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Bruins score early and often

UCLA 76, USC 70

UCLA is alone at the top in Pac-10 after its third consecutive impressive victory.

February 05, 2009|David Wharton

It wasn't even halftime and already the UCLA players could see telltale signs.

They could see USC players making sloppy passes. Talking to each other.


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"They were definitely frustrated," UCLA center Alfred Aboya said.

It wasn't even halftime and already the Bruins could see glimpses of fatigue.

"It was great," guard Jrue Holiday said.

These were the symptoms of an unexpected blowout, 15th-ranked UCLA's sprinting to a 76-60 win at Pauley Pavilion on Wednesday night, a victory that was decided in the first 20 minutes of the game.

"I've come here a lot of times," USC forward Taj Gibson said of playing in Westwood. "And it's never been like this."

Playing in front of the loudest home crowd of the season -- an announced attendance of 12,179 -- the Bruins won with pressure defense, holding USC stars Gibson and Daniel Hackett to a combined four points. They won with forward Nikola Dragovic's raining three-point shots and Josh Shipp's flying to the basket for a team-high 19 points.

This was the bad USC -- see the end of the Oregon State game -- looking flustered, suffering from poor shot selection and, even worse, 23 turnovers.

"That was the story of the ballgame," USC Coach Tim Floyd said.

The victory improved UCLA's record to 18-4, 8-2 in the Pacific 10, and gave them sole possession of first place in the conference standings for at least a day.

USC fell to 15-7, 6-4.

The last time these teams met, in early January, USC faltered down the stretch of a tight game, losing 64-60 at the Galen Center.

But the Trojans seemed to mature in the weeks after, pulling out a string of close victories. They were eager to show that kind of clutch play on the court of their biggest rival.

UCLA, meanwhile, wanted to prove it could sustain the momentum -- and defensive intensity -- from two impressive victories over California and Stanford last week.

The difference in strategies was immediately evident. While USC spread the floor, running time off the clock, the Bruins pushed the ball upcourt looking for any easy opportunities they could generate.

And from the beginning, UCLA controlled the pace.

Forward Drew Gordon slammed home a put-back and Holiday snaked through the defense for a layup. Dragovic's fourth three-pointer of the first half stretched the early lead to 21 points.

The same thing happened last month, Floyd bemoaning that his team got outplayed at the beginning. This time, however, there would be no comeback.

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