No. 12 Wildcats rally from big deficit to stop UCLA

HIGHLIGHTS: No. 12 Wildcats 77, UCLA 71

UA comes from 19 down in the first half to win 77-71

TUCSON — Pelle Larsson scored 22 points, sparking No. 12 Arizona’s comeback from a 17-point second-half deficit Saturday as the Wildcats rallied past rival UCLA 77-71 in front of a sellout crowd of 14,688 at McKale Center.

Arizona (14-4, 5-2 Pac-12) made 22 of 23 free throws in the second half and survived a wild last minute against the Bruins (8-11, 3-5), who were making their final scheduled appearance in McKale Center.

(VIDEO): TOMMY LLOYD POSTGAME PRESS CONFERENCE

Larsson provided a huge basket with a rebound and short jumper with 52 seconds left for a 75-71 lead. UCLA’s Dylan Andrews then turned over the ball on an offensive foul.

The Bruins quickly got the ball back on a traveling call but missed three 3-pointers before retaining possession on a held ball.

UCLA then missed another 3-pointer and fouled Oumar Ballo, who made both attempts with 19.0 seconds left. UCLA’s Will McClendon missed one more deep shot attempt as Arizona escaped with the win.

Arizona Postgame Download: Pelle Larsson and Oumar Ballo talk about the Cats comeback win over the Bruins

Ballo had a double-double with 17 points and 13 rebounds. He entered the game shooting 43.5 percent from the free-throw line but made 7 of 8 against UCLA. Caleb Love scored 14.

Sebastian Mack scored 21 to lead the Bruins. Lazar Stefanovic had 17 points and eight rebounds.

UCLA, which entered shooting 29.6 percent from 3-point range, was hot at the start, making six of its first nine shots from behind the arc. Stefanovic hit three during the early blitz and he capped a 13-0 run with two free throws that gave the Bruins their largest lead at 32-13 with 7:40 to go.

Although the Wildcats closed the half on a surge, UCLA led 37-28 at halftime and extended the lead by holding Arizona scoreless for more than four minutes to start the second half, going up 45-28.

The Wildcats whittled away and later used a 7-0 run to get within 55-52 before tying the game at 60 with 6:04 left when Larsson converted 4 of 4 free throws when he was fouled on a drive and UCLA coach Mick Cronin picked up a technical foul for arguing the call.

Arizona took its first lead since the opening minute when Love attacked on a fast break and converted a three-point play for a 67-65 lead at the 4:14 mark.

Meridian Wealth Management Postgame Show: UA beats UCLA 77-71

–Field Level Media