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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Gonzaga notes

Good evening once again. As promised, here's an unedited notebook and Vince Grippi's unedited column. Both will run in Friday's S-R. Read on for more.

Here's Vince's column: 

 

BUFFALO – If there is one thing Gonzaga should have taught us – and by us, we mean America's college basketball fans – is where you come from isn't nearly as important as where you're going.

 

Your conference, your reputation, your name, they might get you a berth, a seed, a site, but they don't get you into the next round of the NCAA tournament.

 

All that really matters is how you play.

 

Tonight the Zags will make their 12th consecutive NCAA appearance. They'll represent the overlooked – in most time zones – West Coast Conference and will wear the higher seed's white uniforms for the sixth time in seven years.

 

Their opponent, Florida State, hasn't made a lot of noise in the mania that is the NCAA since a runner-up finish in 1972. Think FSU, even its players admit, and you think football.

 

But the Seminoles also come in as the third-place finisher from Atlantic Coast Conference. And down on Tobacco Road, throughout the Southeast actually, this is thought of as the true conference of (basketball) champions. If the ACC isn't the birthplace of basketball, it's at least the nursery.

 

Still, the Seminoles are trying to earn something Gonzaga already has.

 

Basketball cred.

 

"The good and unique thing about college basketball is that you have a right to earn your reputation," postulated Leonard Hamilton, in his eighth season in Tallahassee after drawing paychecks from all matter of schools, big and small.

 

"You have to give credit where credit is due," Hamilton continued, describing the Zags. "And these guys have earned the right to be considered one of the better basketball programs in the country."

 

They've gotten to a point, in fact, where knocking them out of the NCAA Tournament would be a coup for the 22-9 Seminoles.

 

 "I told our players," Hamilton said, "I can't think of a better bracket to be in than to play against – I guess you have to call them a perennial power now."

 

So here we have an ACC team, the third-best in the league mind you, a member of a conference that has won 11 national titles, trying to build a resume against the Bulldogs.

 

Because, despite all the hype, all the "one-shining-moment" productions, the brackets, the talking heads, this tournament is about playing basketball. Good basketball. No matter where you come from.

 

"Like everybody is finding out this morning or early this afternoon, no matter what game you play in this tournament, it's going to be a hard one and a tough one," Gonzaga coach Mark Few said Thursday, while 10th-seeded St. Mary's upset of Richmond was showing on televisions throughout the HSBC Arena.

 

"If you're not ready to go and if you're not playing your best basketball, you're probably putting yourself in position to get beat."

 

Few understands that.

 

It happened to his team as first-round favorites in 2002 (Wyoming) and again two years ago (Davidson).

 

Remember the teeth gnashing that followed?

 

If the same result occurs tonight, do you think it will be met with the same consternation? Sure, GU is just an eight seed – the fairness of that designation was a matter of debate for the past few days in Spokane watering holes – and FSU is actually favored.

 

But the honest truth is, most basketball fans are moving the Seminoles over a bracket line due to one reason: Florida State is in the ACC.

 

"It's a heck of a league," said former Washington State coach Tony Bennett, who just finished his first year at Virginia. "What I've been told, the bottom tier was probably a little stronger and there was more parity this year."

 

So the last couple months the Seminoles built toughness, confidence and the nation's best defense against one of the country's best conferences. And that gets them exactly nothing.

 

Because the Bulldogs have done the same thing. Only the formula is different.

 

"When you look at their non-conference schedule," Hamilton said of the 26-6 Zags, "they play as tough a (one) as probably 80, 90 percent of the teams in the country."

 

Ask any Gonzaga player about Florida State and they'll answer about how the Seminoles remind them of Cincinnati, or Wisconsin or Wake Forest or Duke or Michigan State, all postseason participants and all Zag opponents in this season's version of the Long March.

 

"Whether it's flying to Maui or flying to Memphis or flying to Madison Square Garden, we try to play in a lot of these games," Few said. "The reason I do it is to help prepare us for the NCAA tournament."

