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WATCH: Johnny Juzang lights up with 23 and 27 points in first two games of March Madness to help UCLA advance

 

UCLA won 86-80 in overtime of Thursday’s First Four NCAA tournament game against Michigan State, but the Bruins’ victory came with a scary moment. Sophomore guard Johnny Juzang exited with an apparent right ankle injury at the 44-second mark of overtime, seemingly getting rolled up on by Spartans fifth-year senior guard Joshua Langford, who was following through during a layup that cut UCLA’s lead to 83-80.

Los Angeles Times UCLA beat writer Ben Bolch reported early Friday morning on Twitter that Juzang’s injury was a right ankle sprain, with further evaluation to come later in the night.

Juzang scored 23 points on 9-of-20 shooting, including 3 for 9 from long range, while grabbing four rebounds and dishing two assists in 41 minutes. Sophomore wing Jaime Jaquez Jr. paced the Bruins with a game-high 27 points on 11-of-20 shooting in 45 minutes.

“But I know what the competitor that he is. So none of it — Jaime is almost better when we’re down. He’s got tremendous heart. But I thought he had some favorable matchups and late they put (Aaron) Henry — what we did — (Michigan State) coach (Tom) Izzo went smaller and put Aaron Henry on him to try to stop him.

“So Johnny got it going as well. But we were going to have to score some points, guys, because the way they played offensively, to catch them, we were going to have to get the ball in the basket.”

By beating MSU (15-13), UCLA (18-9) earns a No. 11 seed in the East Region and faces sixth-seeded BYU (20-6). Saturday’s first-round game is set for a 9:40 p.m. ET tip-off on CBS at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

With the Wildcats, as a freshman in 2019-20, Juzang averaged 2.9 points and 1.9 rebounds in 12.4 minutes over 28 games (two starts). A four-star recruit out of Los Angeles Harvard-Westlake, Juzang was a part of Kentucky’s six-member top-ranked 2020 class in the 247Sports Composite Team Rankings. Juzang was the 247Sports Composite’s No. 33 overall prospect, No. 9 small forward and No. 3 player in California for the 2020 class.

Johnny Juzang returns from ankle sprain, lifts UCLA over BYU in NCAA tournament

 

The ball came off the rim and UCLA’s Jaime Jaquez Jr. powered his way toward it, ripping it away from the counterpart who held a nine-inch height advantage.

Matt Haarms, Brigham Young’s overmatched 7-foot-3 center, fell to the court in agony along the baseline. Jaquez and the Bruins were on the attack once again, taking it to another team that was supposed to end their season.

After taking a double-digit halftime lead thanks to Johnny Juzang’s epic shot-making in his return from a sprained ankle, UCLA prevailed Saturday night at Hinkle Fieldhouse thanks to the toughness of Jaquez and others who countered every late run by the Cougars.

 

 

Having been blanketed by the Cougars after his 19 first-half points, Juzang mostly set screens and helped space the floor for the balance of a game he finished with 27 points.

 

The team approach resulted in the 11th-seeded Bruins breaking out in a celebratory jig in front of their bench after securing a 73-62 victory over the sixth-seeded Cougars in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

“Everybody on this team, now more than ever,” Juzang said, “really trusts each other.”

The Bruins’ magical mystery tour of storied Indiana venues will last at least two more days.

After moving from one arena where a statue of John Wooden stood outside to another where its legendary coach once played while in high school, UCLA (19-9) will play No. 14 seed Abilene Christian in the second round Monday at Bankers Life Fieldhouse.

For the first time in the tournament, the Bruins will be favored, needing one more victory to reach a regional semifinal for the first time since 2017.

Highlights from UCLA’s 73-62 victory over Brigham Young in an NCAA tournament first-round game Saturday night.

Juzang was a straggler to pregame warmups, walking over to a courtside chair to tie his shoes while his teammates started stretching on the court.

There was reason to wonder whether he would get up to join in the exercises or remain an observer.

He had been carried off the court with his ankle injury only two days earlier in a victory over Michigan State, leaving his status in doubt. The uncertainty was answered when Juzang bounded over to the baseline and joined his teammates, moving fluidly and showing no lingering signs of his injury.

In a sign of things to come, Juzang sank a three-pointer less than a minute into the game. He carried UCLA to a 38-27 halftime lead after making eight of his first 11 shots, including three of four three-pointers, helping his team withstand a decided rebounding disadvantage and having all three of their big men in foul trouble.

Riley picked up his second foul less than three minutes into the game and went to the bench. Forwards Mac Etienne and Kenneth Nwuba also picked up two fouls in the first half, but coach Mick Cronin had no choice but to leave Nwuba in the game.

The move worked out when Nwuba backed into his man underneath the basket, clearing a path for Jaquez to drive for a ferocious two-handed dunk that gave the Bruins a 38-25 lead.

“It’s March Madness,” Juzang said after crediting trainers’ around-the-clock efforts for speeding a recovery that has helped him pile up 50 points in his first two NCAA tournament games. “It’s do or die. I mean, I knew I was playing. … It felt great.”

Juzang received plenty of help from a team that’s showing an increasing array of reliable options. Bernard scored 16 points and Jaquez added 13 points and eight rebounds in 37 minutes, nearly playing an entire game for the second time in three days.

“Just our effort and our toughness was there all night and it had to be,” Cronin said after his team limited the Cougars to their second-lowest scoring output of the season, “because they’re really hard to play defense against.”

Brigham Young’s Alex Barcello scored 20 points, but the Cougars (20-7) made only three of 17 three-pointers (17.6%) and committed six more turnovers than the Bruins.

UCLA completed a clean sweep of the first round for the Pac-12 Conference after Colorado and USC won earlier in the day and Oregon advanced after Virginia Commonwealth was forced to withdraw because of COVID-19 issues.

Notching a comeback victory over Michigan State two days earlier had erased any worry the Bruins would close the season on an extended losing streak and wipe out the progress they had made under Cronin in his second season.

Now, it seems as if the Bruins might just be getting started.

“Nobody’s satisfied,” Juzang said. “We want to keep this going and we don’t plan on going home.”

 

 

 

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