LOS ANGELES_Steve Alford is openly seeking a few L's early in the season.
Leaders, that is.
The UCLA basketball coach acknowledged his team's deficiency in that department after its victory over Cal State Northridge on Sunday. The Bruins rallied after a lackluster first half but received too much prodding from coaches and not enough from players.
It's an ongoing issue. Players have mentioned the need to better direct themselves going back to last season, when the team finished 15-17 and guard Bryce Alford said "some of the guys aren't fully there, fully following what we've got to do."
Alford and fellow senior Isaac Hamilton have played well in season-opening victories over Pacific and Northridge. Steve Alford wants more.
"I just need them to be more vocal whether it's in their personality or not because we're a fairly quiet team," Alford said. "We're great guys, we're just quiet and I need somebody to rile them up a little bit."
Bryce Alford said Tuesday he noticed the locker room was hushed before the game against the Matadors. The Bruins didn't seem like they had too much to say either during a first half in which they fell behind by as many as five points.
"It's not really something you can teach," Bryce Alford said of being vocal. "Guys just have to talk, and that's probably my biggest role outside of having to score the basketball and doing the things I do on the court. My biggest thing is getting guys ready to play."
Bryce Alford said he spoke to the Bruins at halftime after coaches chewed out the team. His message: Everything's fine. It was in the second half, when the Bruins outscored the Matadors, 62-45.
Bryce Alford said being the coach's son didn't diminish the value of his voice because of his having won a Pac-12 Conference tournament title and twice advanced to an NCAA tournament regional semifinal.
"I feel so close to these guys that I don't have an issue with it," Bryce Alford said. "I think they respect what I've done here as a player and what kind of person I am, so they listen to me pretty good."
Point guard Lonzo Ball, who has more cachet than most freshmen considering his high-profile status, has also tried to become a chatterbox at the urging of coaches.
"I feel like I could always be more vocal," Ball said, "but I think I'm doing a pretty good job."