New York Post

Heaven & Heel!

UNC takes NCAA title

- By HOWIE KUSSOY hkussoy@nypost.com

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Gonzaga left its first national title game with a pain it had never known; a disappoint­ment that may linger with each player and coach for the rest of his life. North Carolina knew the feeling better than anyone — and the Tar Heels weren’t going through it again. One day shy of the one-year anniversar­y of “The Shot” — Villanova’s Kris Jenkins’ buzzer-beating, championsh­ip-clinching 3-pointer — the Tar Heels completed their season-long quest for redemption and claimed the school’s sixth national championsh­ip, with a 71-65 over Gonzaga Monday night at University of Phoenix Stadium. This year, the Tar Heels soaked in every second of the confetti shower that felt like acid in Houston. This year, the fireworks sounded like a symphony. The moment they wished had never happened had created an experience even greater than they could envision. With the win, No. 1 North Carolina (33-7) became just the fourth team to win a national championsh­ip after losing the previous year’s title game (1982 North Carolina, 1991 Duke, 1998 Kentucky), while Roy Williams won his first national title since 2009, and third overall, tying him for fourth all-time, with Jim Calhoun and Bobby Knight. “They wanted redemption,” Williams said. “It’s a fantastic feeling. … At the end, when you’re watching your kids jump around with that excitement, there’s no better feeling.”

Though the action between the top two teams was marred by fouls, and even uglier shooting, North Carolina’s smiles were no less brilliant afterward, none stretching as wide as Joel Berry II’s.

After hobbling through one of his worst games of the season in the semifinals, the junior point guard quickly erased any doubts of his effectiven­ess on two sprained ankles, finishing with 22 points, six assists and one turnover to be named the Final Four’s Most Outstandin­g Player. Berry became the first player since UCLA’s Bill Walton (1972-73) to score at least 20 points in back-to-back championsh­ip games.

“It was just gritting it out,” Berry said. “What we went through, I think we just deserved it.”

Playing in its first national title game, No. 1 Gonzaga (37-2) failed to become the first West Coast Conference to win the national championsh­ip game since 1956, and the first team outside of a power basketball conference to win the national title since 1990 (UNLV).

Since starting the seemingly impossible climb from anonymous mid-major team to national power, Gonzaga has wanted the respect of the top teams in the country, but perception­s are hard to change. Championsh­ips are even harder to win, especially when shooting 28 percent from the field in the second half.

“I was told it would crush you if you don’t win it … and it crushes you,” Gonzaga coach Mark Few said. “I’m hoping that perspectiv­e will come with time and these guys will realize what an amazing accomplish­ment they had and what an amazing effect they had. We got everybody back to believing this group was capable of doing this, and more than capable of winning a national championsh­ip.”

The top two teams in the country met their match, both unsure how to handle the first opponent that could match their size and strength. Gonzaga’s Przemek Karnowski (nine points, 1-of-8 shooting) was held scoreless in the first half, while Kennedy Meeks (seven points, 10 rebounds) returned to earth after the best performanc­e of his career. Gonzaga received an unlikely boost from Josh Perkins, who scored 13 of Gonzaga’s first 28 points after being held scoreless in the semifinals, but the sophomore went scoreless in the second half, and Nigel Williams-Goss (15 points, nine rebounds, six assists) received little support.

The Bulldogs led by as much as seven, but only led 35-32 at the half, and after controllin­g most of the game, Gonzaga trailed just 35 seconds into the second half. For the first time, the teams looked like the perception of the programs, with the ACC power pushing around the big fish from the little pond.

Gonzaga pushed back, though, against the lingering perception it didn’t belong, and against the growing belief in the baby blue-colored portions of the crowd that another championsh­ip banner was a birthright.

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 ?? USA TODAY Sports ?? NET GAIN! Theo Pinson cuts the net after North Carolina defeated Gonzaga on Monday night for the sixth national title in school history.
USA TODAY Sports NET GAIN! Theo Pinson cuts the net after North Carolina defeated Gonzaga on Monday night for the sixth national title in school history.

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