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UCLA vs. Arizona score, takeaways: No. 7 Wildcats get revenge, beat No. 3 Bruins for first time in six games

UCLA had a chance to take sweep Arizona and take hold of a potentially significant tiebreaker on the Wildcats in the Pac-12 standings on Thursday night, but the the Wildcats took first place for themselves and evened up the season series between the Pac-12 powers with a 76-66 win at the McKale Center. The No. 7 Wildcats (18-2, 8-1 Pac-12) led by 12 at halftime and withstood several surges from the No. 3 Bruins (16-3, 8-2) to avenge last Tuesday's 75-59 road loss.

A 10-2 run following the game's final media timeout helped Arizona pull away after the Bruins closed within 64-61 with 3:52 remaining. The victory snapped the Wildcats' four-game home losing streak against UCLA and a six-game skid overall vs. the Bruins for Arizona, which was led by 16 points from Kerr Kriisa after he was held scoreless in the first meeting last week. Kriisa was among five Arizona players in double figures and knocked down a massive 3-pointer with 1:50 left that put the Wildcats ahead by nine.

Jules Bernard led UCLA in scoring with 15 points, but the Bruins hit just 3 of 14 attempts from 3-point range as a team. Leading scorer Johnny Juzang added 12 for the Bruins in his first game back after missing two contests due to COVID-19 protocols.

Redemption for Kriisa and Terry

When these teams met last week, Terry and Kriisa combined to go 0 for 17 from the floor and were held scoreless in Arizona's loss. This time around, the duo contributed a combined 26 points. The two also combined for 12 assists, as Terry finished three assists and one rebound shy of a triple-double.

There was also a distinct difference in the play of Azuolas Tubelis this time around. The 6-foot-11 Arizona sophomore came off the bench in last week's meeting while dealing with an ankle injury and was clearly limited while playing 15 minutes and contributing eight points. He appeared more nimble this time around and provided a big lift early in the game. Tubelis scored eight of Arizona's first 10 points and finished with 14 while looking more like his normal self after suffering the injury in a win at Stanford on Jan. 20.

Foul trouble hurts Juzang 

Juzang sat the final 9:55 of the first half after picking up his second foul while UCLA trailed 20-14. Without him on the floor, the Bruins' deficit doubled heading into halftime. Once he was back in the court on the second half, UCLA began to chip away.

In the end, Juzang finished with just three fouls in 29 minutes of action, and it's fair to question whether UCLA coach Mick Cronin was too conservative in the handling of his leading scorer during the first half. If Juzang had been playing instead of watching late in the first half, perhaps the Bruins could have kept the deficit in a more manageable range. UCLA's other four starters each logged 30 or more minutes, and unless Juzang was on a minutes restriction following his two-game absence, the approach to his foul trouble was misguided.

Juzang also wasn't the only UCLA play in foul trouble. Tyger Campbell fouled out late in the game for the Bruins, who were called for 23 fouls compared to just 16 for Arizona. The Wildcats shot 30 free throws and made 20, whereas the Bruins shot only 12, making seven of them.

Pac-12 implications 

The result leaves Arizona in sole possession of first-place in the conference standings. Even though the league's front-runners split their two meetings with each other, UCLA's surprising home loss against Oregon on Jan. 13 means the Bruins now have two conference losses.

Both teams still have to play third-place USC twice, and the Trojans could join the mix if they play well enough in those games. Oregon could also play its way into the mix. But don't be surprised if we look up in a few weeks and the Wildcats are on track for at least a share of the league title because they took care of business at home against the Bruins.

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Live updates
 

The difference

Arizona is getting full-speed Azuolas Tubelis and a confident Kerr Kriisa so far. They have combined for 17 of the team's first 31 points. That's been the difference between this first half and the way things went against UCLA last week. UCLA may need to get Johnny Juzang back in, despite the two fouls.

