Oregon: Saturday’s announced attendance was 7,301. With four home games remaining, the Ducks have yet to draw a crowd topping 9,000 — or what would have come close to filling their former home, 9,087-seat McArthur Court. It may take the return of Dana Altman’s predecessor, first-year Washington State coach Ernie Kent, with his Cougars in two weeks to attract Oregon’s largest crowd of the season at Matthew Knight Arena, which seats 12,364.
MORE THAN A RIM PROTECTOR
Bell blocked two shots against the Bruins, giving him 68 for the season. He came into the game with more blocks than 178 NCAA teams, including conference foes Arizona (64), Stanford (55) and Arizona State (44). Still, it was the 6-foot-9 freshman’s five assists on Saturday that impressed his coach. “He’s just unselfish,” Altman said. “He’s looking for open people. He has a nice little jump hook and he’s starting to develop some offense, but he is also a very good passer.”
PARKER’S ABSENCE A BIG ONE
UCLA coach Steve Alford felt playing without Parker was a big factor in the Bruins getting swept on their Oregon road trip. The 6-foot-9 junior was averaging 10.8 points and 7.8 rebounds in 18 starts before being sidelined. “It’s not an excuse, but we’re not a deep team to begin with,” Alford said, “and Tony being gone just doesn’t affect what we do offensively, it affects what we do on defense as well.”
OFF WITH THAT REDSHIRT
Altman inserted 6-10 freshman Roman Sorkin in the final minutes for the first time, and he responded with a 20-foot jumper off a pump fake from the top of the key for his first points as a Duck. The 18-year-old Serbian was seen working with assistant coach Mike Mennenga on that very shot after Oregon’s home win over Oregon State three weeks ago, not long after Sorkin joined the team. “He’s going to play,” Altman said. “He’s going to have opportunities. He came here to get an education but also to develop, and asking him to stay for five years is probably not practical.”