Los Angeles Times - 04.03.2020

(singke) #1

LATIMES.COM/SPORTS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2020D3


Cool, calm and confident.
That’s how you can describe
sophomore guard Dylan An-
drews, who buried a three-
point shot as the buzzer
sounded Tuesday night to
give Los Angeles Windward a
64-62 victory over Fairfax in an
opening game of the Southern
California Division I regional
boys’ basketball playoffs at
Windward.
“He’s got ice in his veins,”
Windward coach Colin Pfaff
said. “Fairfax played very well.
They had great energy. It was
a great high school game.”
Fairfax was coming off its
worst performance of the sea-
son in losing to Westchester in
the City Section Open Divi-
sion final Saturday night, but
the Lions were in position to
win until Andrews came
through with his three from
the right side of the court as
time ran out.

Devin Tillis scored 19
points for Windward. Keith
Dinwiddie had 16 points for
Fairfax. Windward will play at
San Diego Torrey Pines in the
second round Thursday. Tor-
rey Pines received 38 points
from Brandon Angel in an 82-
53 victory over West Hills
Chaminade.
No. 15-seeded La Verne
Damien stunned No. 2-
seeded Long Beach St. An-
thony 74-63 behind Malik
Thomas, who finished with 29
points. DJ Davis scored 30 as
Riverside Poly rolled to an 83-
46 victory over San Diego
St. Augustine.
Los Angeles Ribet elimi-
nated City Section Open Divi-
sion champion Westchester
70-46. Tre White scored 21
points for Ribet. Joseph John-
son led Westchester with 16.
Ribet advances to play top-
seeded Bellflower St. John
Bosco on Thursday night.
No. 14-seeded Altadena
Renaissance knocked off San

Diego Open Division champi-
on Cathedral Catholic 62-54.
Renaissance was without
standout Koat Keat, who had
surgery for a torn meniscus.
No. 3-seeded Cathedral
played without 6-foot-7
Obinna Anyanwu, who was in-
jured in an auto accident Sat-
urday night. Evans Kipkemoi
scored 20 points for Renais-
sance, and Andrii Basovets
added 18.
In Division II, top-seeded
La Cañada St. Francis de-
feated Carlsbad 82-63. Andre
Henry scored 30. In Division
III, Woodland Hills El Camino
Real upset No. 1-seeded Indio
Shadow Hills 102-96 in double
overtime. Sophomore Ramel
Lloyd had 32 points to help
Woodland Hills Taft beat Al-
hambra Mark Keppel 80-60.
In Division I girls, No. 4-
seeded Studio City Harvard-
Westlake defeated North Tor-
rance 66-54. Kiki Iriafen
scored 20 points. The Wolver-
ines will host Los Angeles

Marlborough on Thursday.
Bryn Boznanski scored 16
points to help Fullerton Rosa-
ry defeat San Diego Westview
65-38.

Cathedral boys
win on penalty kicks
The Southern California
regional soccer playoffs began
with drama in Division 1 boys.
Los Angeles Cathedral and
City Section champion Wood-
land Hills El Camino Real
fought to a scoreless dead-
lock, requiring penalty kicks
to decide the outcome. Cathe-
dral got penalty kicks from Al-
ex Mendez, Jesus Ramos and
Alek Palomares to pull out the
victory. Goalie Steven Ruiz
made two saves.
Lex Leathem scored two
goals in Anaheim Servite’s 3-0
victory over Cathedral Catho-
lic. Servite will play Los Ange-
les Cathedral in a rematch of
the Southern Section Divi-
sion 1 semifinals.

