All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: UConn-Gonzaga

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with a recap of UConn-Gonzaga.

Nothing to see here, just a couple of guys dropping by the arena to wrap up a business trip: Mark Few (who has the highest winning percentage in D-1 history with a minimum of 600 games) & Drew Timme (3-time consensus All-American):

Adama Sanogo/Andre Jackson Jr. were also all business during warmups:

I wonder if 2006 national POY Adam Morrison (who is the radio color commentator for Gonzaga basketball) would be able to avoid any semblance of bias:

It always helps to have your Hall of Fame father on hand to support you in the form of Bob Hurley Sr.:

The UConn & Gonzaga cheerleaders were ready:

…as was Danny Hurley, walking out of the tunnel for the biggest game of his life:

I anticipated a great game because these teams have met 5 times in the past, all at neutral sites, and all of them were decided by 5 PTS or less, so let’s tip it off:

Gonzaga’s 2 heroes from their win over UCLA on Thursday continued to produce on Saturday. Both Timme and Julian Strawther were able to score a bunch of PTS in the lane, combining for 18 of their team’s 32 PTS in the 1st half. 1 of UConn’s breakout stars was FR Alex Karaban. After marching into the NCAA tourney like a lamb with just 9 PTS combined in his 1st 2 games, he scored 11 PTS vs. Arkansas on Thursday and scored 10 more in the 1st half vs. Gonzaga including a 3 in the final seconds right before halftime to give his team a 7-PT lead as they headed to the locker room.

Timme has never fouled out of a postseason game, but after picking up 2 fouls in the 1st half and then 2 quick fouls during the 1st 3 minutes of the 2nd stanza, Coach Few had no choice but to take him out of the game despite trailing 44-34. By the time he came back a few minutes later UConn had completed an 8-0 run to make it 52-34, and it did not get better from there. While Sanogo finished with a double-double (10 PTS/10 REB) and Jackson nearly messed around and got a triple-double (8 PTS/9 REB/10 AST/0 TO), the 2nd half turned into the Jordan Hawkins show. The SO G from Maryland had made at least 3 shots from behind the arc in each of his previous 3 tourney games, but took it to another level against the Zags by tying his career-high with 6 3PM (while the entire Gonzaga team combined to make 2-20 3PM). UConn was up 65-40 at the under-12 timeout (which as far as I can tell is the 1st time in Timme’s 133-game college career that he has ever trailed by 25 PTS) and up 80-47 with 4 minutes to play as they blew out the Bulldogs 82-54.

In the postgame press conference I asked Hawkins (on the left) if he just felt like he was in the zone all night long. He said that after the 1st 1 went in he just kept taking them and credited his teammates for finding him:

I attempted to get Coach Hurley to confirm that between his Hall of Fame father, 2-time NCAA champion brother, and now himself and his son Andrew heading to the Final 4 next weekend, they could properly be considered among the preeminent families in the history of the sport alongside the Barrys (Rick/Jon/Brent/Drew), the Currys (Dell/Steph/Seth), and the Drews (Homer/Bryce/Scott). He would neither confirm/deny but is certainly proud of his family. His dad is the patriarch who is 1 of the best coaches of his generation, and he is just blessed that his father pushed him and his brother Bobby to succeed. Now he is happy that he gets to take his dad to the Final 4:

That is a wrap for the recap, but check back later this weekend for 1 HECK of a photographic celebration with the West Regional champs!

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Doctor of Dunc: HoopsHD interviews McDonald’s All-American Ron Holland

We have not even reached the end of the college basketball regular season but can already start wondering about the stars of tomorrow as the best high school players in the country prepare to receive some national exposure. The McDonald’s All-American Game will take place on Tuesday in Houston, TX, and the Nike Hoop Summit will tip off on April 8th in Portland, OR. Several of this year’s college basketball super-freshmen played in last year’s McDonald’s Game including Gradey Dick (Kansas)/Keyonte George (Baylor)/Jarace Walker (Houston). Earlier this week HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Ron Holland about winning a pair of gold medals and choosing the Longhorns.

In 2021 you won a gold medal with team USA at the FIBA U-16 Americas Championship in Mexico, and in 2022 you won a gold medal at the FIBA U-17 World Cup in Spain: what did it mean to you to win a pair of gold medals? Winning a pair of medals was crazy: it was nice to represent my country even 1 time, but I was able to do so twice, and I have a chance to do it again this year. Knowing that they keep trusting me to represent not only my city and my town but my country: it just means a lot to me that they trust me with their brand and the meaning of USA Basketball. Me and the other guys are the face of the team and the fact that they are giving their all to us and want me to represent our country is just a blessing.

