UCLA didn’t need style points Saturday — it needed a result. The Bruins got it, edging Washington 77-73 on Feb. 8, 2026, in a game that stayed within one or two possessions deep into the closing minutes.
The win pushes UCLA to 17-7 on the season, a timely bounce after a recent up-and-down stretch. Washington drops to 12-12, another close loss in a pattern of uneven form that has followed the Huskies through the middle of the year.
How the game swung
With no quarter-by-quarter breakdown available, the story is the margin: UCLA won the math at the finish. In a four-point game, every empty trip matters, and the Bruins did enough late to keep Washington from stealing it on the road.
Washington’s 73 points were enough to make this a live-wire finish, but UCLA’s 77 proved just enough separation — the type of narrow win that often comes down to execution in the half court, defensive rebounding, and converting at the line in the final stretch.
Closing time: Bruins survive the possession game
Games like this typically get decided by who can manufacture clean looks when scouting tightens and legs get heavy. UCLA’s ability to stay composed in a one-possession environment was the difference on the scoreboard, turning a fragile lead into a final horn that didn’t require overtime.
What it means going forward
For UCLA, this is the kind of win that stabilizes a season: a close, pressure-filled finish handled without extra time, adding another notch to an already strong record (now 17-7). The Bruins have been trending positively in recent games, and surviving a tight one reinforces that they can win without needing a runaway.
For Washington, the loss drops the Huskies to 12-12 and underscores the thin margin they’ve been living on. When games compress late, the difference between a road win and another close defeat can be a single defensive stop or one more clean possession — and Saturday, UCLA found just enough of both.

