The Denver Post

TECHNICAL FOUL RUINS RALLY

No call on goaltendin­g puts halt to Wildcats’ rally from 22 down

- By Eddie Pells

Gonzaga fought off a wild Northweste­rn comeback for a 79-73 victory with help from an untimely technical foul on Wildcats coach Chris Collins. Northweste­rn trimmed its 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. There was no call, and Collins ran onto the court and was slapped with a technical foul.

WEST: (1) GONZAGA 79, (8) NORTHWESTE­RN 73

Chris Collins was right. It was goaltendin­g all the way.

The Northweste­rn coach was also wrong. At the worst time possible.

After not getting the call, Collins stomped onto the court and drew a technical foul with 4:54 left in Saturday’s game, sucking life out of a frenetic comeback that fell short in a 79-73 loss to topseeded Gonzaga.

What a strange, heartbreak­ing way to close out the school’s first-ever trip to the NCAA Tournament.

Adding to it: The NCAA released a statement acknowledg­ing the call was missed, and Collins was sitting at the postgame interview while he heard it read to him for the first time.

“I appreciate the apology,” Collins said, the venom practicall­y dripping off his tongue. “It makes me feel great.”

Nigel Williams-Goss finished with 20 points, eight rebounds and four assists to power Gonzaga, which led by as many as 22 points in the first half, then saw the lead dwindle to five.

The arena, drenched in purple, was rocking, and all the momentum was in Northweste­rn’s corner.

The Wildcats (24-12) got the ball down to Dererk Pardon for a point-blank shot that was on its way in. Gonzaga 7-footer Zach Collins reached up through the net and deflected the ball out. No whistle blew. Gonzaga got the rebound and started down court. Collins ran onto the court, charged toward the referee and gestured as if he were knocking a ball out of the hoop from the bottom.

An automatic “T.” The NCAA’s postgame statement also said Collins was hit with the technical for violating “bench decorum” rules by stepping onto the court with the ball in play.

On the other end, Williams-Goss made both free throws and Northweste­rn never drew closer.

But if the coach had any regrets, they weren’t apparent in the aftermath.

“If I see a guy from another team put his hand through the rim and block a shot, I’m going to react to it if the play isn’t called,” Collins said. “I think all of you would. Of course. That cuts it to three. We’re all emotional. We’re coming back from 20 down.”

What a comeback it was. Bryant McIntosh scored 13 of his 20 points in the second half and Vic Law had 15 of his 18, as Northweste­rn finally found an answer for Gonzaga’s quick guards and smooth-ascan-be ball movement.

Law dunked an offensive rebound to cut the deficit to 63-58 and on the other end, Scottie Lindsey swatted Williams-Goss down low to give Northweste­rn the ball with a chance to draw within a 3-pointer.

Pardon had Zach Collins pinned down low for what should have been an easy hoop. After the game, the Gonzaga center was still unclear about what, exactly, happened.

“I thought I blocked the shot and they thought it was a foul,” he said. “We weren’t really worried about (that). I honestly can’t really remember.”

 ??  ?? The Gonzaga bench celebrates during the second half of a second-round NCAA Tournament game against Northweste­rn on Saturday in Salt Lake City. The Bulldogs held on for a 79-73 win over the Wildcats. Rick Bowmer, The Associated Press
The Gonzaga bench celebrates during the second half of a second-round NCAA Tournament game against Northweste­rn on Saturday in Salt Lake City. The Bulldogs held on for a 79-73 win over the Wildcats. Rick Bowmer, The Associated Press

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