UCLA tries to enjoy rare opportunity for Lauren and Sienna Betts
With simply over 5 minutes left in UCLA’s first-round win over California Baptist On Saturday, freshman Sienna Betts took a shot. She missed. She grabbed the rebound. She missed once more. Then, she put it within the basket.
On the bench, her older sister, Lauren Bettswas laughing. No. 1 seed UCLA was up huge late, the Bruins had been going to advance and Lauren was getting pleasure from seeing her sister succeed — and fail.
“I’m like, Sienna, just make the shot, and she’s laughing; she’s not serious,” Lauren mentioned.
The sisters recorded double-doubles throughout the 96-43 win that secured the Bruins a second-round date with Oklahoma State. Sienna had 10 factors and 12 rebounds, six of them offensive, and Lauren had 22 factors and 10 rebounds.
UCLA freshman ahead Sienna Betts performs tight protection on California Baptist guard Sofia Alonso throughout the Bruins’ first spherical NCAA event win Sunday at Pauley Pavilion.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
“She is so hard on herself and she’s so driven, I think her humor is actually a saving grace for her,” UCLA coach Cori Close mentioned of Sienna. “It’s sort of a light moment. It’s laughter. Because when she’s not smiling and bringing joy, she’s usually beating herself up for a mistake. As she continues to grow in that, I hope it doesn’t have to be her escape, but I just have absolutely enjoyed Sienna so much.”
The sisters have solely this season to play collectively earlier than Lauren, a senior, graduates. They performed only one season collectively in highschool in Colorado, and this season may be the final time they’re ever on the identical group.
“It’s this weird thing, on the one hand, I want them to enjoy this connection they have,” Close mentioned. “I want them to enjoy this year. They will look back on this year and just really treasure it.
“Simultaneously, I want to especially treat Sienna on her own journey, and to not make her feel like she’s in the shadows of anything that Lauren is doing.”
Sisters have posted double-doubles in the NCAA tournament before. At Stanford, Nneka and Chiney Ogwumike did it multiple times in the early 2010s. In the 1980s, USC twins Pamela and Paula McGee averaged double-double their senior years.
But it’s a rarity, and one that could only happen this season for the UCLA sisters.
Sienna, though, didn’t want to make a big deal of it. Sitting to the side in the locker room after the win over California Baptist, she was critical of her own game, just the way Close expected.
“I’m trying to focus more on just that game and just taking what we can learn from our mistakes in the first half, especially, and trying to move on,” Sienna said. “But, I mean, I think in an hour, I’ll take that in and be more excited about that.”
Lauren said she thought Sienna played one of her best games of the season.
“Honestly, besides her scoring, I thought her defense was a lot better today and I know that’s something she wanted to get better at,” Lauren said Saturday. “She was simply actually happy with her slides. Like she did not say something about her factors. She was like, I’m so glad that I can save them. I labored so onerous on that.”
Sienna has had back-to-back strong efforts, with 14 points against Iowa in the Big Ten tournament championship game two weeks ago. She has done so without being harassed by her big sister.
“I think [Lauren] respects my boundary to figure it out on my own,” she said.
Lauren, meanwhile, has averaged 16.5 points and 8.7 rebounds per contest this season. The projected WNBA lottery pick is considered one of the best centers in the nation.
UCLA center Lauren Betts drives to the basket under pressure from California Baptist forward Grace Schmidt during the NCAA tournament on Saturday at Pauley Pavilion.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
“I love the moments you catch when they have a connection and an eye contact or a smile that is different than everybody else because they are sharing it as sisters and I just think how special that is,” Close said. “That’s so wonderful.”
Charlisse Leger-Walker played with her sister, Krystal Leger-Walker, at Washington State for two seasons. There, the duo shared time in the backcourt for an up-and-coming Cougars squad.
“It’s just a different connection,” Charlisse Leger-Walker said. “Out there, you’ve somebody who’s your blood and unconditional love and assist. And it is simply superior to give you the option to see [Lauren and Sienna] of their journey, and have a lot success early.”
Sienna will carry the torch for the Bruins past this season when the vast majority of the veteran roster graduates and many go professional.
That’s when she might be the face of this system on her personal. But first, she is working to lengthen an NCAA event run alongside her sister.
“I want Sienna to feel like she’s Sienna,” Close mentioned. “She’s not Lauren’s sister. She can enjoy that, but for our team, she’s Sienna Betts.”