You received offers from several great schools including Arkansas/UCLA but signed with Texas back in November: what was the biggest factor in your decision? The biggest factor was everybody who is leaving, but also the academics. Everybody leaving means that I will get 1 of the best opportunities to go in there and prove that I can be one of the best freshmen ever. I get to put my stamp on why I should be in the NBA draft lottery sooner than later. However, my mom is really big on me being good at things besides basketball. You need to have your books right so that you know how to read a contract: you do not want anybody to be playing with your money. She trusted UT the best with the whole academic thing so I think I will be set with that.

You are part of a great recruiting class that includes AJ Johnson: what makes him such a good player? AJ is a skinny guard who can maneuver and play/guard multiple positions. He complements my game because not only does he try to score but also looks to pass: I feel like we will be a good duo going to Texas. There are other guys who have a chance to come back like Tyrese Hunter, Dylan Disu, or even Dillon Mitchell. I am sure they are not all coming back because those guys are having a great season and probably going to the league. AJ just really complements my game so I feel like we will be great together.

TCU showed the country that they still play some good football down in Texas, but do you think that it is turning into a basketball state due to all of the top-25-caliber teams such as Baylor/Houston/TCU/Texas? I think it is…but honestly I feel like Texas just does everything better than everybody else. I feel like everybody in Texas believes that, and if you do not then you have an issue. If you go down the list of who beat who and all of the names that we have: nobody does it like us!

Earlier this year your mother tweeted that you remained committed to the school even after Coach Chris Beard was suspended (and subsequently fired) after being charged with a 3rd-degree felony for family violence: what kind of relationship do you have with his replacement (Rodney Terry)? I love Coach RT and he loves me. The relationship I have with him: I can tell that he already trusts me more than he should and I really commend him for that. He has shown that he really wants me but I can tell that it is something more. It is deeper than that: I feel like he needs me and I really need him too. I love the relationship we have and I cannot wait for him to be my coach.

You are 6’8”: what position do you play now, and what position will you feel most comfortable at in college? Right now in high school I am position-less because I can guard anybody and do everything that a guard or big man can do. However, in college I feel like they are going to have me focused on being a small forward/power forward or perhaps a shooting guard. Regardless of those 3 positions, I know that I can still get down there and bang in the post but can also guard the post and defend point guards and control/handle the ball like a point guard. I shoot it at a high level and will just control my team, facilitate things, and be the leader that I am.

Last December your fellow honoree Stephon Castle scored 41 PTS before fouling out in a 4-PT loss by Newton at Red River Hoopfest: will you remind him of the final score when you face him again at the McDonald’s Game in March?! I am definitely going to talk but I do not even know what he is going to say back. He had 41 PTS so he is a very good basketball player, obviously, but we came out with the win and it was a really fun game. I did not really have as good of a game as I wanted to, but it gave my teammate KJ Lewis a chance to show why he is 1 of the top players in the country. I think he had 34 PTS that night as well: we have the kind of team where you never know whose night it will be.

In January you were named a McDonald’s All-American: what did it mean to you to receive such an outstanding honor? It meant a lot just knowing that I can showcase my talents all over the country and am able to put myself in the conversation with other great players. Knowing that I get a chance to go out there and show the world that I am one of the greatest players in the country and represent my city: it is just a whole lot of love.

How excited were you to see that your fellow 2-time gold medalist Jeremy Fears was also named a McDonald’s All-American? We talk almost every day: that dude and I have been through a lot together: from making the team USA roster to playing with and against each other in AAU and being at all of the camps. Just knowing that 1 of my brothers made it brought a whole lot of joy to me and felt really good.

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NCAA Tournament Elite Eight Preview

An already chaotic NCAA Tournament became even more unpredictable after the completion of the Sweet 16 round; we are now assured of no 1-seeds advancing to the Elite 8 for the first time since seeding began for the 1979 NCAA Tournament. Texas is the lone remaining 2-seed, and the only regional that has teams with recent Final Four experience is in the West with Gonzaga and UConn, although you could add Texas from the Midwest (although their last Final Four was 20 years ago).

EAST REGION (Saturday, March 25)

(3) KANSAS STATE vs (9) FLORIDA ATLANTIC (6:09 PM ET, TBS) – Kansas State on paper looks to be the favorite in this matchup, and thanks to some heroic performances from Marquise Nowell and Keyontae Johnson the Wildcats were able to avoid a 2nd-half flurry from Michigan State and ended up winning the first overtime game of the 2023 NCAA Tournament. A win here would give the Wildcats their 5th Final 4 appearance and their first since 1964. However, Florida Atlantic has been venturing further and further into uncharted territory this season – their first Final Four would not be out of the question, either. This is the first time since 2008 that a team from Conference USA has advanced this far in the NCAAs, so naturally they will be moving up to the American next season.

