Gonzaga tops UCLA 74-62 to advance to Elite Eight

  • By Jim Meehan The Spokesman-Review
  • Friday, March 27, 2015 6:38pm
  • SportsSports

HOUSTON — Gonzaga assistant coach Tommy Lloyd was visiting with Domantas Sabonis in the locker room, reflecting on Przemek Karnowski’s two behind-the-back passes.

“Those were right out of your dad’s book,” said Lloyd, referring to Sabonis’ father, Arvydas, a tremendous passing big man.

Karnowski’s passing and low-post work and GU’s trademark balance transformed a tight game into one of the biggest wins in school history, a 74-62 victory over 11th-seeded UCLA on Friday that propelled the Zags into the Elite Eight for the second time, joining the 1999 team.

“It’s the greatest,” coach Mark Few said. “It means we get to hang out again for another two days. As close as this team is, that is the absolute strongest motivating factor.”

Second-seeded Gonzaga (35-2) will meet top-seeded Duke (32-4) at 2:05 p.m. Sunday with a spot in the Final Four on the line. Duke defeated No. 5 Utah 63-57.

The Zags, who lead the nation in field-goal percentage, have won many games behind a fluid offense, including an 87-74 victory over UCLA on Dec. 13. That wasn’t the case inside cavernous NRG Stadium, where both teams struggled from the perimeter.

Gonzaga made just 40 percent of its shots, including 3 of 19 3-pointers, but it still put up 74 points by pounding the ball inside and cleaning up on the offensive glass.

Gonzaga’s defense bottled up a Bruins offense that had been in high gear in recent weeks.

“We haven’t won them all pretty, but that’s the beauty of this team,” Few said. “That’s why we’ve been so good, that’s why we have 35 of them. There are going to be nights when you can’t make shots from the perimeter.

“That’s the beauty of having our bigs. They did a wonderful job of slowing down and getting their touches and delivering. And it wasn’t easy; it was really physical in there. The guards were in there stripping and reaching because they knew nobody was making outside shots.”

So Gonzaga went inside. UCLA (22-14) scored the first six points of the second half to trim Gonzaga’s lead to one. Gary Bell Jr. hit a baseline floater and then the 7-foot-1 Karnowski took over. He hit a jump hook and a pair of layups.

Kyle Wiltjer, who had a tough scoring night but contributed 10 boards, four assists and solid defense on Kevon Looney, banked home a 10-footer. Byron Wesley’s determined drive resulted in two free throws and GU led by 13 with 13:33 remaining.

UCLA cut it 10 but Karnowski answered again with a jump hook and the first of his behind-the-back feeds to Sabonis.

“In practice it doesn’t always work,” said Karnowski, who finished with 18 points, nine rebounds, two assists and two blocks. “I’m glad those two worked.”

The Bruins hung around, but Karnowski dropped a fade-away jump hook and another passing gem to Sabonis for a reverse layup.

“He was fantastic,” Sabonis said. “He was getting fouls on the other bigs so they had to switch. He got me easy baskets.”

UCLA couldn’t say the same. The Bruins relied on Tony Parker’s 16 points, Norman Powell’s 12 first-half points and Isaac Hamilton’s nine second-half points to stay within striking range. Bryce Alford, averaging 24.5 points in two NCAA wins, scored eight points, six in the final 2:20. Looney was limited to nine points.

The Bruins didn’t make a 3-pointer for the first 37-plus minutes. They hit three in the closing minutes but Gonzaga was comfortably in front. UCLA shot just 39 percent overall.

“We did a good job when our shots weren’t falling of leaning on our defense and rebounding,” Wiltjer said.

The Zags won the boards 50-38. Eighteen of those were on the offensive glass, leading to a 22-12 edge in second-chance points.

“The difference was board play and one team got to the free-throw line (GU 17 of 23, UCLA 7 of 11),” Bruins coach Steve Alford said.

Gonzaga had four players score in double figures for the 21st time this season. Karnowski was joined by Wesley (14), Sabonis (12) and Kevin Pangos (10).

