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10. UCLA
The Bruins lost one of the nation's top point guards -- and may be better without him
By Alan
Shipnuck
"A team's personality is shaped by its point guard," says UCLA coach
Steve Lavin, which explains the smiles around Westwood these days. Gone is Baron
Davis, who after two seasons bolted to the NBA. Davis was so talented he was the
third player taken in the draft, by the Charlotte Hornets, but his departure may
be the best thing that could have happened to the Bruins. He was undisciplined
on defense -- he fouled out eight times last season -- and often out of
control on offense, and he was far too uneven a presence to lead the talented
but painfully inexperienced Bruins, a fact that was obvious during UCLA's
first-round flameout against Detroit in the NCAAs. Taking over for Davis at the
point will be junior Earl Watson, who for the past two seasons has been UCLA's
shooting guard. "Earl's game is rooted in fundamentals and a deep knowledge
of the game," says Lavin, who's tactful enough not to draw the obvious
comparison.
The transition to point guard should pose no problem for Watson -- he played
the position in high school and last year had more assists (142) than Davis
(138, though Davis did miss four games with a knee injury). He'll have a strong
rotation of 10 players to get involved in the offense, including a big front
line anchored by Jerome Moiso, the 6'10" sweet-shooting lefty; JaRon Rush,
who needs to develop an offensive package to go with his relentless efforts in
transition and on the glass; and bruising center Dan Gadzuric, who's fully
recovered from the knee problems that beset him last
season.
The key for the Bruins is finding a perimeter game. They finished ninth in the
Pac-10 in three-point shooting (32.8%) last year. Help in that department should
come from highly touted freshman Jason Kapono, a 6'7" deadeye shooter who
made 211 threes in high
school.
"We've got so much talent and depth that all it's going to take to be
successful is leadership," says Watson. "I'm looking forward to
providing that, in excess."
Issue date: November 15, 1999
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