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STANFORD, Calif. (AP) -- A wild and controversial UCLA upset of top-ranked Stanford ended with Bruins coach Steve Lavin hugging a referee and shirtless UCLA players running back and forth to the locker room in dismay and then celebration.
JaRon Rush, playing his first game after a nine-game suspension,
hit a disputed baseline jumper with 3 seconds remaining in overtime
as UCLA defeated Stanford 94-93 on Saturday in a game that left
both teams confused and exhausted.
| | Stanford's David Moseley launches a shot over UCLA's JaRon Rush, who hit the game-winner. |
Rush, who scored 19 points to lead the Bruins, grabbed a loose
ball under the UCLA basket after a wild scrum during which the shot
clock appeared to expire. Stanford's Michael McDonald then missed a
desperate halfcourt shot, and UCLA ran to its locker room in
celebration.
The Bruins, some without their shirts, were called back to the
court as referees reviewed their decision and Stanford players
began to celebrate. But the referees determined a shot by Ray Young
earlier in UCLA's possession had scraped the rim, meaning the
35-second shot clock should have been reset and hadn't run out.
Lavin said the ending echoed the Soviet Union's infamous victory
over the United States in the 1972 Munich Olympics, a game the
Americans thought they had won until officials called them back on
the floor and the Soviets scored a winning basket.
"I wanted to get us off the floor right away and get out of
there, and not have another '72 Olympics," Lavin said.
Rush had no idea how much time was left on the clock when he
threw up the winning shot.
"I just knew I had to get the ball off. I was lucky it went
in," he said in the joyous UCLA locker room.
The defeat ended a 13-game winning streak during which the
Cardinal (25-2, 14-2 Pac-10) won every game by a double-digit
margin. Stanford had won its previous five by an average of 36.4
points.
"We haven't been in a close game for a long time and we kind of
loosened up, we made some bad mental mistakes," Stanford coach
Mike Montgomery said. "The shot clock did go off. With the noise,
nobody heard it. But they reviewed the play and the previous shot
had grazed the rim. End of game, end of story."
UCLA (17-11, 8-8) broke a five-game losing streak to the
Cardinal and got a significant boost in its bid for a berth in the
NCAA Tournament.
The Bruins, who already have clinched their NCAA-record 52nd
consecutive winning season, tied a school record for 3-pointers set
earlier this season by hitting 12 against Stanford and shooting 55
percent against a Cardinal team that came into the game leading the
nation by allowing opponents only 34 percent shooting.
Rush, who had been suspended for the previous 25 games because
of benefits he received from an AAU coach while in high school in
Kansas City, was playing his first game since Dec. 1.
Rush originally was suspended for 29 games, but the NCAA reduced
the length of the penalty last Monday after an appeal by UCLA. Rush
also served a 15-game suspension this season for accepting $200
from an agent last season.
"He seemed like he was able to get into the flow pretty
quickly," Lavin said. "This game gives you an idea of what kind
of an impact he has."
In overtime, David Moseley hit a 3-pointer with 1:27 left to
give Stanford a 92-89 lead. Jarron Collins added one of two free
throws with 54 seconds left to give the Cardinal a four-point
margin.
Rush hit a 3-pointer from two feet beyond the top of the key
with 42 seconds left and Stanford was called for a five-second
violation when it could not inbound the ball. That led to the
final, and decisive, UCLA possession.
Moseley said the Cardinal, who pride themselves on being one of
the nation's most composed teams, were stunned when Rush hit the
long 3-pointer to pull UCLA within one.
"We kind of lost our composure when Rush hit the 3. We kind of
went 'Ooh, that hurt us.' We just kind of forgot what we were
doing," Moseley said. "We just got frazzled near the end."
McDonald hit a 3-pointer with 17 seconds remaining in regulation
to give Stanford an 80-78 lead, the 16th lead change of the second
half. Jerome Moiso, who scored eight points in the final 3:34 of
regulation, hit a short turnaround jumper at the buzzer to send the
game into overtime.
Moiso had 17 points, 12 rebounds and three blocks before fouling
out in overtime. Earl Watson had 15 points and 13 assists for the
Bruins while playing all 45 minutes.
Moseley had 22 points, Casey Jacobsen 19 and Mark Madsen 17 for
Stanford.
UCLA, which went 0-for-14 on 3-pointers in a 78-63 loss at home
to Stanford in early February, was 12-of-23 from behind the arc
Saturday -- including eight 3-pointers in the first half.
Stanford opened the game with a 12-0 run that included seven
points by Jacobsen. UCLA, which had four early turnovers, did not
score in the game's opening 2:41. The Cardinal were leading 18-4
when Rush made his first appearance, and the Bruins responded with
a 10-1 run.
With Rush moving in and out of the lineup, UCLA moved outside
and started hitting 3-pointers. Jason Kapono's 3 tied the game at
27 with 6:36 remaining in the half, and Billy Knight hit another 3
to tie it at 36 with 3:18 left.
Stanford rebuilt its lead to 43-38, but Knight hit a 3 from the
corner in front of the Cardinal bench as time expired in the first
half to pull UCLA within 43-41.
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AUDIO/VIDEO
JaRon Rush says he was successful because he didn't try to do too much.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Steve Lavin is happy for JaRon Rush.
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Jason Collins says Stanford did not put UCLA away when it had the chance.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Joe Kirchofer says Stanford didn't do the little things it takes to win.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
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