Purdue’s offense, the most efficient in the country, arrives at the United Center in Chicago this afternoon, March 14, at 3:30 p.m. EDT, with a spot in the Big Ten Tournament championship game on the line. UCLA earned its place in this semifinal by surviving Michigan State 88-84 on Friday night, but the victory came at a crushing cost: Tyler Bilodeau, the Bruins’ leading scorer and rebounder, suffered a right knee injury with 3:33 remaining in the first half and did not return. Despite Donovan Dent’s impressive 23-point, 12-assist double-double against the Spartans, Bilodeau’s absence creates a vulnerability that Purdue’s elite offense will seek to exploit.
| Metric | Purdue Boilermakers | UCLA Bruins |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 25-8 (13-7) | 23-10 (13-7) |
| Points Per Game | 82.0 (53rd) | 78.1 (124th) |
| Points Allowed | 70.2 (78th) | 70.9 (100th) |
| Offensive Rating | 124.6 (2nd) | 117.2 (51st) |
| Defensive Rating | 106.7 (178th) | 106.4 (168th) |
| 3-Point % | 38.2% (20th) | 38.3% (14th) |
| Assists/G | 19.8 (3rd) | 16.3 (50th) |
| Defensive Rebounds/G | 24.2 (199th) | 22.5 (321st) |
| Offensive Rebounds/G | 11.4 (127th) | 10.0 (264th) |
| Steals/G | 5.6 (301st) | 6.5 (197th) |
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Key Advantage
Bilodeau (UCLA’s leading scorer and rebounder) is out. This removes UCLA’s best chance to clean up the glass, making a below-average defensive rebounding unit more vulnerable.
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Market Analysis
The Boilermakers open as a -7.5 (-107) favorite with a 147.5 total, and the moneyline implies roughly 73% win probability for Purdue against UCLA’s 27%. The spread reflects Purdue’s 124.6 offensive rating, second nationally, against a UCLA defense that has allowed 70.9 points per game and now operates without its primary interior defender. The 147.5 total prices both defenses as vulnerable: Purdue allows 70.2 points per game; UCLA’s defensive rating of 106.4 provides similar resistance as Purdue’s 106.7.
Dent’s Burden Without Bilodeau
Donovan Dent has been exceptional, averaging 14.4 points over the last 10 games and delivering the first triple-double in Big Ten Tournament history against Rutgers. Against Michigan State, Dent added 23 points and 12 assists while Trent Perry contributed 22 points. Yet Bilodeau’s absence fundamentally alters UCLA’s offensive geometry. The Bruins forward puts up 18.1 points and 5.8 rebounds while shooting 51% from the field and 46% from three; his ability to stretch defenses created the space Dent exploited.
Without Bilodeau, UCLA’s rotation compresses. The Bruins grab 10 offensive rebounds and 22.5 defensive rebounds per game; Purdue’s 11.4 offensive rebounds per game target this vulnerability directly. Braden Smith and Fletcher Loyer provide the Boilermakers with perimeter execution, but the interior mismatch is where the game tilts. Purdue’s 49.9% field goal shooting converts high-percentage looks that UCLA’s diminished frontcourt rotation may not be able to consistently contest.
Tournament Stakes and Pace Implications
This semifinal carries NCAA Tournament seeding implications for both programs. Purdue’s 25-8 record and No. 2 offensive efficiency position the Boilermakers for a top seed with a victory. UCLA’s 23-10 mark and Friday’s emotional expenditure, compounded by Bilodeau’s injury, create a compressed preparation window. The Bruins’ 9.0 turnovers per game, top ball security, kept a step ahead of MSU; sustaining that discipline against Purdue’s 19.8 assists per game is essential.
The pace factor favors Purdue’s methodical approach. The Boilermakers operate at a 0.93 pace factor, slightly below UCLA’s 0.94, and excel in structured half-court sets. UCLA’s transition opportunities, generated through 6.5 steals per game, must materialize against a Purdue offense that rarely surrenders possessions via turnover. The first meeting on January 21, a 69-67 UCLA victory, featured Dent’s 23 points; replicating that output without Bilodeau’s complementary threat requires a schematic adjustment the Bruins may not have time to implement.