 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 

u8 Timeout

Arizona 28, UCLA 19

Strange sequence that results in Jules Bernard scoring a quick five points and silencing an Arizona run that briefly extended the Wildcats' lead to 28-14. Things are getting a bit unraveled, but that favors Arizona, which is fine playing at warp speed. UCLA is just 1 of 8 from deep and will need a lot of Bernard and Jaquez if Cronin doesn't want to play Juzang with two fouls.

 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 

Timeout UCLA

This is the Arizona we grew accustomed to. Unlike last week at Pauley, the Wildcats are getting out in transition, playing fast and free. Bruins call a TO as Arizona extends lead to 22-14 following a Christian Koloko dunk. Johnny Juzang has also picked up his second for UCLA, which already has reserve center Myles Johnson with two.

 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 

UCLA weathers run

Nice job by UCLA to weather an early storm by Arizona and stay within 16-14 at the u12 media timeout. Wildcats were hot for a moment after the Dalen Terry 3 but have cooled off. Nice to see Tubelis, Jaquez and Juzang all shining after all three have dealt with varying degrees of health/injury uncertainty over the last couple of weeks.

 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 

Azuolas Tubelis!

The Arizona big man is on fire and finally looking like he's 100%. He's got eight points on 4 of 5 shooting and the crowd is getting lively in the early-going. 16-10 Wildcats after Dalen Terry knocks down a 3.

 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 

Arizona up

With Azuolas Tubelis limited recently, Oumar Ballo has been shining in an increased role. The Gonzaga transfer is in early hits a FT for the Wildcats, who lead 9-8 at the u16 timeout. Tubelis and Christian Koloko each picked up early fouls for Arizona, so something to watch there.

 
@UCLAMBB via Twitter
 

Early read

Kerr Kriisa has already made one more shot from the field than he did in the first meeting. The Arizona guard is among those on the board early — he's got a foul as well. By the way, Jaime Jaquez Jr. looks totally fine after the ankle injury against Stanford on Saturday. Tubelis looks great for Arizona as well with 6 of Arizona's first 8.

 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 

Setting the stage

Arizona shot a season-low 30.7% from the floor the first time around, while UCLA shot 50% and turned the basketball over only eight times. Because of the Bruins' 16-point win and subsequent blowout victories against Cal and Stanford, they swapped spots with the Wildcats in this week's AP Top 25. UCLA is now No. 3, and Arizona is down to No. 7.

 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
 

Arizona-UCLA starters

Starters have been announced, which officially eliminates any mystery surrounding player availability. Juzang, as expected, is back for UCLA after clearing COVID-19 protocols. Jaquez (ankle) is in the lineup as well. For Arizona, Azuolas Tubelis is in the starting lineup (ankle). He came off the bench in the first meeting while trying to manage the injury. Getting more out of him would be huge for Arizona in the rematch, and so would a little help from Kerr Kriisa who had a miserable offensive outing in the first game.

UCLA

Jules Bernard
Johnny Juzang
Tyger Campbell
Jaime Jaquez Jr.
Cody Riley

Arizona
Bennedict Mathurin
Dalen Terry
Kerr Kriisa
Azuolas Tubelis
Christian Koloko

 
@UCLAMBB via Twitter
 
@UCLAMBB via Twitter
 
@UCLAMBB via Twitter
 

Jaime Jaquez warming up

Juzang is all clear (scroll down for more details, but one of UCLA's other top players, Jaime Jaquez, is questionable for this game. He's dealing with an ankle injury, but indications from the arena are that he is going through warmups. He suffered the injury in the Stanford win on Saturday and didn't play in the second half of that game.

 
@UCLAMBB via Twitter
 
@UCLAMBB via Twitter
 

Johnny Juzang playing

In case you missed it, UCLA's leading scorer Johnny Juzang is playing tonight for the first time since the first meeting between these teams last Tuesday. The junior guard missed the Bruins' two games since then due to COVID-19 protocols. UCLA won both pretty easily over Cal and Stanford, but a healthy and hitting Juzang takes them to another level. But we'll see how his conditioning holds up after some time out of the fray.

 
@UCLAMBB via Twitter
 
@ArizonaMBB via Twitter
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