Showing posts with label Gonzaga Bulldogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gonzaga Bulldogs. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

Baylor dominates Gonzaga to win NCAA crown

LOS ANGELES -- The Baylor Bears ended the Gonzaga Bulldogs' quest for an unbeaten NCAA championship season on Monday, clinching the US college basketball title with a 86-70 victory.

The Waco, Texas-based Baylor University team sealed their first ever "March Madness" title with a dominant performance against the Bulldogs, who were aiming to crown an undefeated season with a championship.

Monday's defeat at Indianapolis's Lucas Oil Stadium came just two days after Gonzaga's exhilarating semi-final victory over UCLA on Saturday, when Jalen Suggs' buzzer-beater sealed a 93-90 win.

For long periods on Monday, it looked as if Gonzaga were still nursing a hangover from that win, with Baylor dominating in all departments to build a comfortable lead well before the end.

Jared Butler led the Baylor scoring with 22 points, seven assists and three rebounds, while MaCio Teague had 19 points with two rebounds.

Baylor laid the foundations for success with a blistering start, jumping into a 9-0 lead that they never relinquished.

The Bears had surged into a 19-point lead midway through the first half and also led by 20 points at one stage in the second.

Baylor Bears coach Scott Drew said the fast start reflected his team's "culture of joy."

"They came out and fed off of each other and got off to a great start, and defensively we're pretty good," Drew said.

"Our guys have been motivated all year. It's a player-led team. We're so blessed to have unbelievable leadership. We play with a culture of joy.

"If you're going to war and I'm coaching, then I'm taking these guys."

Gonzaga, meanwhile, were left shattered in defeat, with Saturday's hero Suggs -- who led the Bulldogs' scoring with 22 points -- in tears.

"We just couldn't get anything going, you have to give credit to Baylor," said Gonzaga coach Mark Few.

"They were just so aggressive defensively we couldn't get anything going on the offensive end. Hats off to them. They dominated both ends of the ball all night."

Few had words of solace for his players, who had won 31 straight games this season by an average of 22.4 points.

"You can't go 31-0 and get to the last night and get beat and feel bad about it," Few said. "It was an unbelievable run we've been on. I just said to them this will pass, and they've got to remember what an amazing accomplishment it was just getting to this point."

Agence France-Presse

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

North Carolina beat Gonzaga for NCAA collegiate crown


LOS ANGELES -- The University of North Carolina Tar Heels, who fell agonizingly sort of the goal last year, beat the Gonzaga Bulldogs 71-65 on Monday to claim the coveted US collegiate basketball crown.

The Tar Heels won their sixth national title with the triumph at the University of Phoenix Stadium, where center Kennedy Meeks's block of a shot by Gonzaga's Nigel Williams-Goss set up a fastbreak dunk by North Carolina's Justin Jackson with 12 seconds to play that sealed the win.

Last year the Tar Heels' title bid was sunk by a last-second shot by Villanova's Kris Jenkins in the title game.

"They wanted redemption," said North Carolina coach Roy Williams, who became the sixth coach to win three or more NCAA championships.

"One of the things we had to be tonight was tough enough. I think this group was tough enough."

This year's championship showcase featured a welter of fouls and missed shots by both teams.

But it offered plenty of drama, with the outcome in doubt in the final minute.

Forward Isaiah Hicks's jump shot with 26 seconds left gave North Carolina a 68-65 lead before Williams-Goss, who had scored eight straight points for Gonzaga, was blocked on the other end.

North Carolina point guard Joel Berry made two free throws with seven seconds remaining to finish with a game-high 22 points.

Berry, who sprained both ankles during the tournament, made all four of North Carolina's three-pointers and was named Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four.

"My teammates believed in me," he said. "My teammates said just keep on pushing. I couldn't do it without them. I wasn't 100 percent but I gave it my all."

Gonzaga, the small-school perennial contender who had made it to the Final Four for the first time in their 19th straight appearance in the national tournament, missed nine consecutive shots in the second half, going more than eight minutes without a basket.

North Caroline still couldn't deliver a decisive run, and it was a one-possession game for much of the second half, when foul trouble dogged both teams.

Meeks was whistled for his fourth foul with 9:42 remaining.

Gonzaga's Polish center Przemek Karnowski picked up his fourth with 8:20 remaining and finished the game just one of eight from the field for nine points.

Gonzaga's Zach Collins, hero of a semi-final win over South Carolina, fouled out with 5:03 left in the game.

Jackson scored 16 points, but missed all nine of his three-point attempts.

Williams-Goss finished with 15 points, but connected on just five of 17 from the field.


- 'National champs now' -

Gonzaga led 35-32 at halftime, but North Carolina hit them hard after the break.

A steal led to a layup for Berry, and two free-throws by Jackson had the Tar Heels in the lead 35 seconds into the second half.

Gonzaga coughed up two turnovers and missed their first five shots before coach Mark Few called a timeout with his team trailing 40-35.

The Bulldogs responded with an 8-0 scoring run of their own that included Karnowski's first points of the game, setting the stage for the tense battle to the finish.

"We came out here and we competed," Berry said. "It came down to the last second, but we're national champs now."

source: news.abs-cbn.com