Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

West Virginia outshoots Notre Dame

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WEST VIRGINIA 83, NOTRE DAME 71

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Led by Jevon Carter’s 24 points, West Virginia outshot Notre Dame in an 83-71 victory on Saturday to clinch their third Sweet 16 berth since 2010.

West Virginia entered the tournament leading the nation in forcing 20.4 turnovers, while also ranking 15th in averaging 82 points. The Mountainee­rs topped 80 points for the 18th time, while also breaking the single-season school scoring record set by the Jerry West-led 1958-59 squad.

Daxter Miles scored 18 points, and Esa Ahmad had nine rebounds.

Carter led the way in matching a season high, while going 8 of 15, including 4 of 5 in three-pointers.

His last three-pointer all but finished the fifth-seeded Fighting Irish (26-10) as they attempted one final comeback bid.

Notre Dame’s Matt Ryan hit a three-point basket in the right corner to cut West Virginia’s lead to 72-66 with 3:06 left.

Carter responded by crossing through the middle and pulling up to hit a fallaway three-pointer about 25 seconds later.

“Just staying confident,” said Carter, the Big 12’s defensive player of the year. “When we step on the court, we feel like we can beat them. We got hot early and kept going from there. We keep that chip on our shoulder.”

The Mountainee­rs continue to overcome the sting of last year’s first-round tournament collapse, when they lost to 14th-seeded Stephen F. Austin.

Now they’re off to the round of 16 for the first time since 2015, for the fourth time since Coach Bob Huggins took over in 2007, and seventh time since the NCAA field expanded to 64 teams in 1985.

Notre Dame was denied a chance to reach the Elite Eight for a third consecutiv­e year.

Bonzie Colson led the Fighting Irish in hitting 10 of 15 shots, scored 27 points and had 8 rebounds. Otherwise, the rest of the teammates were stymied.

Guard Matt Farrell was limited to 8 points, while V.J. Beachem hit 2 of 14 attempts and finished with 9 points.

Coach Mike Brey said the difference was Notre Dame falling behind 10-0 and eventually getting worn down from attempting to dig out of such a hole. The Irish did eventually cut the lead to 3229 only to give up two baskets

over a 20-second span in a game the Mountainee­rs never trailed.

“Any time we thought we’d get this thing to four or get it to two possession­s, somebody hit a big 3 or they got a putback,” Brey said. “It’s really spirit-breaking after a while.”

Brey had to gamble in keeping Colson in after the star forward picked up his fourth foul with 9:47 left and with West Virginia up 59-47 Colson scored 10 of Notre Dame’s next 14 points over a five-minute span.

“It’s horrible,” said Colson, whose shoulders were heaving in emotion as he left the court. “It’s frustratin­g when you try to play your tail off and play with everything you have and just leave everything out there.”

GONZAGA 79, NORTHWESTE­RN 73

SALT LAKE CITY — Top-seeded Gonzaga fought off a wild Northweste­rn

comeback for a victory, 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.

A few minutes after the game, the NCAA released a statement saying goal-tending should have been called, and that Collins had violated “bench decorum” rules by running onto the court to argue the call while the ball was in play.

Williams-Goss led the Zags (34-1) with 20 points, 8 rebounds and 4 assists, while Collins and Jordan Mathews had 14 points each.

Bryant McIntosh, who hit the goahead free throws in Northweste­rn’s opening-round victory, had 20 for the Wildcats and Vic Law had 18.

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