Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsSports

UCLA coach says Love deserves honor

AROUND THE NATION

March 11, 2008|Diane Pucin, From Times Staff and Wire Reports

UCLA Coach Ben Howland said Monday he was thrilled freshman Kevin Love was selected the Pacific 10 Conference player of the year by a vote of league coaches but disappointed that junior point guard Darren Collison wasn't a first-team all-conference choice.

"It's a little frustrating for me, looking at his numbers," Howland said of Collison. "He's No. 1 in the league in free throws, No. 1 in steals, No. 2 in assists, he's shooting 53% from three[-point range], he's averaging 15.4 points a game which is ninth, he's on the all-defensive team. I really believed he'd be first team."


Advertisement

Howland said Love, a 6-foot-10 center who is averaging 17.4 points and 10.9 rebounds, was "definitely deserving" of player of the year. Love is only the second freshman in league history to win the award. California's Shareef Abdur-Rahim was the first in 1996.

Love was also selected freshman of the year, and Bruins sophomore guard Russell Westbrook was chosen defensive player of the year.

Love was joined on the all-conference first team by two other freshmen -- guards O.J. Mayo of USC and James Harden of Arizona State -- and sophomore forwards Brook Lopez of Stanford and Ryan Anderson of California. Collison was on the second team and Westbrook and USC's Taj Gibson were on the third team.

Joining Love, Mayo and Harden on the all-freshman team were Arizona's Jerryd Bayless and USC's Davon Jefferson.

Stanford's Trent Johnson was coach of the year.

Love, who averaged 18.2 and 11.5 rebounds in conference play, is the third UCLA player in four years to be freshman of the year -- Luc Richard Mbah a Moute was honored in 2006 and Jordan Farmar in 2005.

Seven Bruins have been player of the year since the inception of the award in 1975-76. "I didn't think they'd give it to a freshman," Love said. "In a way I knew I was up for contention, but a lot of people don't like UCLA."

And Love was quick to point out that he was also selected honorable mention on the all-defensive team. "That's my favorite thing," Love said. "After all the grief Coach Howland gave me about my defense."

Coaches couldn't vote for their own players and Howland wouldn't divulge his first-team choices.

"No question Mayo deserved to be on there," the UCLA coach said. "I laugh at anyone who suggests anything other than that he is one of the best players in the country."

Love, Collison and Mayo are also on the final 24-man ballot for the John R. Wooden Award, given annually in April to the best college basketball player.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|