HIGH SCHOOL REGIONAL PLAYOFFS

Andrews powers Windward


By Eric Sondheimer

BOYS
Division I
Ribet Academy 70, Westchester 46
Windward 64, Fairfax 62
San Diego Torrey Pines 82, Chaminade 53
Renaissance Academy 62, San Diego Cathedral 54
JSerra 63, Santa Clarita Christian 62
Riverside Poly 83, San Diego St. Augustine 46
Damien 74, St. Anthony 63
Division II
St. Francis 82, Carlsbad 63
Birmingham 58, Poway 49
Oxnard 78, Bonita 76
Hesperia 70, Solana Beach Santa Fe Christian 57
Salesian 53, El Cajon Foothills Christian 50
Eastvale Roosevelt 76, El Cajon Christian 67
King/Drew 62, Chula Vista Mater Dei 50
Hillcrest 55, San Diego Parker 41
Division III
El Camino Real 102, Shadow Hills 96 (2OT)
Santa Maria St. Joseph 54, Bakersfield 43
Arroyo Grande 80, Washington 65
Taft 80, Keppel 60
Oceanside El Camino 77, Adelanto 68
Burbank Providence 68, San Diego County San Marcos 66 (OT)
Price 72, San Diego 63
Fountain Valley 66, Gardena 63
Division IV
Aquinas 74, Visalia Redwood 56
Narbonne 65, Coronado 52
Bakersfield Christian 70, Montclair 61
Summit 79, Oakwood 70
St. Pius X-St. Matthias 45, Yeshiva 39
San Diego University City 81, Calexico 65
San Diego San Ysidro 69, View Park 48
Palisades 57, Bakersfield Independence 52
Division V
Eastside 60, Dymally 44
Banning 58, Valley Torah 42
Arrowhead Christian 59, Escondido Classical Academy 43
Trinity Classical 54, San Fernando 37
Delano 65, Sierra Vista 54
Fowler 52, Maywood 41
Bishop Diego 63, Vistamar 51
Los Angeles Roosevelt 76, Cathedral City 57


GIRLS
Division I
Orangewood Academy 66, Chula Vista Bonita Vista 59
Marlborough 63, Troy 52
Harvard-Westlake 66, North Torrance 54
Lynwood 71, Carlsbad La Costa Canyon 35
King 79, El Cajon Christian 55
West Torrance 64, Fairmont Prep 61
Rosary 65, Poway Westview 38
Division II
Mira Costa 55, Long Beach Wilson 42
San Clemente 57, Arroyo Grande 32
La Jolla Bishop’s 58, Granada Hills 50
Santa Monica 49, San Diego Serra 44
Bakersfield 46, El Camino Real 32
Chula Vista Mater Dei 81, Los Angeles Hamilton 78
Crean Lutheran 45, Bishop Amat 42
Palisades 59, San Marcos Mission Hills 42
Division III
Spring Valley Mount Miguel 65, West Covina 35
San Luis Obispo Mission Prep 66, Legacy 59
Paloma Valley 62, San Diego Lincoln 52
Peninsula 53, Taft 44
Eisenhower 79, Porterville 48
Viewpoint 59, Poway 25
Westchester 59, Burbank Burroughs 48
Division IV
Lancaster 66, Artesia 40
Los Angeles CES 59, Arvin 50
Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 105, San Diego Point Loma 103, 2OT
Ganesha 47, Xavier Prep 46
La Salle 51, Los Angeles Marshall 31
Chula Vista Otay Ranch 58, Campbell Hall 50
Paramount 59, Carson 52
Ontario Christian 63, Eagle Rock 51
Division V
San Jacinto Valley Academy 46, Monroe 27
San Bernardino 50, San Diego Hoover 46
Rubidoux 46, Verdugo Hills 43
East Bakersfield 39, Santa Ana Calvary Chapel 36
King/Drew 50, Vista del Lago 29
San Diego 52, Central City Value 45
San Diego Madison 49, Bishop Diego 26
Pasadena Marshall 50, Strathmore 43

HIGH SCHOOL RESULTS
Results from first-round basketball games Tuesday in the Southern California regionals