“That’s been the story all year,” Wesley said. “We have so many weapons it can be anybody’s night. We’re so unselfish. Whoever has the hot hand, we’re going to feed them.”

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Sports

Storm crumble late, lose 17-point lead against Sparks

Seattle, 22-20, lost a key matchup in securing a playoff spot as it dropped to the eighth seed.

AquaSox outfielder Jonny Farmelo watches the ball off his bat during Everett's 7-5 win against the Eugene Emeralds at Funko Field on Aug. 31, 2025. (Joe Pohoryles / The Herald)
AquaSox end losing streak, gain confidence vs. Emeralds

Everett snaps 8-game skid with 7-5 win against Eugene to close regular season home slate.

AquaSox catcher Harry Ford hits a fly ball during a game against the Vancouver Canadians on Thursday, June 8, 2023, at Funko Field in Everett, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Mariners call up Harry Ford

The former AquaSox catcher looks to see his first Major League action.

The Seattle Sounders celebrate after beating Miami to win the Leagues Cup Title on Sunday, Aug. 31 at Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington. (Rich Lam / Getty Images / The Athletic)
Seattle routs Messi’s Miami to win Leagues Cup title

The Seattle Sounders were wounded and weakened, overlooked and undermanned,… Continue reading

Julio Rodríguez (44) of the Seattle Mariners hits a single during the third inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on Aug. 31, 2025, in Cleveland, Ohio. (Nick Cammett / Getty Images / Tribune News Services)
Mariners avoid sweep in Cleveland

The holiday weekend skies over Cleveland couldn’t have been… Continue reading

Everett AquaSox outfielder Jonny Farmelo runs in from the outfield during the game against the Spokane Indians on Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Now ‘fixed,’ Jonny Farmelo hopes for healthy future

The AquaSox outfielder reflects on time lost, insights gained in two injury-riddled seasons.

Dallas Cowboys defensive end Micah Parsons reacts during the final seconds of the fourth quarter against the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, at AT&T Stadium. (Amanda McCoy, Tribune News Services)
Source: Seahawks pondered a Micah Parsons trade

It would be inaccurate to say the Seahawks were not intrigued with… Continue reading

Everett AquaSox right fielder Carson Jones registered a hit and a walk against the Eugene Emeralds at Funko Field in Everett, Washington on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2025. (Photo courtesy of Evan Morud / Everett AquaSox)
AquaSox offense falls flat against Eugene

The Everett AquaSox fell 4-0 on Thursday, as Eugene Emeralds… Continue reading

Seattle Storm guard Skylar Diggins holds the basketball during a game against the Indiana Fever on Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Ind. (Photo courtesy of Seattle Storm)
Storm claw back from down 21 to top league-best Lynx

Skylar Diggins sparked a 25-6 run to end the third quarter and led the comeback.

Seahawks OL Jalen Sundell (61) and Grey Zabel (76) line up before a snap against the Las Vegas Raiders in a preseason game on Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025 at Lumen Field in Seattle, Wash. (Steph Chambers / The Seattle Times / Getty Images)
Seahawks GM Schneider confident in reconfigured O-line

Plus practice squad updates and surprise waiver moves

Everett AquaSox pitcher Christian Little pitches in his High-A debut against the Eugene Emeralds on Tuesday, Aug. 27, 2025 at Funko Field in Everett, Wash. (Photo courtesy of Shari Sommerfeld / Everett AquaSox)
Little shines, AquaSox stumble late against Emeralds

AquaSox pitcher Christian Little allowed one run in five innings in his High-A debut.

Seattle Mariners center fielder Julio Rodriguez (44) hits a home run during a game between the Detroit Tigers and Seattle Mariners at Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan, on Saturday, July 12, 2025. (Devin Anderson-Torrez / mlive.com / Tribune News Services)
Four-run fourth proves to be enough as M’s beat Padres

Bryan Woo was pulled before the sixth for the first time this season, but the Mariners made do.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.