GU-St. John’s tangle in Denver
I spent a couple hours at Gonzaga today after watching the selection show on CBS. Here's a link to the article I put together that will run in Monday's S-R. (There's an update on Sam Dower at the bottom). And here's John Blanchette's column on GU and the curious NCAA selection process.
Interesting draw for Gonzaga, which would probably gladly trade a spot on the seeding line (most had them as a No. 9 or No. 10 seed) to stay reasonably close to home. St. John's is a tough, talented Big East team that went 6-5 vs. the top 25 RPI, but the Red Storm lost key swingman D.J. Kennedy to a torn ACL early in the their Big East tournament quarterfinal loss to Syracuse.
There's also a capsule look below at GU and the other three teams in their Southeast bracket.
We'll have much more on GU right here over the next few days leading up to Thursday's game.
UPDATE: Ticket information here.
GONZAGA (24-9)
Seed, region: No. 11, Southeast
Location: Spokane
Enrollment: 7,682
Founded: 1887
Mascot: Bulldogs
Conference: WCC (11-3)
Bid: Automatic
NCAA tournament record: 15-13
Marquee players: Steven Gray, the team’s only senior, and junior Robert Sacre were named to the All-WCC team. Gray is GU’s top scorer (13.8 points) and Sacre averages 12.5 points and a team-high 6.2 rebounds. Elias Harris was honorable mention and Marquise Carter was selected Newcomer of the Year.
Famous alumni: Former Speaker of the House Tom Foley, entertainer Bing Crosby, basketball Hall of Famer John Stockton, baseball All-Star Jason Bay.
Starting five
C Robert Sacre Jr. 12.5
F Elias Harris Soph. 12.1
G Steven Gray Sr. 13.8
G Marquise Carter Jr. 5.9
G Demetri Goodson Jr. 5.3
A Look at the Zags and their bracket
Gonzaga will be the No. 11 seed, taking on No. 6 St. John’s in Denver on Thursday in the Southeast bracket. The other side of the bracket has No. 3 Brigham Young facing No. 14 Wofford.
Here’s a look at the four teams:
NO. 11 GONZAGA
Coach: Mark Few
Record:24-9
Strength: The Bulldogs tend to have an inside-first approach, relying on Robert Sacre, Elias Harris and Sam Dower, who became a force off the bench in the last six weeks.
Season highlight: The Zags overcame a three-game deficit by winning their last eight WCC contests, including an overtime win against Saint Mary’s in Moraga. After sharing the regular-season title with Saint Mary’s, GU defeated the Gaels to win the conference tournament.
Style of play: The key to Gonzaga’s late-season winning streak was solid defense, often limiting opponents to shooting percentages in the 30s.
NO. 6 ST. JOHN’S
Coach: Steve Lavin
Record: 21-11
Strength: Tough, hard-nosed club that is battled-tested in the Big East, which has 11 teams in the NCAA field. Senior Dwight Hardy averaged 23.2 points over last 13 games and 20.4 vs. Top 10 opponents.
Season highlight: Put an end to three-game losing streak by thumping then-No. 3 Duke, 93-78, behind Hardy’s 26 points. That started a late surge by the Red Storm, who finished tied for third in the Big East, 10 spots higher than 2010.
Style of play: Hardy is a handful (59 3-pointers and an 84.3 percent free-throw shooter). St. John’s likes to apply pressure and plays quite a bit of zone defense. The Red Storm rank in the top 15 in turnover margin (plus-3.7).
NO. 3 BYU
Coach: Dave Rose
Record: 30-4
Strength: Player of the Year candidate Jimmer Fredette leads the nation in scoring (28.5 points per game). His range extends to roughly 30 feet and he’s also strong off the dribble. Senior guard Jackson Emery was named the Mountain West Conference’s Defensive Player of the Year.
Season highlight: Fredette poured in a school-record 52 points in BYU’s win over New Mexico in the Mountain West tournament semifinals. Knocked off San Diego State twice in the regular season.
Style of play: The Cougars are just 3-2 since Brandon Davies was suspended late in the regular season for violating the school’s Honor Code. The 6-foot-9 sophomore was an inside presence, contributing 11.1 points and 6.2 rebounds per game.
NO. 14 WOFFORD
Coach: Mike Young
Record: 21-12
Strength: Senior forward Noah Dahlman averages 20.5 points and ranks fourth nationally in field-goal percentage (62.3).
Season highlight:Wofford won its last eight games, including three to claim the Southern Conference tournament title. Earlier, the Terriers defeated George Mason in overtime and lost to Xavier in triple overtime.
Style of play: The Terriers share the ball (SoCon-leading 15.0 assists per game) and take care of the ball (first in the conference in assist-to-turnover ratio, plus-1.2.). They start four seniors, including Dahlman and Tim Johnson, the top rebounder in the SoCon at 8.8.