USC’s Alissa Pili was
named Pac-12 Conference
freshman of the year Tuesday
while UCLA’s Michaela
Onyenwere and Japreece
Dean were selected along
with Pili to the 15-player All-
Pac-12 first team in a vote by
the league’s 12 head coaches.
Pili, who averaged 16.2
points and 8.1 rebounds, is
USC’s first conference fresh-
man of the year since Briana
Gilbreath in 2009 and the pro-
gram’s fifth overall. The 6-foot
forward was the only fresh-
man named to the All-Pac-12
team after helping the Tro-
jans (16-13, 8-10 Pac-12) re-
bound from an 0-5 start in
conference play to finish with
the No. 7 seed in the Pac-12
tournament, which begins
Thursday in Las Vegas.
Onyenwere, a junior
whose 18.8 points per game
rank second in the confer-
ence, earned her second
straight All-Pac-12 first-team
honor. She and Dean, a senior
point guard, led the No. 8

Bruins (24-4, 14-4) to their
best Pac-12 finish in coach
Cori Close’s nine-season ten-
ure as the team grabbed the
No. 2 seed in the conference
tournament. Dean earned
her first All-Pac-12 honor after
averaging 13.7 points and 5.5
assists. Her assists per game
ranked second in the confer-
ence behind three-time
Pac-12 player of the year Sa-
brina Ionescu, who was one of
three Oregon players selected
for the first team.
UCLA guard Charisma
Osborne earned a spot on the
five-player all-freshman team
and was honorable mention
on the all-defensive team. The
freshman from Windward
High is UCLA’s third-leading
scorer with 12.2 points per
game and the second-leading
rebounder with 6.0. Despite
being just 5 feet 9, Osborne
leads the Bruins in offensive
rebounds with 85.
USC begins its postseason
Thursday against No. 10 seed
Colorado at 6 p.m. PST with
the winner advancing to the
quarterfinals to face UCLA
on Friday.

USC forward Pili selected


Pac-12 freshman of the year


By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

MEN TONIGHT

Cal State Northridge at UC Irvine ................................................ 7

SOUTHLAND


MEN
TOP 25
Tennessee 81, No. 6 Kentucky 73
Rutgers 78, No. 9 Maryland 67
No. 16 Michigan State 79, No. 20 Penn State 71
Purdue 77, No. 18 Iowa 68
SOUTHLAND
CCAA tournament quarterfinals
Cal State East Bay 70, Cal State San Bernardino 68
Cal Poly Pomona 67, Cal State Dominguez Hills 66
Chico State 75, Stanislaus State 73, OT
UC San Diego 89, Cal State L.A. 70
EAST
Bucknell 65, Holy Cross 62
Buffalo 75, Miami (Ohio) 69
Lehigh 78, Loyola (Md.) 75
Maine 71, Hartford 65
Masschusetts-Lowell 63, New Hampshire 54
No. 16 Michigan State 79, No. 20 Penn State 71
Rutgers 78, No. 9 Maryland 67
Syracuse 84, Boston College 71
Maryland-Baltimore County 75, Stony Brook 67
Vermont 85, Albany (NY) 62
SOUTH
Appalachian State 61, Louisiana-Monroe 57
Arkansas State 76, Georgia Southern 75
Charleston Southern 81, Presbyterian 64
Cincinnati 79, South Florida 67
Duquesne 80, Virginia Commonwealth 77, OT
Georgia State 89, Arkansas-Little Rock 70
Liberty 55, NJIT 49
Lipscomb 68, Florida Gulf Coast 63
Louisiana-Lafayette 108, Coastal Carolina 101
North Carolina 93, Wake Forest 83

