USC’s Pac-12 Tournament hopes end in blowout loss to Arizona
The Trojans couldn’t buy a bucket in the first half, and were eliminated from the Pac-12 Tournament in Vegas on Thursday afternoon
Luca Evans (OC Register) — LAS VEGAS – As dubstep pumped through the speakers in Vegas, a rocking overstimulation of a hostile crowd and Arizona’s body-bumping defense overwhelming USC with their season on the line, freshman Isaiah Collier stood by halfcourt out of the break and closed his eyes.
He breathed. In. Out. In. Out.Â
This was mayhem, a freshman taking a moment before the war resumed on the floor of T-Mobile Arena. This was college basketball at its finest Thursday afternoon, two teams with regular-season history matching up in the second round of a one-and-done conference tourney, unwilling to give an inch. Open jumpers came as freely as water in Vegas. Arizona’s Caleb Love and Collier, their programs’ respective top scorers, exchanged words and snarls virtually from the tip.
And Collier’s breaths were for naught, as USC’s composure fell apart by the second half. Passes were thrown scared. Jumpers were taken short-armed. USC’s shot died in the desert against Arizona, a drought unlike any other they’d seen in a rocky season, and their season died with it in a 70-49 loss in the second round of the Pac-12 Tournament.
They’d finally clicked by March, a roster fully healthy, rolling off a four-game winning streak as players like Collier and wings Kobe Johnson and DJ Rodman tapped into grooves they’d never found all season. But they ran into Arizona, frothing at the mouth from the tip after USC embarrassed them last Saturday, a team that has still never lost in the Pac-12 Tournament in head coach Tommy Lloyd’s tenure.
And a season that began with March hopes, with super-senior Boogie Ellis returning for one last NCAA Tournament shot and top recruits Collier and Bronny James joining the fray in viral explosion, fell short for the last time Thursday.
Down 28-16 after not finding a bucket for the last 5:49 in the first half, USC (15-18, 8-13 Pac-12) found no answer out of the halftime buzzer to a swarming Arizona (25-7, 16-5 Pac-12) defense, their worst habits resurfacing after a much-improved run to close the season. In the first few months, USC struggled so fervently with ball control and rebounding that the coaching staff began tracking turnovers and offensive rebounds in team-against-team drills in practice. It worked, seemingly, for a while.
Until the second half against Arizona. Seven minutes in, the Wildcats’ KJ Lewis grabbed an offensive rebound for a putback layup to put Arizona up 17. A few seconds later, Arizona snatched a pass from USC’s Vincent Iwuchukwu and Love forced an ill-advised three in transition, only for Lewis to snag another rebound and lay in a back-breaking and-one layup.
Shoulders slumped. Any Newton of energy left in USC’s balloon deflated. And T-Mobile erupted, Wildcat faithful chanting and savoring the moment with glee.
U of A! U of A!
This was – for all intents and purposes – a home game for Arizona, the desert faithful streaming into T-Mobile in all their vibrant red and chants of U of A. Nary a shred of USC red could be seen in Vegas on Thursday afternoon besides the student band, their players introduced to boos as Arizona’s starting lineup was greeted like gladiators, and USC’s back was to the wall before the ball was even tipped.
Last Saturday, USC overwhelmed Arizona with their physicality on defense, holding Pac-12 Player of the Year Caleb Love to just 1 of 10 shooting in a surprisingly emphatic win. No more. Arizona came out hounding USC, so physical that the Trojans’ perimeter players could hardly get into any sort of off-ball action, possessions too often ending in a rushed floater or a three-pointer without feet set.
Ellis got going early with a pair of threes off dribble handoffs, and USC flew aggressively on defense, trapping Arizona ball-handlers on baseline drives and forcing tough jumpers. Center Joshua Morgan feasted inside, and Arizona turned the ball over nine times in the first half – but USC couldn’t capitalize in an astoundingly cold shooting stretch, bricks piling up on the west-side rim at T-Mobile.
After five straight USC misses, Arizona’s Pelle Larsson unlocked the net with a transition three to push the Wildcats’ lead to seven. Back down the floor, USC freshman Bronny James spun and seemed to be tripped by a defender, losing the handle. No foul called. Enfield’s face writhed with rage, visibly coming a few choice words shy of a technical. A few plays later, a pull-up Love triple pushed Arizona’s lead to 12 at the break, any hope at a comeback seemingly impossible inside the rocking maelstrom at T-Mobile.
