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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Bulldogs hold off LMU, 82-72

Good evening from Los Angeles. Haven't seen a cloud in three days but I did witness two interesting basketball games. GU worked over Pepperdine on Thursday, but Saturday wasn't as easy against a short-handed Loyola Marymount squad. The Zags had to work from start to finish to secure an 82-72 win at Gersten Pavilion.

Sam Dower finished with a career-high 28 points -- surpassing 1,000 career points at GU -- and 14 rebounds. Known for his soft shooting touch, Dower couldn't buy a basket at times as his attempts from close range trickled off the iron, but he got plenty of opportunities and made several crucial baskets in the closing minutes.

My unedited game story is below. Check back for my day-after post in the morning.

 

 

By Jim Meehan

Staff writer

LOS ANGELES – They won’t get extra credit for making it harder than it needed to be, but the Gonzaga Bulldogs, after a few false starts, finally got what they were looking for Saturday afternoon.

The Bulldogs, on the verge of blowing out Loyola Marymount several times, took control in the final 10 minutes, endured one last Lions’ rally and snagged an 82-72 WCC win viewed by 4,059 at Gersten Pavilion.

The victory capped a 2-0 road trip for the first-place Bulldogs (16-3, 6-1 WCC), a solid response to last week’s 82-73 loss at Portland.

“They’re scrappy,” said Gonzaga forward Drew Barham, who capped perhaps his best weekend as a Zag with four timely 3-pointers and 16 points. “We knew if we let them make shots and hustle plays they can catch fire. Thank goodness we settled ourselves down.”

This game had an unsettled feeling throughout for the Bulldogs, or as coach Mark Few put it, “it’s always uncomfortable in my seat. When you coach long enough, you kind of expect the worst and hope for the best.”

Gonzaga dominated in the lane with LMU concentrating on preventing 3-pointers, but the Zags still left a number of points on the table. GU led 30-19, with 26 of those points coming in the paint. The Bulldogs, with Gerard Coleman contributing 11 points off the bench, held a nine-point halftime lead but had to be kicking themselves after missing 6-7 open shots from point-blank range.

Sam Dower Jr. scored a career-high 28 points and grabbed 14 rebounds, giving him 46 points and 22 boards on the road swing. He also had a handful of shots lip out that could have pushed his scoring total well into the 30s.

“They all felt good but they didn’t go in,” said Dower, who surpassed 1,000 career points. “But I didn’t let it stop me from being aggressive. It was a close game and I needed to make some shots and play defense and as a team I think we did that.”

Said Few: “I’ve never seen us miss that many chippies, but Sam stepped up and hit two big baskets at the end after experiencing all of that. So, mission accomplished.”

Barham, whose 3-pointer gave GU a 42-33 halftime lead, added three big 3s in the second half. The first gave GU a 53-52 lead, the second extended it to 57-52 and the last at the 4-minute mark made it 75-64. His biggest basket, though, was probably an off-balance 10-footer that trickled in just as the shot clock expired, giving GU a 66-57 lead.

“They were concentrating on Kevin (Pangos) coming off balls screens,” said Barham, who had eight points and six rebounds versus Pepperdine. “He did a good job seeing me and also ‘Stocks’ (David Stockton) and Kyle (Dranginis) were finding me when they penetrated.”

LMU (10-10, 2-6), down to seven scholarship players after several season-ending injuries, took a 52-50 lead with 14:08 remaining before GU’s decisive 20-5 run. Freshman Evan Payne, who finished with 19 points, picked up his fourth foul with LMU trailing by two. When he returned 4 minutes later, the Lions were down by 13.

“We fought our guts out,” Lions coach Max Good said. “Dower and (Przemek) Karnowski are a handful, especially when you’re playing with a freshman (Gabe Levin) and (6-foot-9, 185-pound) Marin Mornar. He could tread water in a garden hose, but they fought.”

Pangos had open looks, particularly from the perimeter, but made just 1 of 11 shot attempts, 0 of 6 on 3s. He finished with six assists and Dranginis and Stockton each had four. Gonzaga piled up 18 assists and 50 points in the paint.

Dranginis, with help from GU’s other four defenders, helped hold Anthony Ireland to 13 points. LMU’s senior guard had nine assists and four turnovers.

“We were telling them at half the offense is getting us great shots, you’re not going to get better than that,” Few said. “We absorbed an off day from Kevin and won on the road so that’s a positive, too.”

Gonzaga entertains San Diego on Thursday and BYU on Saturday.

 



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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