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Bruins tame Nittany Lions with 30-point performance from Trent Perry

Sophomore guard Trent Perry jumps with the ball for a layup with a Maryland defender at his hip. Perry paced the team with a career-best 30 points, shooting 7-for-13 from the field Wednesday night. (Aidan Sun/assistant Photo editor)

By Una O'Farrell

Jan. 14, 2026 8:32 p.m.

It takes pressure to tip an evenly balanced scale. 

But eventually, something has to give. 

And Wednesday night, it was sophomore guard Trent Perry, who stole the show and tipped the scales in his favor.

UCLA men’s basketball (12-5, 4-2 Big Ten) traded back-and-forth possessions with Penn State (9-8, 0-6), until a career-high 30 points on a 53.8% clip from sophomore guard Trent Perry fueled the former to a 71-60 victory Wednesday night at the Bryce Jordan Center. The loss keeps the Nittany Lions winless in conference play, while the victory gives the Bruins back-to-back wins before finishing the away trip at Ohio State on Saturday.

The opening half offered little room to breathe. 

Through the first 20 minutes, there were three ties and three lead changes as neither side could string together enough defensive stops to create distance.

That steadiness was tested early when senior guard Donovan Dent briefly left the floor early in the first half. After a forced turnover and what looked like a leg injury, the Bruins were forced to navigate a ten-minute stretch without their primary ball handler. Even then, the Bruins stayed within a possession, leaning on free throws to avoid slipping behind.

Senior guard Donovan Dent dribbles the ball on the floor at Pauley Pavilion. Dent failed to score against Penn State, going 0-for-5 from the field, but led the team in assists with five. (Aidan Sun/assistant Photo editor)

But the balance finally broke late in the half. 

After Penn State tied the game at 21, UCLA seized control during a brief but decisive six-minute stretch where the Bruins entered intermission on a 12-2 run, forcing multiple turnovers and converting extra possessions while the Nittany Lions failed to ever score from the paint.

And even with the eventual return of Dent just minutes later, redshirt freshman guard Eric Freeny provided the spacing UCLA had been missing. 

The guard knocked down the first two 3-pointers of his collegiate career during the closing stretch of the first half, turning the tide of the affair and forcing Penn State to defend wider than it had all night.

But the lead the Bruins built would quickly start to unravel as the Nittany Lions wasted little time erasing the cushion. 

Penn State opened the second half with increased pace, scoring on three of its first four possessions to trim the deficit to a single point within the opening two minutes of the second half.

But when it mattered most, Perry rose to the occasion, scoring 22 second-half points, fueled by four converted 3-pointers and a perfect 6-for-6 from the charity stripe. Perry’s scoring kept UCLA from slipping into empty possessions, with Dent continuing to struggle on the offensive side of the court, scoring zero points on 0-for-5 shooting from the field – his third single-digit scoring appearance in his last five games. However, Dent still proved to be vital to the Bruins’ offensive structure, garnering a team-high five assists.

The margin finally expanded when senior forward Tyler Bilodeau and Perry traded makes that Penn State could not match. Bilodeau finished with 21 points, supplying the half-court scoring UCLA needed when the pace sped up. 

Junior guard/forward Eric Dailey Jr. dribbles the ball at Pauley Pavilion. Dailey played just 15 minutes and scored two points against Penn State. (Aidan Sun/assistant Photo editor)

Bilodeau and Perry were the lone Bruins to reach double digits in scoring, with junior guard/forward Eric Dailey Jr. joining Dent with his offensive struggles. While Dailey can lead the Bruins in scoring on any given night – averaging 10.9 per game – he has had his fair share of invisible nights, scoring just two points in 15 minutes Wednesday night, his sixth game this season with seven or fewer points and second with zero baskets made.

However, proficiency at the free-throw line proved to be critical. 

UCLA finished a perfect 21-for-21 from the free-throw line, using trips to the charity stripe as insulation whenever the offense stalled. 

While both teams struggled to generate separation from the floor late in the second half, the Bruins’ ability to convert on foul shots eliminated wasted possessions. 

Penn State continued to hunt for quick answers to find its first conference win, but UCLA’s late possessions stayed too composed. 

Perry’s points came in multiple forms – 3-pointers and free throws and a late layup to reassert control – and the Bruins closed out the final minute without allowing the deficit to dip back into a single-possession game. 

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Una O'Farrell | Senior staff
O’Farrell is Sports senior staff and a Photo and News contributor. She was previously a 2024-2025 assistant Sports editor on the beach volleyball, rowing, men’s water polo and women’s water polo beats and a contributor on the women’s volleyball and women’s water polo beats. She is also a third-year English and economics student from Seal Beach, California.
O’Farrell is Sports senior staff and a Photo and News contributor. She was previously a 2024-2025 assistant Sports editor on the beach volleyball, rowing, men’s water polo and women’s water polo beats and a contributor on the women’s volleyball and women’s water polo beats. She is also a third-year English and economics student from Seal Beach, California.
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