North Florida 91, Jacksonville 88
Richmond 80, Davidson 63
South Carolina-Upstate 69, High Point 59
South Alabama 58, Texas State 54
South Carolina 83, Mississippi State 71
Stetson 82, North Alabama 72
Texas-Arlington 78, Troy 64
UNC-Asheville 72, Campbell 68
Vanderbilt 87, Alabama 79
Tennessee 81, No. 6 Kentucky 73
MIDWEST
Akron 74, Ohio 67
Ball State 85, Central Michigan 68
DePaul 69, Marquette 68
Illinois-Chicago 93, IUPUI 59
Kent State 83, Bowling Green 69
Northern Illinois 71, Toledo 50
Oakland 80, Cleveland State 59
Western Michigan 70, Eastern Michigan 54
Youngstown State 63, Milwaukee 57
Purdue 77, No. 18 Iowa 68
West Virginia 77, Iowa State 71
SOUTHWEST
Stephen F. Austin 77, Abilene Christian 72
Texas 52, Oklahoma 51
WOMEN
SOUTHLAND
CCAA tournament quarterfinals
Stanislaus State 65, Cal Poly Pomona 53
Cal State San Marcos 65, Sonoma State 51
UC San Diego 78, Humboldt State 61
Cal State East Bay 78, Chico State 53
WEST
Fresno State 94, San Jose State 68
Boise State 79, Wyoming 71

COLLEGE RESULTS


John Fulkerson scored a
career-high 27 points, and
Yves Pons made several key
jumpers down the stretch as
Tennessee rallied from a 17-
point deficit to upset No. 6
Kentucky 81-73 on Tuesday
night in Lexington, Ky.
The Wildcats (24-6, 14-3
SEC) appeared in control
leading 51-34 early in the sec-
ond half before the Volun-
teers (17-13, 9-8) outscored
them 29-9 over 10:09 to lead
63-60. Kentucky tied it at 63,
but Pons answered with a
three-pointer and Fulkerson
added two free throws to
stay ahead.

at Rutgers 78, No. 9
Maryland 67:Jacob Young
came off the bench and
scored 17 points to bolster
Rutgers’ NCAA tournament
hopes. Montez Mathis add-
ed 15 points and Gio Baker

had 11 as the Scarlet Knights
(19-11, 10-9 Big Ten) won their
school-record 18th home win
and first win over Maryland
since 2014. Jalen Smith had
16 points and 10 rebounds for
Maryland (23-7, 13-6).

No. 16 Michigan State 79,
at No. 20 Penn State 71:Xa-
vier Tillman Sr. scored 23
points and had 15 rebounds
to lead Michigan State (21-9,
13-6 Big Ten). Rocket Watts
added 18 points, Cassius
Winston had 14 and Aaron
Henry scored 12 as the Spar-
tans erased a 46-31 halftime
deficit to win their fourth
straight.

Purdue 77, at No. 18 Iowa
68:Eric Hunter Jr. scored a
career-high 19 points and
Evan Boudreaux had 14
points and 14 rebounds to
help lift Purdue (16-14, 9-10
Big Ten). Iowa (20-10, 11-8)
had its 13-game home win-
ning streak snapped.

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

Unranked Tennessee


stuns No. 6 Kentucky


associated press

morial Basketball Hall of
Fame who also won an NBA
championship with the Lak-
ers in 1972. “Yes, we’ve had
championship teams, but
this team, who knows how
far they’re going to go, but
they are performing to the
best of their ability; they
don’t quit, they play hard
and because of their defense,
they’re pretty much in every
game.”
Goodrich noted the Bru-
ins (19-11 overall, 12-5 Pac-12)
were outplayed for nearly
the entire game by the Wild-
cats but kept the deficit
manageable and won
thanks to sturdy defense, re-
lentlessness and heady play
in the final minutes.
Those are all qualities
that Lorenzo Mata-Real
once embraced as a center
on UCLA teams that made
three consecutive trips to
the Final Four under coach
Ben Howland from 2006 to



