The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gonzaga reaches final

Nigel Williams-Goss scores 23 points to help the Bulldogs hold off South Carolina 77-73 to advance to their first NCAA championsh­ip game Monday,

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to be. They led 65-51 with 10:55 remaining. They trailed 67-65 with 7:06 to go. South Carolina, which had done next to nothing for most of the game, embarked on another second-half run, the likes of which had already felled Marquette, Duke and Florida. PJ Dozier, whose dad was a Gamecock, scored three baskets in the 16-0 surge, which left the precise Zags discombobu­lated and surely disbelievi­ng.

Sometimes, though, a game comes down to a bounce of the ball. This one turned on a 3-point try by Gonzaga’s Zach Collins, a 7-foot freshman who’s not from France. (Las Vegas, actually.) Collins’ shot hit the brace and plopped — there’s no other word for it — through the hoop. Gonzaga was back ahead, ahead to stay. Consecutiv­e baskets by Przemek Karnowski, a 7-1 senior from Poland, made the score 72-67. The Zags managed only three points over the final 4:41, but the Gamecocks could muster but six.

In the end, this became the defensive tug-of-war most expected. These teams ranked Nos. 1 and 2 in Ken Pomeroy’s defensive-efficiency ratings, and the final 4½ minutes yielded a lot of running and bumping, but not skill. Which was OK by Gonzaga. It had the lead again. South Carolina had to catch it. South Carolina could not. The improbable run ended here.

The first half in digest form: Thornwell, who’d averaged 25.7 points in four NCAA tournament games, made one basket. (Even his make was motley — a clanged-off-therim 3-pointer from the left corner that bobbled home.) Thornwell worked 18 minutes, missed four shots and lost the ball twice. He managed five points, three fewer than sub Justin McKie mustered in less than half the time.

The Gamecocks hung close for a while. Gonzaga kept nosing ahead — it led for 15:58 of the 20 minutes — but South Carolina would answer with a transition basket or two, and you’d think, “This is shaping up as a real game.” Then Curtis Silva blocked Karnowski’s shot while smacking the luxuriousl­y bearded Zag in the face. Karnowski was forced to the locker room, which might have augured a Zag sag. Nope.

The Bulldogs outscored South Carolina 14-5 over the final 5:12 — a span that included Thornwell’s lone hoop. Nigel Williams-Goss was the player of the half by some distance, and the Zags guard energized the run with a baseline fadeaway followed by a driving banker. Had the half lasted two-tenths of a second longer, his closing trey would have beaten the buzzer and put the Gamecocks a dozen points behind.

The second half began with Williams-Goss — he would finish with 23 points, five rebounds and three assists — driving the Zags into a double-figure lead, at which point it seemed class would prevailed. But South Carolina clawed its way back and gave itself a chance at the end. The chance proved unavailing. Frank Martin and his mean face and the ascendant Thornwell and his plucky crew will be seen no more this tournament, but say this for the Gamecocks: The team with the player named Notice (Duane) made us notice.

But the mystery guest from the SEC, a conference known mostly for football, will be checking out of its Phoenix hotel tomorrow. Gonzaga gets to stay through Tuesday. Gonzaga plays to win it all. Yes, Gonzaga.

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 ?? TOM PENNINGTON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Killian Tillie shoots a late free throw in the second half Saturday to help the Bulldogs put away a stubborn Gamecocks team. Gonzaga, which is in its first Final Four, advances to Monday’s title game.
TOM PENNINGTON / GETTY IMAGES Killian Tillie shoots a late free throw in the second half Saturday to help the Bulldogs put away a stubborn Gamecocks team. Gonzaga, which is in its first Final Four, advances to Monday’s title game.
 ?? RONALD MARTINEZ / GETTY IMAGES ?? Killian Tillie, a 6-foot-10 freshman from Cagnessur-Mer, France, leads the applause as the Bulldogs celebrate their defeat of South Carolina on Saturday.
RONALD MARTINEZ / GETTY IMAGES Killian Tillie, a 6-foot-10 freshman from Cagnessur-Mer, France, leads the applause as the Bulldogs celebrate their defeat of South Carolina on Saturday.
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