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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Dinner, and a WCC game

Ronny Turiaf brought his enthusiasm for life from the Lakers to the Golden State Warriors.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Ronny Turiaf brought his enthusiasm for life from the Lakers to the Golden State Warriors. (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)

Made the trip to Oakland today and was greeted by a couple of downpours. The Zags were supposed to leave this afternoon and they have dinner plans with some guy named Ronny Turiaf.

The ex-Zag, who attended last year's Loyola Marymount game when he was with the Lakers, is starting for the Warriors after an injury to Andris Biedrins. Turiaf (pictured above) had 10 points in a 144-127 home win over the Knicks on Tuesday. Golden State entertains Portland tomorrow.

Here's a link to an article on Saint Mary's defense and read on for my unedited game preview and other notes on Thursday's GU-Saint Mary's game.

Here's some info that will run on the Four Corners page Thursday:

GONZAGA

Record: 17-5, 8-0 WCC

Coming up: Tonight at Saint Mary’s, 8; Saturday at San Francisco, 8.

Outlook: Preseason polls had the Bulldogs and Gaels battling for the WCC title and it was playing out that way – until Saint Mary’s guard Patty Mills suffered a broken hand against Gonzaga two weeks ago. At 6-3 in conference, the Gaels are struggling to stay on the NCAA Tournament bubble while Mills mends from surgery. He could return for the WCC Tournament. The Gaels are relying on the inside presence of Omar Samhan and Diamon Simpson. Gonzaga, which has lost three of its last four at McKeon Pavilion, is trying to shake off a disappointing 68-50 loss to Memphis. The Bulldogs’ Matt Bouldin needs one point to reach 1,000 for his career. Josh Heytvelt is 22 points from the century mark. A win would give Saint Mary’s back-to-back 20 win seasons for the second time in school history. The Gaels’ 1938-39 teams won 24 and 20 games, respectively.  

And here's my game preview...

By Jim Meehan

Staff writer

MORAGA, Calif. – Two weeks ago, Saint Mary’s was humming along with the best start in school history, a candidate for West Coast Conference player of the year, a national ranking and conference championship aspirations.

And then standout point guard Patty Mills took an awkward fall in the lane.

That tumble sent Mills to the sideline with a broken right hand and the Gaels into a tailspin. Mills exited late in the first half against Gonzaga and the Bulldogs rallied from a six-point deficit for a 69-62 win that eclipsed Saint Mary’s 15-game winning streak.

Without Mills, the Gaels dropped two of their next three. They were held to 62 points by GU (after a 39-point first half), tying their second lowest output of the season. They scored just 52 points in a blowout loss to Santa Clara last Saturday.

Meanwhile, the Bulldogs were cruising along with their own winning streak. They’d taken control of the WCC race and were climbing in the polls. But Saturday night, Gonzaga took a giant step backward when it was humbled by Memphis 68-50 at the Spokane Arena.

So the 19th-ranked Bulldogs (17-5, 8-0 WCC) have problems of their own to deal with as they enter the rematch with the struggling Gaels (19-4, 6-3) tonight at 8 at McKeon Pavilion.

“It’s very important,” junior guard Matt Bouldin said. “This is exactly like our loss to UConn. We didn’t get embarrassed (by the Huskies), but we had a little slump after that and we can’t go through that again.”

Gonzaga was dismantled by the Tigers at both ends of the court.

“I’m sure there are people that still love us and there are people that are second guessing us,” senior center Josh Heytvelt said. “Every team has a slip-up once in a while. A lot of teams in the Top 25 have been doing the same thing that happened to us on Saturday. We just have to move on.”

The Gaels haven’t been able to replace Mills’ 18.7 points or the turbo boost he brought to their transition game. They hope he can return for the WCC Tournament. Freshman Mickey McConnell started the first game following Mills’ injury. Junior Wayne Hunter got the nod the last two games, scoring 17 points. McConnell has added 19 points off the bench.

“They were so dependent on (Mills) before,” Bulldogs coach Mark Few said. “Now they’ve had time to work without him, and I think we’ll see an inside oriented team with (Omar) Samhan and (Diamon) Simpson getting a lot of touches. Obviously after watching us rebound against Memphis, Saint Mary’s is a great rebounding team and I think they’re going to look to exploit that a little bit.

“They also know this is probably their last chance to stay in the league hunt if they can get us. If we can get (two wins) this weekend, then we’re in great shape for the league title.”

Forwards Samhan and Simpson combine to average 27 points and 20 rebounds. Simpson had 17 points and 12 rebounds against Gonzaga in Spokane.

“My dad and I talked about playing better defense in the post and how I can make some adjustments,” said GU forward Austin Daye, referring to his father, Darren, the former NBA player. “Hopefully I can take care of business.”

Gonzaga’s first order of business will be playing with passion, an element that was missing in Saturday’s game.

“Patty was such a key part of their team, but it’s not like they don’t have players. They have two All-WCC players in Samhan and Simpson and their guard play is still solid,” Bouldin said. “They’re going to be hyped for the game, so they’ll come out with a different kind of fire. We need to match that instead of what we did against Memphis.”

 

  

 



Jim Meehan
Jim Meehan joined The Spokesman-Review in 1990. Jim is currently a reporter for the Sports Desk and covers Gonzaga University basketball, Spokane Empire football, college volleyball and golf.

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