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    Local Colleges
    Tuesday, May 14, 2024

    Men's and women's college basketball roundup

    Gonzaga's Brandon Clarke shoots around Pepperdine's Jade' Smith during the first half of Monday's West Coast Conference tournament semifinal in Las Vegas. Top-ranked Gonzaga won, 100-74. (John Locher/AP Photo)

    Men

    No. 1 Gonzaga 100, Pepperdine 74

    Zach Norvell Jr. doesn't believe there is a team in the country that can compete with No. 1 Gonzaga when it plays its best game.

    The Bulldogs made a strong case to back the junior guard's boasts Monday night.

    Norvell scored 18 points and top-ranked Gonzaga beat Pepperdine in the semifinals of the West Coast Conference Tournament.

    "When guys are clicking, we're on the same page, and just sharing the ball, Coach yells at us a lot 'Just make the right basketball play,' Norvell said. "You're rewarded when you play the game the right way. And I think that's something we've been trying to do a lot."

    The top-seeded Bulldogs outrebounded Pepperdine 37-28, outscored the Waves 13-2 in second-chance points, 29-13 in bench points, and dominated the No. 8 seed in fast-break points, 16-2.

    Gonzaga (30-2) will look for its seventh straight WCC title Tuesday when it faces Saint Mary's.

    Rui Hachimura scored 16 points, Brandon Clarke added 15 and Josh Perkins and Corey Kispert each scored 11 for Gonzaga.

    "Just a terrific approach by the guys," Gonzaga coach Mark Few said. "We had a lot of days off, you always wonder how that is going to play out. And to their credit, they came out and attacked the moment and really stayed with it. Even after halftime, they did a great job of really keeping the throttle down. Couldn't have went any better as far as how we wanted to start this tournament."

    Pepperdine had the luxury of warming up with three games in three nights, while Gonzaga was playing its first game of the tournament, something that proved costly for San Francisco and BYU on Saturday, when they were upset by the Waves and San Diego, respectively, in their first games of the event.

    "I've been coming here for a while, since the AAU days, so I look at myself as a vet when I'm in Vegas," Norvell said. "We look at it as a business trip, as we've been doing all year."

    The Bulldogs — who came into the game ranked first in the nation in field-goal percentage (53.4 percent), scoring margin (24.9 points per game) and scoring offense (89.8) — were all business and showed no rust whatsoever, going 39 for 62 (59.7 percent) from the field en route to their 21st straight victory by double digits.

    Gonzaga has won those games by an average margin of 30.1 points.

    The Bulldogs have won 37 straight against Pepperdine, including a 92-64 blowout in Spokane this season.

    The Waves (16-18) were led by Colbey Ross, who scored a game-high 20 points. Eric Cooper Jr. added 16 points, while Jade Smith had 14.

    "Gonzaga's really good," Pepperdine coach Lorenzo Romar said. "I know I'm stating the obvious, but I've been a head coach for 22 years, and was an assistant at UCLA that won a national championship and I just told my team, 'I know what that looks like.' They're really good."

    After falling behind 8-6, the Bulldogs erupted for a 23-5 run to seize control.

    Gonzaga, which closed as 24½-point favorite, never relinquished its double-digit lead after pulling ahead 24-13 with 9:40 left in the first half.

    The Bulldogs got a boost from the return of Killian Tillie, who played for the first time since partially tearing a ligament in his right foot in early February. Tillie was 3 for 4 from the field in the first half, all 3-pointers, contributing during two separate scoring runs.

    Few said Tillie's 5-on-5 practice time had been limited all week, and admittedly was winded after playing just 15 minutes.

    "In my mind that was kind of the two runs I wanted him to have, and now we can keep building on that," Few said. "And obviously we need to see how the plantar fascia reacts to going tonight. It sounded good after he came off the bench."

    Gonzaga didn't waste any time in the second half, as it opened with a 17-5 run, and increased that streak to 32-12 to put the game out of reach.

