men's college basketball leaders in national championships got back on a winning track by hiring Cronin away from Cincinnati. He wasn't the first pick; that was Kentucky's John Calipari. Why shouldn't a blue blood like UCLA swing for the fences? He also wasn't the second choice. The Bruins swung and missed on TCU's Jamie Dixon. 

Cronin was also considered an impossible hire. He was Cincinnati through and through, having grown up in the city playing basketball for his father, Harold "Hep" Cronin, and going to the University of Cincinnati. 

He didn't want to uproot his daughter and he liked being near his father. 

Coaching in the shadow of the greatest coach the game has ever seen is no easy feat. The legend of John Wooden looms large in Westwood, and not just because of the statue outside of Pauley Pavilion. But Mick was undaunted and his ex-wife was intrigued by Los Angeles, so they made the move to the West Coast. 

Mick was forced to break the news to Hep, who was a fixture around the Bearcats program, attending practices, workouts and games after he retired. But Hep encouraged Mick to take the job, telling him the blue bloods are the ones that win

Mick and Hep were reunited after a year apart—their hiatus forced by the COVID-19 pandemic—and the longer UCLA remains in the tournament, the more Mick gets to see Hep, even if it's from a distance. 

Mick's coaching might have been questioned in the beginning since he was considered a consolation hire, but he has more than proved his coaching chops. He came in and immediately changed the culture in his first year and beat Michigan State, BYU, Abilene Christian and Alabama in the NCAA tournament this year.

"When he came to UCLA, he basically preached the entire time that, no matter what was going to happen, we were going to be a tough team, and we were going to be a defensive team," sophomore guard/forward Jaime Jaquez Jr. said. "So that was kind of his whole attitude coming into UCLA is that, no matter what happens, we're going to be the toughest team to go out there and play."

There was one brief moment when his coaching was questioned once again. Up by three points against the Crimson Tide with four seconds left in regulation, the Bruins let Alabama's Alex Reese make an extra long three to tie the game instead of fouling him. He was concerned coach Nate Oats had seen him telling point guard Tyger Campbell to foul. 

"They knew, and when we went to foul him, he was going to shoot it," Mick said. "So obviously, the kids bailed me out. We played great in overtime."

The Bruins absorbed the gut punch and then punched right back. No one was questioning Mick's coaching or anything else by the time they completed their 88-78 win over a team that was a heavy favorite.

Mick reached his first Elite Eight by using a mix of Alford's recruits and his own. He also leaned heavily on some local players, bringing some Los Angeles pride to the west side. Campbell and big man Cody Riley had big performances on Sunday, but it was Jaquez, Johnny Juzang and Jules Bernard, the three Southern California players, that have been leading the way all season. 

Jaquez is from Camarillo, a suburb north of Los Angeles in Ventura County. Bernard went to Windward School, which isn't far from the UCLA campus, and Juzang transferred to UCLA from Kentucky to be closer to his home in the San Fernando Valley. 

They all scored double-digit points, but it was about more than scoring against a top team like Alabama and will be about much more than that moving forward in the tournament. 

"Scoring is not our problem. We've got plenty of guys that can put the ball in the basket," Mick said. "Can we stop Alabama, their speed, their quickness, their three-point shooting, and then keep them off the offensive glass?"

The Bruins limited the Crimson Tide to 25 percent from three-point range, they pulled down 15 offensive boards and they significantly slowed down a team that wanted to play with pace. 

This run might seem improbable to those outside of the program. USC was supposedly the better Los Angeles college team coming into the tournament and now the crosstown rivals are both headed to the Elite Eight, as is fellow Pac-12 member Oregon State. But the Bruins are confident that they have the right players, the coach and the right mindset to be able to return to the program to prominence. 

"We know it's coach's first Elite Eight, so we're really excited and happy for him," Jaquez said. "This is our whole team's first time going to the Elite Eight, but we're not finished yet. We're not finished. We've got a lot more work to do."

