The Commercial Appeal

Gonzaga’s change in attitude shows all across university

- JOHN MARSHALL

GLENDALE, Ariz. - In the summer of 1998, Gonzaga University was a small private college in Eastern Washington that barely made a blip on the public consciousn­ess, even within its own region.

To shake things up, administra­tors decided to change the school’s visual identity. The school colors went from light blue and white to a deep navy. The odd-looking mascot — a bulldog in a sailor’s cap — needed an update, too, so it became the snarling canine with the spiked collar of today. A new brand was born. “We made a conscious decision to change who we were,” Gonzaga athletic director Mike Roth said. “We decided we wanted people to see us differentl­y, too, and to do that we had to change the way things looked. We sat down that summer and decided, we need a new logo. We made it and thought, ‘That’s pretty cool.’ ”

The logo got a huge boost of popularity the next men’s basketball season, when the scrappy Bulldogs made a run to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament, becoming synonymous with success as the program continued to grow.

Under the guidance of coach Mark Few, Gonzaga became a national powerhouse, reaching the NCAA Tournament 19 straight times with multiple trips to the Sweet 16.

That snarling bulldog is now on the sport’s biggest stage as Gonzaga gets set to play mighty North Carolina in Monday night’s national championsh­ip game.

“We don’t pretend or think we’re anywhere near the level with the tradition of Carolina or Duke or Kentucky,” Few said. “But at the same time, I think we do feel we’ve been a national entity for quite some timt.”

The basketball program’s success has brought national attention to a school in the inland Northwest that likely would have otherwise remained mostly anonymous outside of Spokane, Washington.

The more the basketball team won, the more people became interested in learning about Gonzaga and Spokane. That interest turned into a familiarit­y as the Zags continued to win.

With that exposure came massive growth on the campus along the Spokane River.

Enrollment has nearly doubled to 7,800 over the past 20 years, with the number of full-time faculty up 55 percent.

 ?? MATT YORK/AP ?? Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss celebrates during the Bulldogs’ Final Four victory over South Carolina on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz.
MATT YORK/AP Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss celebrates during the Bulldogs’ Final Four victory over South Carolina on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz.

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