Penticton Herald

Top-seed Villanova bounced, Gonzaga barely advances

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Villanova’s unexpected loss to Wisconsin in the second round of the NCAA Tournament could send shockwaves across the March Madness field. Wisconsin’s 65-62 win over the defending national champions in Buffalo not only sends the Badgers back to the Sweet 16 for the fourth straight year, it creates all kinds of opportunit­ies in the East Regional — and possibly beyond.

With Villanova out, Duke becomes the de facto No. 1 in the East. The Blue Devils play South Carolina today, then the winner between Baylor and USC if they get past the Gamecocks.

The Wildcats’ loss also could benefit the winner between Virginia and Florida on the top half of the bracket, leaving Wisconsin and a team that’s not the defending national champion between them and the Final Four.

But it goes beyond the East.

Villanova was the tournament’s top seed, so each of the other three No. 1 seeds essentiall­y move up a spot.

West Region top seed Gonzaga had to hold on to beat Northweste­rn in its second-round game on Saturday, while Kansas (Midwest) and North Carolina (South) play today.

The last time a No. 1 seed lost in the round of 32 was in 2015, when Villanova lost to North Carolina State. The Wolfpack didn’t turn that into a trip to the Final Four, but it did pave the way for Michigan State to reach the Final Four as a No. 7 seed.

The year before, Wichita State lost to Kentucky in the second round as a No. 1 seed, a game that cleared the way for the eighthseed­ed Wildcats to reach the national title game against eventual champ Connecticu­t.

A similar scenario played out in 2013, when Wichita State reached the Final Four as a No. 9 seed after knocking off No. 1 seed Gonzaga in the second round.

There’s still plenty of games to be played, but the door is open — particular­ly in the East — for a low-seeded team to make a run.

That could be Wisconsin. The eighth-seeded Badgers played well down the stretch and are 2-for-2 in Sweet 16 appearance­s.

Villanova’s loss also spotlighte­d the difficulti­es in defending a national championsh­ip.

The Wildcats’ early exit marked the 10th straight season the defending champion has failed to reach the Sweet 16. The last team to do it was the last team to repeat as champion, Florida in 2007. The previous repeat champ before that was Duke in 1991-92.

It also was the 11th time in 14 years the No. 1 overall seed failed to win the national champion and the sixth time since 2010 that a No. 1 seed lost in the round of 32.

“I say this every year at Villanova, we can’t take it for granted,” Villanova coach Jay Wright said. “It’s so special to be a part of it. Every time you win and you get a chance to advance, cherish it. You’re playing the best teams in the country.”

GONZAGA 79, NORTHWESTE­RN 73

SALT LAKE CITY — Top-seeded Gonzaga fought off a wild Northweste­rn comeback for a 79-73 victory Saturday night with help from an untimely technical foul on Wildcats coach Chris Collins.

Northweste­rn trimmed a 22-point deficit to five and had the ball when Gonzaga’s Zach Collins reached up through the basket to reject Dererk Pardon’s shot with 4:54 left.

There was no call, and Collins, jawing with the officials all day, ran onto the court and was slapped with a technical foul.

Nigel Williams-Goss made both free throws, and eighth-seeded Northweste­rn (24-12), in the NCAA Tournament for the first time in program history, never got closer.

Williams-Goss led the Zags (34-1) with 20 points, eight rebounds and four assists, while Collins and Jordan Mathews had 14 points each.

Gonzaga faces fourth-seeded West Virginia in the West Regional semifinal on Thursday.

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