Mexico Defeats USA to Win 2021 Olympic Qualifying Group

Mar 25, 2021
Mexico's Uriel Antuna, left, and United States' Aaron Herrera fight for the ball during a Concacaf Men's Olympic Qualifying championship soccer match in Guadalajara, Mexico, Wednesday, March 24, 2021. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
Mexico's Uriel Antuna, left, and United States' Aaron Herrera fight for the ball during a Concacaf Men's Olympic Qualifying championship soccer match in Guadalajara, Mexico, Wednesday, March 24, 2021. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Mexico defeated the United States, 1-0, in an under-23 matchup in the 2020 CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Championship on Wednesday. 

Uriel Antuna's goal helped capture Group A for El Tri, though both Mexico and the U.S. advanced to the knockout stage ahead of Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic.

The Americans will face likely Group B winner Honduras in the knockout round and can lock up an Olympic bid with a victory. 

Mexico, meanwhile, would face Group B runner-up Canada with the same stakes on the line. 

Despite holding possession for 54 percent of the match and committing 18 fouls to Mexico's 22, the U.S. couldn't put enough pressure on the net of Luis Malagon, who needed just one save to preserve the shutout as six other U.S. attempts were off target

Antuna's game-winner came just before halftime and proved enough for Mexico to claim a victory in Group A. 

With a perfect 3-0 record and a plus-seven goal differential entering play at Jalisco Stadium in Guadalajara, Mexico, the hosts just needed to avoid getting blown out to emerge victorious in pool play. Their defensive effort did more than that; it completely stymied an American offense that had scored five goals in its first three contests. 

A rematch with Mexico could be on the docket in the final should both teams win their semifinal matchups. 

The United States will get its turn on that stage first, facing the Group B winner on Sunday at Jalisco Stadium.

Dustin Johnson Struggles to 1-over 73 in 1st Round of 2021 Players Championship

Mar 11, 2021
Dustin Johnson chips to the green on the ninth hole during the first round of the The Players Championship golf tournament Thursday, March 11, 2021, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
Dustin Johnson chips to the green on the ninth hole during the first round of the The Players Championship golf tournament Thursday, March 11, 2021, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

Dustin Johnson faces an uphill climb in pursuit of his first Players Championship title this week.

Johnson opened with a one-over 73, which put him in a tie for 61st when his opening round concluded. Sergio Garcia sits atop the leaderboard at seven under.  

The two-time major champion struggled in his last outing, tying for 54th in the WGC-Workday Championship. He told reporters he didn't drive the ball well at Concession Golf Club, which caused a domino effect for the rest of his performance.

In addition to diagnosing his problem, Johnson felt good about the Players Championship due to the timing of the event.

"The golf course plays a little better," he said. "Obviously the rough's a little thicker, it plays longer, but the greens are a little more receptive, you can actually hit some shots. So I think the course plays better overseeded and playing this time of year and I definitely like it better."

"I definitely feel like I play it a little better, too."

In retrospect, Johnson's confidence may have been slightly misplaced.

The 36-year-old got off to a good start, carding a par on No. 1 and then birdieing No. 2. His momentum stalled from there, and he fell back to even par with a bogey on No. 6.

Johnson encountered big trouble on the par-five 11th hole when his approach landed well short of the green and in the water. After getting onto the green in five, he two-putted his way to a double bogey.

The South Carolina native rallied back to eagle No. 16. Following a 320-yard drive, he dropped his approach within 15 feet of the flagstick. He still had a tricky putt but found the bottom of the cup to climb to even par.

Johnson gave one stroke back on the very next hole. Unlike others in the field, he successfully navigated his way onto the famous island green off the tee. His birdie putt rolled past the hole, however, and his par putt met the same fate.

Poor putting was a theme throughout the day. According to PGATour.com, Johnson's 2.091 putts per green in regulation are tied for 145th.

His iron play wasn't great, either, as he reached 11 greens in regulation.

Looking ahead to Friday, Johnson is once again grouped with Bryson DeChambeau and Collin Morikawa for the second round, and they're scheduled to tee off at 7:40 a.m. ET.

Although he doesn't appear to be in danger of missing the cut, his title hopes are already hanging by a thread.