The Mercury News

Zags ready to show they belong in finals

Coach Few may have compiled best group in 18 years at school

- Associated Press

SAN JOSE — Gonzaga coach Mark Few did not like the question but answered it anyway.

His Zags had just held off West Virginia to reach the Elite Eight and he was asked if he felt like the monkey was off his back.

Few gave a long answer about no one believing there was a monkey there in the first place. Not him, his players, his wife, fishing buddies, not the people of Spokane.

At the end of his mini rant, Few shifted the focus to his players with this zinger: “It’s not about me and my monkeys and my dogs and my cats. It’s about them.”

The Elite Eight is not new territory for Gonzaga nor its opponent on Saturday, Xavier. Both teams have gone this deep twice before.

The next step is the big one: The Final Four in Arizona.

“It’s a credit to Gonzaga, it’s a credit to the guys up here and the guys in the locker room and the ones before them at Xavier, that both of these programs are in the position that we’re in,” Xavier coach Chris Mack said.

Few built one of college basketball’s most successful programs from scratch.

With limited resources and even less exposure, Few built the small Catholic school in Eastern Washington into a national powerhouse by recruiting high-character players who fit into his system — principles he still sticks to.

That has turned Gonzaga into one of the nation’s most consistent programs. The Zags have been to NCAA tournament 19 straight seasons, fourthlong­est in the nation, and have reached the Sweet 16 eight times. And this may be the best group of Few’s 18 seasons in Spokane.

“As far as going to a Final Four, I desperatel­y want it for this group of guys,” Few said. “I desperatel­y want it for everybody who has play at Gonzaga, the players who have been such a huge part of that.”

Mack’s rise also came from humble beginnings.

He played his final two seasons at Xavier and returned to Cincinnati to coach girls junior varsity basketball because it was the only job he could find after a profession­al career overseas was cut short by injuries.

After six years coaching high school, he joined Skip Prosser’s staff at Xavier and followed him to Wake Forest. Mack returned to work on Sean Miller’s staff at Xavier and was named head coach when Miller left for Arizona in 2009.

Since then, he has elevated the program Miller kick-started.

Xavier has made the NCAA tournament seven times in Mack’s eight seasons and reached the Elite Eight four times. The Musketeers battled a slew of injuries this season — point guard Edmond Sumner’s torn ACL was the big one — but kept scratching out victories to reach the doorstep of the Final Four.

“There’s always going to be some type of adversity through the year,” Mack said. “How your team handles it usually reveals the type of team that you have. And our team handled it extremely well and for that I’m really proud of our team.”

Xavier’s biggest task n on Saturday will be to stop the biggest player in college basketball: Gonzaga’s 7-foot-1, 300-pound center Przemek Karnowski. The Polish big man is not only 50 pounds heavier than anyone on Xavier’s roster, he’s an adept passer with good footwork. “He’s a load,” Mack said.

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