Halftime: UCLA 46, FIU 13

This is a real yawner. The Bruins are dominating FIU, and this is a defensive performance they’ve needed. Seven of FIU’s 13 points have come at the free-throw line and UCLA has held them to 3 of 19 first half field goals. Jrue Holiday had 15 first-half points. He made all six of his shots, including an open 3-pointer from the left wing at the first-half buzzer.

Walk in the park?

In case you’re still reeling from UCLA’s football loss to Arizona State, there’s always basketball. The Bruins went on a 14-0 run against Florida International to build a 28-5 lead. Florida International scored a pair of free throws to end the drought with 8:14 left. UCLA leads 28-7.

Sticking together

The theme after the game was how the defense will not point fingers at the offense for what has taken place this season.
“We’re going to stick by our offense no matter what,” Bruins cornerback Michael Norris said. “We’re not the type of team that is going to be divided when one has a good day and the other doesn’t. We’re sticking together. We hang out with each other. We talk about stuff. We’re friends. There’s no way we’re going to leave them out to dry and talk about us doing well and them doing bad. It’s not like that.”

Goal achieved?

UCLA linebacker Reggie Carter said after Arizona State’s fourth defensive touchdown, which came with nine minutes left, he gathered the defense and told them the Bruins had a chance to give up the fewest yards since the Bruins allowed 42 to Arkansas in the 1989 Cotton Bowl.
“After the last Arizona State score, I just got the whole defense up and told them, win, lose or draw …I thought we could break this record,” UCLA linebacker Reggie Carter said. “I think we achieved our goal. Win, lose or draw, I think we achieved our goal. Win, lose or draw, the defense played hard.”
Indeed, UCLA did it, allowing 122 to the Sun Devils.

Breaking down the turnovers

Here is what UCLA coach Rick Neuheisel said about each of the the turnovers, beginning the crazy play in which everyone stopped on the field after a fumble before Arizona State picked it up and jogged into the end zone.
“The first one, our players felt like they heard a whistle, which is why they stopped,” Neuheisel said. “(Running back) Derrick Coleman even had the ball in his hands for a brief time and then just laid it on the ground because all the players on the field were stopped.”
As for QB Kevin Craft’s three interceptions?
“The (first pick) was an ill-advised throw into coverage that got tipped and taken back for a touchdown,” Neuheisel said. “The (second) one was just an unfortunate slight underthrow on a corner route that I thought we had a chance to hit and then hopefully get the two-point conversion and tie the game. But it was slightly underthrown the guy returned it for a back-breaking touchdowns.”