The Commercial Appeal

Early turnovers sank Trojans vs. Gonzaga

- Aaron Beard

Southern California knew it might take a perfect game to spoil Gonzaga’s perfect season and reach the Final Four.

Less than 20 seconds in, perfect was long gone.

The turnovers came quickly. So too did a big deficit. And just like that, the Trojans’ chances of beating the NCAA Tournament’s No. 1 overall seed were all but over. By the end, Gonzaga had claimed an 85-66 win in Tuesday’s West Region championsh­ip game, a margin that was largely establishe­d during a mistake-filled opening 12 minutes for the Trojans.

“We didn’t do our part offensively,” USC coach Andy Enfield said. “It was a little unusual because we had been playing so well offensively. We haven’t been turning the ball over, we’ve been making shots and playing together as a team.

“I thought we got sped up a little bit at times in the first half because we were trying too hard after our slow start.”

Sixth-seeded USC (25-8) committed seven of its 10 turnovers in a rough opening 11-plus minutes, a stretch that helped Gonzaga run its lead out to a 17point margin. That put the Trojans in the near-impossible position of trying to make up ground against the nation’s highest-scoring offense.

It was a frustratin­g finish to the Trojans’ first trip to a regional final since losing to eventual champion Duke in 2001. They were chasing the program’s first Final Four since 1954 and third overall.

The Trojans rolled through the first three games of the tournament, beating Drake, Kansas and Oregon by doublefigure margins – highlighte­d by an 85-51 win against the Jayhawks to reach the Sweet 16. They had found added confidence by using plenty of zone looks along the way after playing man most of the season, allowing opponents to shoot just 32% in the three NCAA wins.

That unit faced a big test slowing a Gonzaga offense averaging 91.8 points – and that was before the Trojans started committing turnovers to send the Bulldogs off and running.

It started with Gonzaga’s Drew Timme stripping Tahj Eaddy just 18 seconds into the game, starting a transition that led to a foul as the Zags jumped to a 7-0 lead that had Enfield burning a quick timeout.

But the mistakes continued.

Enfield said the Zags were switching on defense and trying to deny passes, though he said the Trojans had seen that in their previous tournament games.

“They were denying the wings a lot,” freshman big man Evan Mobley said. “A lot of our plays involve a lot of movement and swinging the ball. But we couldn’t swing the ball because our wings weren’t open necessaril­y. So it would cause the guard to go 1-on-1 or so, and sometimes it would cause a turnover.”

That showed on one turnover from USC’S Max Agbonkpolo, who tried to drive on Corey Kispert only to see Timme come over to strip the ball. Timme took it all the way for a layup and a 17-4 lead.

By the time Andrew Nembhard had a layup off yet another turnover, Gonzaga led 29-12 while USC had six turnovers with just five made baskets.

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? USC Trojans guard Isaiah White works against Gonzaga guard Julian Strawther on Tuesday.
ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY SPORTS USC Trojans guard Isaiah White works against Gonzaga guard Julian Strawther on Tuesday.

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