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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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WSU, GU face off Wednesday


COUGARS

Gonzaga makes the trek down U.S. 195 to Pullman tomorrow, and with the Spokane weather report calling for sleet and ice, it may not be that easy. We have an advance of the big local non-conference game on the link, so read on.
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• Spent the evening in a gym with middle-school age basketball players so I would love to write how they made me feel young again. But my back won't let me. So we'll just say how much fun it is to be with kids who love a game and leave it at that. ... We have our advance for you to read – it would be so much easier to just link the story but couldn't find it, so here it is ... But before you get to ours, here is Bud Withers' advance in the Seattle Times.

PULLMAN – It was just another friendly game between two schools some 80 miles apart.

Game No. 144 in a rivalry that stretches back more than 100 years.

But it turned out to be more than that. At least in DeAngelo Casto mind.

"I think that defined our season," Washington State's 6-foot-8 junior center said of last year's 74-69 defeat at then 17th-ranked Gonzaga. "We managed to always find a way to not finish games."

Last year the Cougars broke in front, led by 12 with 10 minutes, 32 seconds left and basically watched as the Bulldogs roared back behind Elias Harris and now-graduated Matt Bouldin.

It was WSU's first loss of the season, but it would be followed by more. And it wouldn't be the last time the Cougars, who finished 16-15 overall and, at 6-12, last in the Pac-10, would surrender large second-half leads.

Casto, from Spokane, has yet to experience a win over the Zags – GU is 9-2 in the last 11 meetings and has won the last two – but he feels tonight's Beasley Coliseum battle could be a turning point in the series and the Cougars' fortunes.

"That's the difference between this year and last," he said. "We're older and mature, ya, but the ability to close a game is there. We didn't die against K-State."

But they didn't win either.

"It speaks volumes for our team because we didn't play well," Casto said. "We didn't shoot well, but we were in it. ... But we do have to prove we can win ball games at the end."

It's also a different Zags team this season. Playing their usual tough non-conference schedule, the Bulldogs are 4-3 and unranked, the first time that's been the case heading into the WSU game since the 2002-03 season.

However, WSU Ken Bone doesn't see a drop off.

"I still see a really good team," he said.

The Zags' losses have come to Illinois, San Diego State and Kansas State, all currently ranked in the top 16. It was the latter of those teams, K-State, that handed WSU its first defeat this season, 63-58 last Friday night. The nature of that defeat impressed GU coach Mark Few.

"They’re obviously a veteran team and they have most of the pieces back," said Few, whose team lost to Kansas State 81-64 in Kansas City. "They’re very confident, because of the schedule they’ve played they’re off to a great start. They played K-State tough. They’re going to be a formidable foe, especially in that environment."

WSU drew 11,671 for the game with the Wildcats and expect a similar crowd tonight. But the folks in the building that really worry Few are the Cougars outside shooters, Klay Thompson, Faisal Aden and Moore, who played for the first time this season against K-State.

"They can really shoot it, they're seeing a big rim," Few said. "With Moore back, they can spread you out and bounce it at you."

Moore, playing with a splint to protect a fractured scaphoid bone in his left wrist, came off the bench against K-State, played 27 minutes, scored 10 points and had three assists.

Bone said the sophomore will move into the starting lineup tonight, with Aden taking over the sixth-man role envisioned before the season began.

Thompson (21.2 points per game) and Aden (18.7) have combined to shoot 36 percent from beyond the arc, a worry for the Bulldogs after yielding a dozen 3-pointers in last Saturday's 73-61 loss to Illinois.

"We know that the 3-point game is what we need to work on," center Rob Sacre said. "We need to stop the 3-point game because that’s what is killing us in these losses."

The Zags have their own 3-point threat in Steven Gray. The 6-5 senior guard is averaging 20 points per game and shooting 44 percent from beyond the arc.

Casto, for his part, knows he will have his hands full with the 7-foot Sacre (12.1 points, 7.1 rebounds), Harris and the rest of the Gonzaga front court.

"Growing up watching those guys, I thought they produced a lot of good, hard-nosed, strong players," said Casto, who said the first GU player he admired was Casey Calvary. "That's just what Gonzaga's been known for. Guys like Sacre, Harris and the guys coming off the bench, they are all hard-nosed fighters."

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• That's it for now. I just want to reiterate one thing. Please, please, please don't resort to personal attacks in the comments section. I hate having to go through and delete comments that call others names or responses that are in kind. Just go ahead and state your case, be civil with each other and respectively disagree if you must. No matter what side of an issue you are on, please respect the opposing viewpoint. That is all. Until later ...



Vince Grippi
Vince Grippi is a freelance local sports blogger for spokesman.com. He also contributes to the SportsLink Blog.

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