Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Gonzaga’s last hurdles: a quick turnaround -- and Baylor

- By Eddie Pells

INDIANAPOL­IS » Now comes the hard part for Gonzaga.

Less than 16 hours after walking off the floor with one of the most scintillat­ing wins in the game’s history, the barely-still-undefeated Bulldogs returned to the practice court Sunday to get ready for the national championsh­ip game.

Their opponent, Baylor, is rested, ready and waiting for a challenge.

The meeting Monday is one most hoops fans have waited for all year — two years, really — a matchup between two teams who have been on a collision course since the bracket came out.

No need for extra motivation here. But how do the Zags move on after THAT?

“It’s a lot in 30 hours, but it is what it is,” Gonzaga coach Mark Few said. “My guys have been great at game preparatio­ns all season, so consistent with effort and the attention to detail on game night. So, we’re definitely banking on that.”

To recap, Jalen Suggs banked in a shot from a step inside the midcourt line at the buzzer to lift the Zags to a 93-90 overtime victory over UCLA. The game ended after 11 p.m. Saturday.

By the time that happened, Baylor (27-2) was back at the hotel.

“We were probably like everyone else on the eighth floor of the hotel,” Baylor coach Scott Drew said of the reaction to The Shot. “Pandemoniu­m erupted.”

The Bears rolled over

Houston 78-59 and, suddenly, they look every bit as unbeatable as the unbeaten Bulldogs (31-0). No team has come closer than nine points of Baylor over the three weeks in Indianapol­is.

GAMES LOST

This matchup has been a long time in the making.

Had the COVID-19 pandemic not washed out the 2020 postseason, both these teams would have been No. 1 seeds in last season’s NCAA Tournament.

They were supposed to play this season, too. The meeting was set for Dec. 5 in Indianapol­is — a Final Four preview in the Final Four city, many predicted — but the game got scratched when a Zags player and a staffer tested positive.

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