Santa Fe New Mexican

Gonzaga headed back to Sweet 16

- By Tim Bontemps

BOISE, Idaho — It wasn’t too long ago that Gonzaga was one of the teams celebrated for being a giant-slayer in March, for being the little school from Spokane, Wash., that came to epitomize what it meant to be a Cinderella story in the NCAA Tournament.

Those days, however, are over. Gonzaga is now one of those giants the little guys are hoping to take down, one of the teams many with even a casual understand­ing of college basketball will recognize. So, in a weekend that’s already had its fair share of upsets, the idea that the Bulldogs would beat a school with the size and prestige of Ohio State — as they did here Saturday night, winning 90-84 — wasn’t a surprise.

“They’re what you want a program to be,” Ohio State Coach Chris Holtmann said. “That is, year after year after year they have good, young players, so there’s never going to be a significan­t dip in the program. “That’s what you want in an elite program.” The Bulldogs, a year after their breakthrou­gh run to the national championsh­ip game, advanced to a fourth straight

Sweet 16, where they await the Xavier-Florida State winner.

The victory did not come easy, despite Gonzaga (32-4) scoring the game’s first 15 points.

The Buckeyes (25-9) slowly fought their way back, and were trailing 44-33 at halftime, before they stormed out to a 25-10 run to open the second half.

Ohio State took its first lead on Kam Williams’ 3-pointer with 10:35 remaining that made it 56-54, and after the two teams went back and forth over the next few minutes, eventually took a 67-62 lead on a 3-pointer by Keita Bates-Diop — who finished with 28 points in what will likely be his final game before declaring for the NBA draft — with 6:03 to go.

“The run they made in the second half had us back on our heels,” Gonzaga Coach Mark Few said.

At that moment, it looked like Gonzaga’s hopes of yet another deep tournament run were beginning to fade.

But then the Bulldogs scored the next 11 points — a run began by a 3 from redshirt freshman Zach Norvell, Jr., who led Gonzaga with 28 points, and was ended by a 3-pointer from Rui Hachimura (who hadn’t made one since December) that swung the game back in Gonzaga’s favor for good.

“I was just told that,” Holtmann said with a wry smile of Hachimura’s 3. “That’s nice to hear. “But, yeah. Those were crushing.”

So Gonzaga’s 20th consecutiv­e trip to the NCAA Tournament continues.

“Profession­ally, I can’t think of any better feeling than winning games in March,” Few said. “Any win in the NCAA tournament, I think, is the hardest thing you can do. To be able to advance now to that second weekend … We’re guaranteed of at least five more days with our team, with the hope of getting to that next week [the Final Four] that many of have experience­d how special that is.

“We’ve built this thing the right way. And we have do have followers all over the country, and it’s because my guys are what college basketball is all about.”

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 ?? TED S. WARREN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gonzaga guard Zach Norvell Jr., left, pushes the ball on Ohio State forward Jae’Sean Tate on Saturday in the NCAA Tournament in Boise, Idaho.
TED S. WARREN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gonzaga guard Zach Norvell Jr., left, pushes the ball on Ohio State forward Jae’Sean Tate on Saturday in the NCAA Tournament in Boise, Idaho.

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