    After shooting 58.6 percent in the first half, the Bulldogs were 20 for 33 (60.6 percent) from the field over the final 20 minutes.

    The return of Tillie invoked a huge roar from the sold-out crowd. The 6-foot-10 junior from France had played in only nine games this season after missing the first half of the season with a stress fracture in his ankle, and then re-injuring his foot with the ligament tear on Feb. 7. Tillie finished with nine points and six rebounds in 15 minutes.

    Monday marked 20 years to the day Gonzaga got its first NCAA Tournament win, over Minnesota. The Bulldogs ousted three major-conference teams in 1999 and became the tournament darlings before falling to eventual champion UConn.

    During a first-half timeout, former Gonzaga star Adam Morrison was announced as the 2019 WCC Hall of Fame inductee. Morrison, who was courtside as an analyst for the Gonzaga radio network, led the nation in scoring and was the conference's player of the year in 2006. He led the Bulldogs to three straight conference tournament titles.

    No. 20 Wofford 70, UNC Greensboro 58

    Fletcher Magee and Nathan Hoover each scored 20 points, and No. 20 Wofford battled back to defeat UNC Greensboro to win the Southern Conference Tournament for the fifth time in 10 seasons and earn an automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament.

    Hoover scored all 20 points in the second half as Wofford (29-4) completed a perfect season against conference foes.

    Cameron Jackson added 15 points and seven rebounds for the Terriers. Magee was named tournament MVP.

    Francis Alonso scored 21 points for UNC Greensboro (28-6), which led most of the game and was hoping to pull the upset and steal a tournament berth from a bubble team.

    The Terriers have won 20 straight games heading into the NCAA Tournament and on Monday claimed their highest AP Poll ranking in school history at No. 20. With a tough inside-out game and strong backcourt play, the Terriers will be a popular pick in the NCAA Tournament.

    Women

    No. 1 Baylor 67, No. 13 Iowa State 49

    Kalani Brown had 17 points and seven rebounds to help Baylor defeat Iowa State in the Big 12 Tournament championship game.

    Brown, a 6-foot-7 senior center, was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

    Chloe Jackson scored 16 points and Lauren Cox added 14 for the Lady Bears (31-1), who outscored the Cyclones 19-5 in the fourth quarter. It was Baylor's 10th Big 12 title overall and ninth in the past 11 years.

    Alexa Middleton led Iowa State (25-8) with 18 points while Bridget Carleton, the Big 12 Player of the Year, was held to 13 points on 6-of-16 shooting.

    No. 12 Gonzaga 78, Saint Mary's 77 (OT)

    Zykera Rice's last-second layup in overtime lifted Gonzaga past Saint Mary's in the West Coast Conference Tournament semifinals.

    The win came at a cost as the Zags lost Laura Stockton and Jill Townsend to leg injuries. Stockton went down early in the third quarter and Townsend in the second overtime.

    Rice finished with 21 points to lead the Zags (28-3), who will play BYU for the title on Tuesday. Townsend had 19 before getting hurt.

    Madeline Holland scored 20 points to lead Saint Mary's (20-11), which had a chance to win at the end of regulation and in overtime, but Gonzaga got stops both times.

    No. 13 Marquette 75, Georgetown 62

    Natisha Hiedeman and Allazia Blockton each scored 23 points to help Marquette beat Georgetown and advance to its third straight Big East Tournament title game.

    Top-seeded Marquette (26-6) hit 12 3-pointers, setting a program record in the conference tournament. Hiedeman, the unanimous Big East player of the year, made five 3-pointers and Blockton had 10 rebounds.

    Dorothy Adomako led Georgetown (16-15) with 27 points, eight rebounds and four assists and Dionna White added 16 points.

    Baylor's Kalani Brown goes to the basket as Iowa State's Meredith Burkhall defends during the first half of Monday's Big 12 tournament championship in Oklahoma City. Top-ranked Baylor beat the No. 13 Cyclones, 67-49. (Alonzo Adams/AP Photo)

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