 

When the only thing that matters is who wins.

And here's the notebook:

By Jim Meehan and Vince Grippi

Staff writers

BUFFALO – The anchor for Florida State's NCAA-best defense is 7-foot-1, 250-pound Solomon Alabi, a native of Nigeria who played his high school basketball at Montverde Academy near Orlando, Fla.

Alabi, a redshirt sophomore, rejects 2.4 shots a game, one of the best in the nation on a team that averages 6.3 blocks a game, 10th-best. FSU holds opponents to 37.4 percent shooting, tops in the nation.

Most schools have trouble simulating Alabi’s presence around the rim, if only because there aren’t that many 7-1, 250-pound backup centers.

Even Gonzaga lacks one. The Bulldogs’ backup post is 7-5 and 270 pounds. That may help them tonight.

“The thing too, that we have, is, they have great shot blockers, but it’s not like our guys haven’t seen size before,” said Gonzaga assistant Leon Rice, who prepared the scout for tonight’s game. “They see Will Foster every single day at practice. He’s a great shot blocker. It’s not like we’ve been playing against 6-5 guys all the time.”

Foster said Thursday he’s done his best this week in practice to simulate what Alabi can do.

“He's got great feet and soft hands, from what I’ve seen on film,” Foster said. “He gets around. He likes to leave his feet a lot. We’ve been looking on how to attack that.”

Coach-speak

It’s that time of year, when coaching rumors and speculation begin to swirl. That inevitably involves Gonzaga, but its coaching staff has been remarkably stable. Still, when Ernie Kent was fired at Oregon, numerous media outlets reported that one of the Ducks’ first calls figures to be to Gonzaga’s Mark Few, but they’ll wait until GU’s season concludes.

“Would they be interested in Mark? I’m sure they would be,” Gonzaga athletic director Mike Roth said. “If I was in their shoes, I’d probably do the same thing.”

Roth said Few is on a rollover contract that keeps 10 years remaining on his deal. Roth believes Few’s salary package puts him among the top 20 highest paid coaches in college basketball.

“We’re continuing to make sure that’s the case,” Roth said.

GU assistant coach Ray Giacoletti is among the candidates for the vacancy at Hawaii. He has talked with Hawaii officials, but not in person, as has been erroneously reported. The Toledo Blade also listed Giacoletti as a potential candidate at the University of Toledo.

Friends in nearby places

Freshman forward Kelly Olynyk grew up in Scarborough in eastern Toronto before relocating to British Columbia when he was 13. Gonzaga has four Canadians on its roster, but freshman forward Manny Arop is sidelined with a broken foot.

“It’s about an hour and a half or so, depending on the traffic,” Olynyk said. “I’m hoping I’ll have a few friends come down, my mom’s flying in so that will be nice. I hope there will be a lot of Canadians here. I’m sure there will be some coming down for Syracuse (sophomore forward Kris Joseph is from Montreal), but I’m hoping they’ll support us as well.”

Harris still undecided

Freshman forward Elias Harris wants to concentrate on the NCAA Tournament before deciding what his plans are for next season. Harris is averaging 14.7 points and team-high 7.2 rebounds, but his numbers have tailed off over the second half of the WCC season.

“That’s a good question,” Harris responded, when asked if he was leaning one way or the other. “I still have a feeling that I at least want to explore the next level, but right now I want to finish the tournament and then start thinking about what I want to do next year. I haven’t really thought about it much.”

Notes

Bouldin, Harris and Washington State’s Klay Thompson were named to the United States Basketball Writers Association All-District 9 team, which encompasses California, Oregon, Washington, Hawaii, Arizona and Alaska. Arizona’s State Herb Sendek was the coach of the year and Cal’s Jerome Randle was the player of the year. … Gonzaga sold about 350 tickets, according to Roth. “It’s probably our smallest contingent of fans ever, but pretty close to how it was in Raleigh (two years ago) and the first-round in Memphis (2001),” Roth said.

 

 



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