UCLA steamrolls Cal, 63-50

| | Comments (2) |

By Jon Gold
Staff Writer

All pretenses aside, the UCLA women's basketball team's Pac-10 Tournament semifinal matchup with Cal on Friday afternoon was little more than an appetizer for the main course that is the championship game.

It was not even a filling meal, at that, a miniature pig in a miniature blanket.

With big, bad Stanford looming in the tournament final, head coach Nikki Caldwell's toughest job on Friday was not calling the perfect back-pick or the ideal screen-and-roll, but simply getting her Bruins to play with effort and emotion against the Bears. They did, coasting past Cal with a 63-50 win, setting up the tournament final everyone expected, a matchup with the top-seeded and No. 2-ranked Cardinal.

"You can't just look ahead of games," UCLA senior guard Darxis Morris said. "You have to look at what's in front of you. You take a game day by day, you don't look ahead. We just did a good job performing for this game."


Alas, there was a game to be played, if it could be called that. There were games, alright - UCLA playing keep-away from Cal, UCLA playing capture the flag, UCLA simply toying with the Bears.

The Bruins got off to an 11-1 start, led 23-7 and 35-18 and went into halftime up 37-23 before cruising to a 19-point second-half lead.

"We talked about you have a choice every time you step on the floor - a choice to go toe-to-toe with your opponent and compete with them at a level that's higher than them," Caldwell said. "I thought tonight, for the most part, our team made the choice to elevate their play. And they understand that that's who we are."

While Morris (14 points) and starting backcourt mates Atonye Nyingifa (17 points) and Doreena Campbell (12 points) paced the team offensively - the Bruins moved to 19-0 with three in double-figures - it was a true team effort on the defensive end.

UCLA forced 19 turnovers, including 10 in the second half, using an aggressive brand of defense that requires max effort and even more communication.

Fans went to a dinner party and a basketball game broke out. The Bruins talk so much on the court - direct each other, prop each other up, call for help, ask about the weather - it sounds like a gaggle of chattering geese.

The result?

Cal shot 34 percent from the field - 31 percent in the first half - and made just 3-of-19 3-pointers, including 1-for-11 in the second half. With UCLA frustrating the guards with a frenetic full-court press, the Bears often had less than 15 seconds left to run an offense, and the Bruins' lead was just too large.

"We eat up a lot of the clock against our opponents, because we extend our defense 94 feet and we show different looks," Caldwell said. "When we're getting you late - 13, 12 seconds to run your offense - to me that makes a big difference in you being able to come back."
No, Cal was too far down and too far out, and here the Bruins are, trying to avoid the same fate today against the bigger, stronger Cardinal.

In the teams' first matchup, Stanford (28-2) bombarded UCLA much as the Bruins pummeled Cal early, dealing their SoCal rivals a 64-38 loss. The Cardinal sprinted to an 8-0 lead and led 32-15 at the half, holding UCLA (26-3) to 26.9-percent shooting.
The second matchup wasn't much prettier for the Bruins, who shot 31-percent in a 67-53 loss.

Now there is today's matchup with Stanford, scheduled for an 11:30 a.m. tip-off, and UCLA took the first step by not looking ahead to it.
"We've got to be involved in making sure that our ball pressure is there so there are not easy post entries," Caldwell said. "We've got to do things at a very higher level than what we've done. We're capable of doing it.
"It just a matter of are we going to sustain it for 40?"


2 Comments

Timothy Jewell said:

I really appreciate this coverage of women's basketball team. Do you know of any where I can get more regular coverage of this team?

Anonymous said:

looking for women's team coverage? go to bruins nation - nestor and his crew disparage the men's team while gushing over the women's team for losing with effort. Sorry, I'll support Ben's team for winning over Arizona or eking out wins against lesser teams rather than losing 'with good effort' 3 times this season against Stanford. Like coach said, I'll take a team with talent lacking experience over one with experience lacking talent. Support the Bruins, men or women!

Leave a comment

About Inside UCLA

Stay on top of all UCLA sports with up-to-the-minute information and insight from Jon Gold and the rest of the Daily News sports staff.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jon Gold published on March 11, 2011 5:55 PM.

UCLA women's hoops mopping up on Cal at the half was the previous entry in this blog.

Quotables: Tyler Honeycutt & Ben Howland Pt. 2 is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Recent Comments

Anonymous on UCLA steamrolls Cal, 63-50: looking for women's team coverage? go to bruins nation - nestor and h ...

Timothy Jewell on UCLA steamrolls Cal, 63-50: I really appreciate this coverage of women's basketball team. Do you ...

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

Advertisement

Other blogs

Third time not a charm in Inside UCLA with Jon Gold
Ghosts Of USC Basketball in Inside USC with Scott Wolf
Steve Kerr, from close range in Farther Off the Wall
Clippers lose close one in overtime in Inside the Clippers
HS HOOPS: La Canada winning with neighborhood kids in Daily News High School Spotlight