Afflalo, UCLA seeking revenge in Final Four
Bruins two wins away from returning to college basketball mountaintop
![]() Robert Galbraith / Reuters file UCLA's Arron Afflalo celebrates following the Bruins' victory over Kansas in the West regional final |
Special feature |
College hoops season preview Men's top 25 rankings, analysis, predictions and more. Cole Aldrich and Kansas are No. 1, but where does the rest of the field fall? NBCSports.com |
College basketball |
Slideshow |
more photos |
NCAA tournament coverage |
|
UCLA held a news conference April 3, 2003 to introduce Ben Howland as the school’s new basketball coach. Under NCAA rules, Howland had to wait until April 9 before he could contact any potential recruits.
That’s just six days. But the wait was hard.
The Bruins were coming off a 10-19 season under Steve Lavin. More than anything, Howland knew he needed players in order to merge onto the road to respectability again. Howland started his wish list with two players from the Bruins’ backyard: Jordan Farmar of Van Nuys and Arron Afflalo of Compton.
Howland got them both. Farmar required some work. Afflalo, who wanted to stay close to home, was an easy sell.
Fast forward almost four years later and UCLA is headed to a second consecutive Final Four. Howland has joined the inner circle of the sport’s elite coaches and you can be sure he will never forget the people — especially Afflalo — who helped him reach both destinations.
“Arron Afflalo took a chance when I got this job six days into it,” Howland once said. “He was my first recruit. I will always be thankful and grateful to him.”
Afflalo sends those words of gratitude right back to Howland. The deal has worked out remarkably well at both ends. The 6-foot-5 junior guard was the Pac-10 Player of the Year. Monday he was honored as a first-team selection to the Associated Press All-American squad.
Now Howland, Afflalo and the rest of the Bruins have a truly unique opportunity. Just two more wins and they can return to Westwood with the 2007 national championship trophy. But all four teams in Atlanta this weekend share that goal. The thing that sets UCLA apart is the chance for revenge. One year after Florida throttled the Bruins 73-57 in the national championship game, UCLA gets another shot.
That doesn’t happen often, at least not in college basketball. The last time the Final Four offered a rematch from the previous season was 1991. UNLV crushed Duke 103-73 for the 1990 championship. One year later, Duke played the spoiler with a 79-77 national semifinal victory that ruined the Rebels’ shot at an undefeated season.
Now UCLA gets a shot. A win Saturday moves the Bruins into the championship game and ends Florida’s quest for back-to-back championships. That hasn’t been done since Duke won in 1991 and 1992.
|
“Now that it’s here, it’s a great thing,” Afflalo said of the rematch. “It gives us a chance to kill two birds with one stone in a sense — a chance at revenge and moving toward the championship.”
No one deserves a second chance any more that Afflalo. Known as one of the top lockdown defenders in the nation, Afflalo entered this season trying to silence his critics. His detractors said he was unable to produce when things mattered most.
And Afflalo’s shot did fail him at the end of last year’s tournament. He was 8-for-30 from the floor in the final three games of the 2006 tournament, including 3-for-10 with 10 points against Florida.
He’s had an entire year to think about the numbers. Just think how that performance must have eaten away at Afflalo since the final buzzer in Indianapolis.
“It was horrible; not the game itself, but the thought of losing,” Afflalo said. “Winners and people who do things special are never forgotten. Second-best is not good enough. It was very painful that night.”
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
LowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM COLLEGE BASKETBALL |
| Add College basketball headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links





