Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gonzaga dispatches depleted Kansas

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SALT LAKE CITY — And to think, some folks said they might not make it to March Madness.

The Gonzaga Bulldogs laughed that off as easily as they swatted away an exhausted Kansas team Saturday, rolling past the Jayhawks 89-68 to return to the Sweet 16 for the nation-leading ninth consecutiv­e time.

Led by Anton Watson’s 21 points, fifth-seeded Gonzaga was nearly as good over the second half of this game as it has been over the second half of the season. The Bulldogs scored 15 consecutiv­e points early in the half to turn this one into a runaway on an afternoon when basically everyone in a navy jersey was a star.

They improved to 16-2 since Jan. 18, with the only two losses coming to Saint Mary’s, the team that beat Gonzaga for the West Coast Conference title but was dismissed from the tournament Friday night.

“Late December, it was looking like maybe it wasn’t going to happen,” said Mark Few, his hair still damp from the dousing he received in the postgame locker room. “But I’ll give credit. These guys stayed coachable. We figured it out.”

Once Few dries off, he and the Bulldogs, who are in their 25th consecutiv­e NCAA Tournament, will load up for their routine trip to the second weekend to play the winner of today’s game between Purdue and Utah State.

The Bulldogs (27-7) made their first five three-pointers of the second half, not missing from long range until 1:30 remained and the game had long entered extended garbage time. They shot 60% from the floor and 53% on three-pointers. Ben Gregg still managed to stand out — he went 6 for 6 and finished with 15 points and nine rebounds.

Big man Graham Ike also had 15 and nine, going toe to toe with KU’s Hunter Dickinson, who finished with a quiet 15 points.

Making all the Bulldogs look good was Ryan Nembhard, who blew off a rough shooting night (1 for 6) and finished with 12 assists to become the program’s career leader in that category.

“Ryan’s been at the highest level for the last eight weeks,” Few said. “He’s just got our throttle all the way down and he’s making great decisions.”

Kansas was gassed, facing an early start after an emotional, close victory over Samford late Thursday night. Coach Bill Self said he knew he was in trouble when he turned to his bench partway through the game, looking to make a substituti­on.

“There’s not many times where you take a guy out, he’s sitting through a three-minute timeout, I say, ‘Can you go back in?’ and he says ‘I need more time,’ ” Self said.

The tired legs played into a painfully familiar scene for fans of the fourth-seeded Jayhawks (23-11). They have struggled with depth, shooting, consistenc­y and injuries; leading scorer Kevin McCullar Jr. (knee) was out for the tournament. During Gonzaga’s 15-0 run, the Jayhawks missed 10 consecutiv­e shots.

Gonzaga eventually extended the run to 32-4; Kansas shot 2 for 23 during that stretch.

“It’s a formula for disaster when you can’t make shots and you can’t stop them,” said Kansas forward KJ Adams Jr., who finished with 10 points.

A few of those misses looked strangely ugly, including when Dickinson, who missed the Big 12 Tournament with a dislocated shoulder, grabbed a rebound under the bucket and looked poised for an easy bucket but could barely get the ball to the rim.

“Hunt gave us everything he had,” Self said. “But that was one tired dude out there today.”

TENNESSEE 62, TEXAS 58

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Dalton Knecht scored 18 points and made four free throws in the final 8.8 seconds as Tennessee topped Texas to advance to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutiv­e year.

Jonas Aidoo had 11 points and Tobe Awaka added 10 for the Volunteers (26-8), helping Coach Rick Barnes beat the team he coached for 17 seasons. The Vols have reached the Sweet 16 three times in nine seasons under Barnes, but have yet to advance out of that round in that stretch.

Tyrese Hunter and Chen-dall Weaver each had 13 points for seventh-seeded Texas (21-13).

Knecht struggled early on, missing his first four shots, including an air ball on a fadeaway jumper. The AP All-American converted his first field goal with 90 seconds remaining in the first half, putting Tennessee up by 11.

Knecht began to flex his muscles with a pair of second-half dunks, one of which came after he grabbed a missed transition three-pointer in the air and jammed it home with two hands.

 ?? (AP/Isaac Hale) ?? Gonzaga forward Anton Watson dunks Saturday during the second half of Bulldogs’ 89-68 victory over Kansas during the second round of the NCAA Tournament in Salt Lake City.
(AP/Isaac Hale) Gonzaga forward Anton Watson dunks Saturday during the second half of Bulldogs’ 89-68 victory over Kansas during the second round of the NCAA Tournament in Salt Lake City.

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