Underdogs in the 2008 NCAA
tournament for the first time, the Bruins will need more than a
dominant outing from Kevin Love to prove oddsmakers wrong.
You expected the UCLA Bruins to reach the Final Four. The Bruins
expected the Bruins to reach the Final Four. But as losers in the semifinals the last two years, what they
do from here is anyone’s guess. Maybe that's why oddsmakers opened them as
two-point underdogs against Memphis and as
63/20 dogs to win the national championship. "We're definitely not satisfied with going to the Final
Four," Bruins forward Luc Richard Mbah a Moute told the
Associated Press. "We want to have a better outcome than we
had the last two years. UCLA is about hanging national
championship banners. Going to the Final Four is not going to
cut it." This is the third year in a row that the Bruins made it this
far, but this is undoubtedly the best team overall. The Bruins
were missing an inside presence to tussle with Florida last year
and the year before, and they've definitely fixed that problem
with freshman Kevin Love. The All-American has the size (6 feet 10 inches and 271
pounds) to go head-to-head with any big man and the versatility
to get the whole team rolling offensively. However, what’s
worrisome about the 2008 Bruins is that it's still a mystery as
to which team will show up against Memphis on Saturday: The
balanced Bruins' attack or the team that relies on one player,
Love, to bail them out? They've looked dominant when they were clicking on all
cylinders. All but one Bruin scored in their first-round, 70-29
blowout of Mississippi Valley State, and five players were in
double-digit figures against the Xavier Musketeers in their
76-57 win. But against Texas A&M, they needed forward Josh Shipp to play
hero. He blocked Aggies guard Donald Sloan’s drive with seconds
remaining for the 51-49 win. And versus No. 12 Western Kentucky,
the Bruins were outscored 58-47 in the second half, needing
clutch points from Love and guard Russell Westbrook to pull away
with an 88-78 victory. The Bruins were put in a region billed as the easiest for a
No. 1 seed to dominate, but twice they had to clutch up against
lesser opponents to move on. And you can point the blame at the
fact that Love has been the only Bruin bringing his "A" game
consistently in the tournament. With averages of 21.7 points, 11 rebounds and 4.5 blocks in
the tourney, only Davidson's Stephen Curry has done more heavy
lifting. But at times, Love's supporting cast has disappeared. Guard Darren Collison has had off games, posting four points
and fouling out against Western Kentucky while Westbrook was
3-15 from the field. As for Shipp, he’s been cold since the
tourney tipped. He averages 13.2 points per game but is eight
for 27 in his last four. And if they all have another off night
on Saturday, don't expect much from the Bruins' bench. UCLA
averages 73.8 points but only 12.4 (16.9 percent) is produced by
non-starters. "We've really got to do the job on the perimeter if we really
want to win this game," Collison said. "They're [Memphis]
athletic and long. Not a lot of teams are athletic and long like
that." And despite their run-and-gun reputation, Memphis has the
bigs to hassle Love. Tigers forward Joe Dorsey is 6 feet 9
inches and 265 pounds, probably the biggest forward Love will
play all year, and Tigers forward Shawn Taggart is at least
another five fouls off the bench at 6 feet 10 inches and 230
pounds. If they can hassle him, the other Bruins will need to
step up. If they don't, it'll be another disappointing Final Four
finish for UCLA. "This is a great accomplishment, three straight Final Fours,"
senior center Lorenzo Mata-Real told Dailynews.com.
"But it's definitely going to be bad if we don't win it because
we worked so hard all year to get to this point. We're here now
and we don't want another loss. We know how it feels."
Team (Seed)
Odds
Kansas
31/10
Memphis
27/10
North Carolina
7/4
UCLA
63/20
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