Like many Angelenos, the UCLA girls’s basketball workforce is coping with the catastrophic toll of the large wildfires this week — a firestorm inching perilously nearer to dwelling.
Simply seven miles west of Pauley Pavilion, the Palisades hearth rages, scorching all the pieces in its path with the flames steadily advancing towards campus.
“I wish we weren’t having to go through it,” coach Cori Shut stated. “I’m devastated by some of the hurt that people are experiencing right now and the devastation to our city.”
At one level, the blaze encroached upon the properties of Shut and assistant Tony Newnan, who reside close to the sting of the fireplace zone.
Thankfully, not one of the athletes or coaches — besides Shut and Newnan — had their properties in rapid hazard or have been compelled to evacuate. Though the coaches lived near Pacific Palisades, the shifting winds spared their properties, pushing the flames in one other route.
With gratitude comes a profound tinge of guilt in realizing the hardships others have endured — the ravaging of greater than 20,000 acres and displacement of tens of hundreds.
“It’s almost like you don’t even want to say it because you know so many people have it so much worse, but we’ve been very fortunate,” Shut stated.
Amid this tragedy, the Bruins should steadiness their standing because the nation’s No. 1-ranked workforce whereas confronting real-world hardship past the courtroom and the college’s protecting partitions.
The previous few days have been extraordinarily tough for everybody as this system works to remain centered on basketball amid the encircling turmoil. For the out-of-state gamers who make up a lot of the Bruins’ roster, that is their first expertise with a wildfire — essentially the most harmful in Los Angeles County historical past.
Because the fires started, coaches have given gamers the area to course of the unfolding occasions whereas conducting nightly check-ins to make sure security.
Compartmentalizing the dread and disarray gives a useful lesson that Shut says teaches “how to be the best version of ourselves in the face of extreme adversity.”
“One of the reasons this experience is so valuable is because this won’t be the last difficult thing they have in their lives,” she added. “I wish it was. I wish I could protect them all and put them in a little bubble, but I can’t.”
After returning dwelling from their decisive win over Purdue on Tuesday — the identical day the preliminary blazes ignited — the gamers took two days off from follow.
Earlier than arriving in L.A. on an extended flight from Indiana, the workforce confronted the uncertainty about what they’d return to. Two donors touring with this system shared the identical concern, grappling with the truth that their dwelling within the hearth zone may not face up to the flames — a concern later confirmed.
“We got off the plane, and our players knew that it [their home] was at risk, and they just went and engulfed them and hugged them,” Shut stated, practically choking up. “That’s what Bruins do. We show up for each other.”
The next day, gamers like Gabriela Jaquez and Kiki Rice continued attending in-person lessons whereas the campus remained shrouded in an orange haze, with ash and smoke filling the air because the Palisades hearth burned miles away.
UCLA ultimately canceled lessons for the remainder of the week, leaving the gamers with one full day without work earlier than returning to follow.
For Jaquez, a Camarillo native simply an hour’s drive from the Pacific Palisades, wildfires are a tragic actuality she’s lengthy been conversant in. Having by no means left California, conflagrations have been a frequent prevalence she’s witnessed firsthand.
“We feel very sorry, and it’s so sad, so tragic,” Jaquez stated. “Being from Southern California and having dealt with plenty of fires in the past, I feel like I found a way to handle it.”
Rice, a local of Washington, the place wildfires are practically nonexistent, encountering such pure devastation is new. She is certainly one of 9 gamers from exterior California witnessing the decimation.
“This is obviously so devastating, just how close it is to us,” Rice stated. “Just seeing a lot of people close to this program have lost homes and a lot of stuff in these fires.”
Whereas many gamers are grateful for basketball as a distraction, Shut famous that others are wrestling with the nervousness of dealing with a wildfire.
“One of our players said in film, ‘Intellectually, I’m OK, but it’s sort of like being in Kansas for the first time and having there be a tornado,’” Shut stated. “‘You know it’s far away, but you’ve still never experienced that, so it’s still so scary.’”
Shut reassured the mother and father of out-of-state gamers that their kids are protected. On the similar time, she and her employees are managing the well-being of their very own households.
Friday’s return to follow introduced solace because the gamers refocused on sustaining their No. 1 rating.
“We still get to play the sport we love,” Shut stated. “Just because there’s so much hurt going on right now and difficulty doesn’t mean we shouldn’t still find joy in playing this game that we love and be committed to that.”
Shut is well-versed in main by adversity as she demonstrated through the COVID-19 pandemic. Persevering with their success whereas the town burns round them isn’t any totally different.
“This is what we do,” she stated. “We find a way. We can’t control this, but this is what we know how to do. We know how to lead through this. … I also believe our players are well equipped.”
Shut takes pleasure in how her squad pivots to surprising challenges and perseveres. The hope is that when the workforce takes the courtroom, they’ll emerge as a squad cast in hearth.
Nonetheless, the return to the courtroom is delayed barely, now tentatively set for Wednesday at dwelling in opposition to Penn State.
Regardless of her finest efforts to arrange for his or her matchup Sunday in opposition to Northwestern, the Wildcats determined to not journey to L.A., citing “concerns surrounding ongoing wildfires affecting the greater Los Angeles area.”
The Massive Ten Convention introduced that the sport — one Shut was assured would proceed after discussions with the administration and convention officers — can be rescheduled.
It’s certainly one of many sporting occasions disrupted by the continued wildfires, together with Northwestern’s sport in opposition to USC on Wednesday.
When the Bruins return to the courtroom, it should present a much-needed sense of normalcy. Simply as Shut has religion in its influence on her gamers, she believes L.A. will ultimately regain normalcy.
“What’s happening in our city is just overwhelming,” Shut stated. “But I’m also so confident in the city’s resilience. Its unity. Its find-a-way mentality. I just know Angelenos are going to find a way to come back stronger.”