Toronto Star

Unbeaten Zags roll into Final Four

Southern California offers little resistance to top-ranked Bulldogs

- EDDIE PELLS

INDIANAPOL­IS—Can anybody stop these guys?

For the 30th straight time this season, Gonzaga answered that question with a resounding “No.”

The Bulldogs got on a roll and put on a show, cruising into the Final Four with an 85-66 beatdown of a Southern California team that was nowhere near ready for what it ran into Tuesday night. Drew Timme had 23 points and five rebounds and, after one dunk, pretended to slick down his handlebar moustache for the few thousand fans in the stands.

“This is a really, really big deal,” coach Mark Few said of the program’s return to the Final Four after a four-year hiatus. “And Zags know how to celebrate, OK?”

The top-seeded and topranked Bulldogs will be the third team to bring an undefeated record into the Final Four since the bracket expanded to 64 teams in 1985. The last team to go undefeated was Indiana in 1976. On Saturday in the national semifinals, the Zags will face the winner of a later Elite Eight matchup between UCLA and Michigan.

Timme did whatever he wanted against the nation’s fourthrank­ed defence — a team that won its first three tournament games by an average of 21 points — as did pretty much everyone else in a white uniform.

Jared Suggs finished with 18 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists. All-American Corey Kispert had 18 points and eight boards on an “off” night — only 6 for 19 from the floor. Gonzaga shot 44% in the second half and “only” 50% for the game. Aurora’s Andrew Nembhard had seven points for Gonzaga.

“We just tried to stay moving,” Suggs said about attacking the USC zone, which had been shutting down teams all month in Indy. “We didn’t let the ball get too sticky. We kept moving, flashing into the high post. It was a lot for them to deal with — good cuts off the baseline, vertical cuts off the wings.”

The game was interrupte­d by a frightenin­g moment early, when official Bert Smith collapsed on the floor and had to be taken off on a stretcher. Smith had just set up on the baseline as the Trojans were moving onto offence when he collapsed and hit his head on the floor. An NCAA spokespers­on said Smith was “alert and stable,” and wouldn’t be taken to a hospital. He was replaced by Tony Henderson.

 ?? CARMEN MANDATO GETTY IMAGES ?? Mississaug­a’s Laeticia Amihere, right, had nine of South Carolina’s 14 blocks against Texas and also had 10 points and eight rebounds in a terrific all-around performanc­e as the Gamecocks advanced to the Final Four in San Antonio, Texas.
CARMEN MANDATO GETTY IMAGES Mississaug­a’s Laeticia Amihere, right, had nine of South Carolina’s 14 blocks against Texas and also had 10 points and eight rebounds in a terrific all-around performanc­e as the Gamecocks advanced to the Final Four in San Antonio, Texas.

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