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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- UCLA has got its groove back.
|  | | UCLA's Jason Kapono pulls down an offensive rebound over USC's Jarvis Turner. Kapono scored a game-high 20 points and pulled down seven rebounds. |
The Bruins beat Southern California 85-76 on Thursday
night, snapping the Trojans' 10-game undefeated streak at home, but the home crowd wasn't much of a help to the Trojans (No. 18 ESPN/USA Today, No. 22 Associated Press).
UCLA (14-6) remained tied for second in the Pacific-10 Conference with Arizona at 8-2 and beat a Top 25 team for the second time in five
days. The Bruins stunned then-No. 1 Stanford 79-73 on the road
Saturday.
"We're playing pretty good basketball," said Jason Kapono, who
led the Bruins with 20 points. "This team has come a long way from
that 4-4 start."
Down 71-66, USC was assessed a technical foul when a fan threw a
plastic bottle on the court. It occurred after the Pac-10 record
crowd of 16,409 had been warned three times about tossing items on
the Sports Arena floor.
"It shouldn't come to that, but it did," USC coach Henry Bibby said. "You get
technicals like that and it hurts you. It's all to UCLA's
advantage."
Kapono hit the technical free throw and then Ray Young made a
pair after being fouled by Sam Clancy on the play to keep the
Bruins ahead 71-64.
The Trojans (16-6, 6-4) got swept in the crosstown season series
after losing 80-75 last month. They committed 19 turnovers, the
same mistakes that haunted them at Pauley Pavilion, where USC had
28 turnovers.
"They came into our place and kicked our butts," said USC
center Brian Scalabrine, who had 17 points and 11 rebounds.
USC tied it once and closed to one twice, but never took the
lead in the second half.
"That's the whole mystique about UCLA -- you know you can beat
people," said Bibby, who starred on three national
championship teams at UCLA and fell to 1-10 against his alma mater.
"They were much better than us. They outhustled us. They made
baskets and plays," he said.
Young had 15 of his 19 points -- making 11 of 12 free throws -- in
the final 4:34, when the Trojans never got closer than four points.
Dan Gadzuric added 12 points and 11 rebounds.
"We basically stayed composed and ran our butts off," Young
said. "We controlled the tempo. We didn't get into the trash
talking or the little elbows, little things like that."
Clancy led USC with 17 points before fouling out. Brandon
Granville had 15 points.
"They came in and outplayed us," USC guard Jeff Trepagnier
said. "They wanted the game more than we did. When we got close,
we couldn't capitalize on our opportunities."
The Trojans trailed by five at halftime and were down 50-43
after Kapono hit a 3-pointer. Moments earlier, Earl Watson earned
his third and fourth fouls and briefly sat.
Scalabrine, David Bluthenthal and Clancy combined to score USC's
first 18 points of the second half. Bluthenthal and Clancy
dominated an 11-4 spurt that Trepagnier capped with a dunk off a
steal by Granville to tie it at 54 with 11:25 remaining.
Playing with his fourth foul, Watson scored and Gadzuric had a
slam dunk to put the Bruins ahead 58-54.
Jarvis Turner scored five consecutive points to draw the Trojans
to one down with 6:26 remaining. But they committed three consecutive turnovers, Kapono hit a 3-pointer and Young scored seven of UCLA's
next nine points for a 71-64 lead. That's when the rowdy crowd cost
the Trojans a technical.
"It was just the pressure was so tremendous that we put on
them, they just made bad decisions," Watson said.
USC's previous largest crowd was 15,517 for a game against UCLA
in 1992.
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ALSO SEE
Men's College Basketball Scoreboard
UCLA Clubhouse
USC Clubhouse
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