  1. Mata-Real attended
    the game Saturday and saw
    some of that same tough-
    ness in guard Jaime Jaquez
    Jr., who, like Mata-Real, is of
    Mexican descent.
    “For a freshman ... his
    game’s pretty advanced,”
    said Mata-Real, who has
    known Jaquez since the lat-
    ter player first tried out for
    the Mexican national team.
    “Obviously, he’s going to
    keep improving and work-
    ing, but I like his game. He’s
    hard-nosed, he doesn’t back
    down from any team or any-
    body.”
    Mata-Real, who recently
    won a professional champi-
    onship in a Mexican profes-
    sional league with Soles de
    Mexicali, made his way to
    the UCLA locker room after
    the game to celebrate.
    Jaquez handed Mata-Real
    one of the former Bruin’s old
    practice jerseys and asked
    Mata-Real to sign it. Mata-
    Real told Jaquez that hewas
    an inspiration, tweeting out
    a photo of them together
    while calling Jaquez “my lit-
    tle brother.”
    “I’m super happy for him
    and just watching him live
    doing well, it really gave me
    goose bumps,” Mata-Real
    said.
    Mata-Real also caught


up with former UCLA team-
mate Darren Collison, who
was part of a crowd that also
included Bruins luminaries
Baron Davis, David Wear
and Andy Hill, among oth-
ers. After calling the game
for ESPN, former UCLA
great Bill Walton and his
wife, Lori, hosted several for-
mer players and their fam-
ilies for a late dinner inside
the nearby Luskin Confer-
ence Center.
“To see the different eras
there,” Wilkes said of the
crowd, “it was just fun and it
brought back a lot of memo-
ries.”
The one constant for
most Bruins has been win-

ning, UCLA’s 11 national
championships the biggest
haul of any college basket-
ball program even though it
has added just one over the
last 25 years.
This team remains on the
fringes of NCAA tourna-
ment consideration, making
it unlikely to raise another
banner. Then again, watch-
ing UCLA beat Arizona on a
night the Bruins made only
33.3% of their shots and were
outrebounded made some
wonder whether this team
might be able to sustain its
winning streak deep into
March.
“You have the feeling as a
fan that we’re capable of
winning any game and I
think they feel that too, the
way they play,” Wilkes said.
“They never got down on
themselves, they kept push-
ing and fortunately they won
the game. It’s just a whole
different feel about this team
and there’s just no quit in
them.”
Wilkes, who went by his
given name Keith when he
won national titles under
Wooden in 1972 and ’73, said
the current team’s ability to
maximize its potential
would have delighted his old
coach.
“Oh, I think he would be
very pleased, very excited,”

Wilkes said of Wooden. “His
whole definition of success
— peace of mind is knowing
you gave the best you had —
and that’s what they’re do-
ing.”
The former Bruins were
universal in their praise of
coach Mick Cronin’s ability
to extract so much from a
freshman-laden team that
features mostly role players.
The one constant this sea-
son has been a commitment
to defense, UCLA going 18-0
during games in which it has
held opponents to 73 points
or fewer.
Goodrich pointed to an-
other critical factor that was
missing before Cronin’s ar-
rival.
“Look at the last two
years at UCLA,” Goodrich
said. “They did not play to-
gether as a team and they
played no defense, they were
not a team. He’s got those
players thinking team both
offensively and defensively.”
These Bruins have their
predecessors thinking
something extraordinary is
afoot, with the hope of more
memories to come.
“It’s been more than fun;
it’s been inspiring to see the
transformation,” Wilkes
said. “This could be one of
the most special teams in
Bruin history.”

BILL WALTON,left, and Jamaal Wilkes were among former UCLA basketball greats who were on hand to
witness the Bruins defeat Arizona on Saturday. Wilkes was impressed with how UCLA handled adversity.


Joe ScarniciGetty Images for Turner Sports

Former Bruins proud of team


[UCLA, from D1]


UCLA GUARDJaime Jaquez Jr. poses with former Bruin Lorenzo Mata-Real.
Mata-Real, who plays professionally in Mexico, said he likes the freshman’s game.

Courtesy of Lorenzo Mata-Real

GAIL GOODRICH
played on two national
championship teams
under John Wooden.

Douglas HealeyFor The Times
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