And with USC down 22 with 7:25 left in the second half, captain Ellis picked up his fifth foul, reality setting in as he trudged off the floor in anguish. His last seconds at USC were coming here, a brilliant career and a self-transformation coming to a close, his last moments in a Trojans jersey.
He hugged his teammates on the bench, the outcome already decided, slumping into his chair and putting his face in his hands for a moment. Time, despite all fight, had run out.
ocregister.com
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QBs face a tough gig in the NFL
The Athletic @TheAthletic
Five QBs were drafted in the top 15 picks of the 2021 NFL Draft:
1) Trevor Lawrence — Statistically, had a bad year and game 13 ankle injury
2) Zach Wilson — Benched
3) Trey Lance — Traded
4) Justin Fields — Reportedly on the trade block
5) Mac Jones — Traded to the Jags for a 6th round pick
The five have combined for three playoff starts and one win.
Ryan Leaf on the Dan Patrick Show re Caleb Williams
“If the Bears take Caleb, they better be under the understanding that you’re gonna sit him this year — because 75% of what made him so great in college is not transferable to the NFL.
“He’s not gonna be able to do that. He can’t do what he did in college 75% of the time and be successful at the NFL level. He can do the 25% part at the NFL level, but he needs some time.”
Just read this Yahoo Sports article on Nick Saban at a Congressional Round Table bemoaning the state of college athletics. https://sports.yahoo.com/nick-saban-wants-players-to-be-able-to-get-paid-but-i-dont-want-them-to-be-employees-193817384.html Boy can he shovel the BS. Gee sorry Nick you no longer had your pick of 5 star players dying to play for you. Now there are a lot more programs thanks to NIL that can compete for players and win Natties. Sure the current NIL can be improved but there is more parity not less. Now any school can become an Oregon and get their own Phil Knight. Qualcom gets on the SDSU band wagon, Nvidia and San… Read more »
Former USC/five-star WR Kyle Ford has entered the Transfer Portal again after a year at UCLA.
Ford caught 22 passes for 236 yds and one TD last year for the Bruins.
USC Women’s Hoops Continues To Load Up On Talent Under Lindsay Gottlieb Trojan signee Kennedy Smith named California Gatorade POY Erik McKinney — (WeAreSC) — Future USC Trojan Kennedy Smith has been chosen the 2023-24 Gatorade California Girls Basketball Player of the Year. Smith, a McDonald’s All-American, recently helped her Etiwanda team to a second-straight state championship with a 60-48 win over previously unbeaten Archbishop Mitty. Smith had 15 points in the title game. The 6-1 SR wing finished the season averaging 20.2 points, 7.5 rebounds, 2.1 assists, 1.9 steals and 1.8 blocks per game. She’s ranked by ESPN as the No.… Read more »
The Trojan Women’s BB team program is headed for greatness in how Coach Gottlieb is running the program. Recruiting, piecing together, developing and having effective game plan practices are showing their worth. Keeping the top California players at home is a big deal. It shows the respect these young ladies have for the USC woman’s program. And just in time to move into the Big Ten. I don’t know about Enfield. Seems he can recruit good enough players but can he develop and form a competitive team? Just seems like the program is slow in developing most seasons. Jen Cohend… Read more »
After listening to Andy’s remarks after being fully hammered by true contender ARIZ yesterday, one would have thought 15-18 USC had a glorious season.
It appears we’ve got two USC coaches who doubt our poor “untrained” eyes, at least whenever they think it suits them.
The incredible Women of Troy await this Sunday’s big 2024 NCAA Tourney bracket reveal at 5 p.m. on ESPN.
USC will receive a very high seed and host the first and second rounds.
The Lady Trojans are back in the big-time, where they belong (thank you Cheryl Miller, Pam and Paula McGee, Cynthia Cooper and Rhonda Windham), led by Naismith Finalists Lindsay Gottlieb and JuJu Watkins (Miller is a former Naismith winner)
There is no reason USC men’s BB can’t be huge. Just look at the women’s team. With a good coaching staff the men can be just as good. USC can walk and chew gum while juggling, they can be good in FB, MBB, and WBB.
How Arizona Sees It
ARIZ post game presser: Tommy Lloyd, Oumar Ballo, Pelle Larsson