Los Angeles Times

Tar Heels champs again

- ben.bolch@latimes.com Twitter: @latbbolch

Theo Pinson, right, celebrates with teammate Joel Berry II after North Carolina beat Gonzaga, 71-65, to win its sixth NCAA basketball title.

GLENDALE, Ariz. — It was an ending for eternity, one that North Carolina will want to relive frame by frame only one year removed from a finish to its season that made the Tar Heels hit the off button.

They can pause their screen on forward Kennedy Meeks’ hand stretching to block a shot by Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss. They can zoom in on the widebodied Meeks stepping in front of an outlet pass for a steal. And they can switch to slow motion for forward Isaiah Hicks’ drive for a onehanded leaning jumper.

Every angle will be pleasurabl­e after North Carolina zipped past Gonzaga over the final 100 seconds of the national championsh­ip game Monday night, scoring

the game’s final eight points on the way to a 71-65 victory at University of Phoenix Stadium.

As colorful confetti descended from the rafters, the Tar Heels could savor redemption alongside the very player who had broken their hearts last season. Kris Jenkins, the Villanova hero whose buzzer-beating shot had sunk North Carolina in the championsh­ip game, was seated in the Tar Heels’ cheering section. He had once been taken in by the parents of North Carolina guard Nate Britt, making him a Tar Heels fan for life.

“It’s a complete 180 from last year,” Hicks said of his feelings. “I feel like this is where, you know, what we worked for. It’s finally here.”

North Carolina (33-7) won its sixth national championsh­ip and third under coach Roy Williams, who also guided the Tar Heels to titles in 2005 and 2009. Williams nearly won again last season before Jenkins intervened in a game that Williams said he had not rewatched and probably never would.

The ending Monday was equally cruel for Gonzaga, which had pushed its more

storied counterpar­t for most of a sloppy game marred by an overabunda­nce of fouls and missed shots. Playing the final five minutes without freshman forward Zach Collins after he had fouled out, the Bulldogs had taken a 65-63 lead when WilliamsGo­ss banked in a jumper with 1:53 left.

Everything else went North Carolina’s way.

Tar Heels forward Justin Jackson converted a layup while being fouled, resulting in a three-point play and a one-point lead for his team. Then Williams-Goss rolled an ankle and missed his final two shots after having scored his team’s previous eight points.

“Sprained it pretty good,” said Williams-Goss, who finished with 15 points. “It was the same ankle that I hurt last game, so it was still a little bit weak.”

North Carolina’s Joel Berry II missed a jumper but the Bulldogs couldn’t secure a defensive rebound, and a jump ball on an ensuing scrum gave possession back to the Tar Heels. Hicks made his one-handed jumper with 26 seconds left and Meeks blocked Williams-Goss’ final shot before Berry grabbed the rebound and fired an

outlet pass that led to a Jackson dunk and a 70-65 lead for the Tar Heels.

When Meeks stepped in front of a subsequent outlet pass by Gonzaga’s Przemek Karnowski with eight seconds left, Tar Heels fans commenced celebratin­g.

Gonzaga’s 19th consecutiv­e trip to the NCAA tournament ended as all the others had before it, with a crushing defeat. But the Bulldogs (37-2) had served notice that they were more than just scrappy overachiev­ers from the West Coast Conference by making it to the season’s final game for the first time.

“They absolutely ignited

a lot of stale people that were kind of bored with the Zags and saying that we haven’t been capable of achieving something like this,” Gonzaga coach Mark Few said on the broadcast immediatel­y after the game. “I think they got the whole world behind them and believing in them.”

Playing on two sprained ankles, Berry finished with 22 points while being selected the most outstandin­g player of the tournament. Jackson added 16 points for North Carolina, which won despite some epic struggles from beyond the arc, making only four of 27 three-point attempts. The Tar Heels probably

didn’t mind that both teams entered the bonus with 12:49 left in a tightly called game, turning the final minutes largely into a battle of free throws.

Some of the fouls were even warranted, including a flagrant 1 called on Karnowski for smacking Berry in the face. Berry stepped to the free-throw line … and missed both attempts.

Everything else about the final minutes was finer for North Carolina than what transpired on this stage last year.

“We set a goal and we achieved it,” Britt said. “We came up short last year and it was our dream to get back. We made it happen.”

 ?? Tom Pennington Getty Images By Ben Bolch ?? JUSTIN JACKSON of North Carolina gets happy late in the title game. The Tar Heels, who lost in the final moments last year, didn’t let that happen again.
Tom Pennington Getty Images By Ben Bolch JUSTIN JACKSON of North Carolina gets happy late in the title game. The Tar Heels, who lost in the final moments last year, didn’t let that happen again.
 ?? Charlie Neibergall Associated Press ??
Charlie Neibergall Associated Press
 ?? Tom Pennington Getty Images ?? KENNEDY MEEKS of North Carolina blocks a shot by Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss of Gonzaga late in the game, when he also made a steal.
Tom Pennington Getty Images KENNEDY MEEKS of North Carolina blocks a shot by Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss of Gonzaga late in the game, when he also made a steal.

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