WEST REGION (Saturday, March 25)

(3) GONZAGA vs (4) CONNECTICUT (8:49 PM ET, TBS) – Our own Jon Teitel has done a fantastic job covering the West Regional out in Las Vegas this week and we will be treated to what should be a classic matchup between the Zags and UConn. The Huskies looked relentless in their first weekend of tournament play against Iona and Saint Mary’s and took it up another level against Arkansas on Thursday night. Gonzaga, on the other hand, had to dig out of a deep hole against UCLA early in the 2nd half and ended up having to withstand a furious UCLA run in the final minute before Julian Strawther added his name to Gonzaga lore with a game-winning 3 against the Bruins. The Zags would be looking for their 3rd Final Four since 2018 and the Huskies would be looking for their first Final 4 appearance since 2014.

SOUTH REGION (Sunday, March 26)

(5) SAN DIEGO STATE vs (6) CREIGHTON (2:20 PM ET, CBS) – The Mountain West Conference collectively had an 11-game losing streak in the NCAA Tournament before San Diego State finally got off the mat and ended up getting wins against Charleston and Furman in the first weekend. After a bit of a slow start against Alabama last night, the Aztecs went on a 12-0 run to take the lead in the 2nd half and never trailed after that point. While Creighton is technically in the Elite 8 for the 2nd time in program history, their previous appearance was in 1941 with a much smaller field; this is the first time the Bluejays have won 3 games to advance to the Elite 8 in program history. They have quietly defeated NC State, Baylor and Princeton to qualify for today’s game. We are guaranteed a first-timer in the Final Four for whoever wins this game.

MIDWEST REGION (Sunday, March 26)

(2) TEXAS vs (5) MIAMI (5:05 PM, CBS) – Miami had a great shooting night from both Isaiah Wong and Nigel Pack as the Hurricanes blew out to a 2nd-half lead that got as high as 19 points against Houston. Not bad for a team that was staring down the barrel of a 5-12 upset against Drake just a week earlier. While Texas lost Dylan Disu to injury for potentially the remainder of the tournament, they got a complete team effort from Marcus Carr, Jimmy Allen, Tyrese Hunter and Christian Bishop and never trailed against Xavier in their matchup last night. This game will feature the ACC regular season champion versus the Big 12 Tournament champion.

So if you’re keeping score, we now have 2 teams from the Big 12, 2 teams from the Big East and 1 team from the ACC, Mountain West, WCC and C-USA.

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All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: UCLA PG Tyger Campbell’s father Tony

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with UCLA PG Tyger Campbell’s father Tony.

You allegedly named your son Tyger because he was born while Tiger Woods was on his way to winning the 2000 Mercedes Championship: what was he like as a child, and if Woods had not beaten Ernie Els by making a 40-foot putt on the 2nd playoff hole at Kapalua then would you have named him Ernye!? All of our kids have sports theme names. We had some other names we were thinking about but we just felt that “Tiger” would be an awesome sports name that an announcer could say over the loudspeaker at a football game: “tackle by Tiger”! The “Y” was just to make it a little different. He was pretty chill as kid: he was the youngest for a long time until we had our 4th child. He was a typical kid so there was nothing too outlandish, but he was an athletic prodigy so from age 5-6 we knew that he would become a great athlete. He was able to do some crazy gymnastic stuff when he was younger, which I think has helped with his muscle movement. My wife Jennifer is about 5’9” and Tyger ended up being 5’11” so once he got too tall for gymnastics he began to focus on basketball.

He received his 1st scholarship offer at age 13 from Western Kentucky while starting on the Christ Presbyterian Academy high school team as an 8th grader, committed to DePaul in 2017, and later signed with UCLA in 2018: why did he change his mind, and what made him choose the Bruins over schools like Maryland/Purdue? As a dad, when you walk out of any recruiting visit you are like “Wow, they love you, you should go here!” He had pro aspirations and we all liked the UCLA coach at the time (Steve Alford), as well as the weather. It is a good school with a great tradition and was the best fit…but it was Tyger’s decision.

He tore his left ACL during a preseason practice in October of 2018 and missed the entire year: how bad was it, and how was he able to finally get back onto the court? It was your typical ACL tear. When they gave us the final diagnosis in the hospital he was just like, “Okay, what’s next?” He listened to his doctors, did everything the right way, and came back sooner than anyone had expected. It is a tribute to how seriously he took his rehab: I was proud of him for doing that.

In the 2021 Final 4 he scored 17 PTS/6-11 FG but the Zags beat UCLA on a Jalen Suggs 40-foot bank shot to beat the buzzer in OT: what are your memories of that stunning shot? We were sitting right there and were all very excited: even though we were an 11 seed we felt like we could beat anybody because the whole team was clicking on all cylinders. When Johnny Juzang hit that layup with 3.3 seconds left we just assumed that the game would be going to a 2nd OT. I have never experienced anything like that: the high of Johnny’s shot and then the low of Jalen’s shot. It was just a tough shot by a tremendous player.

Earlier this month he was named 1st-team All-Pac-12 for the 3rd year in a row as well as honorable mention All-American: how proud were you to see him receive all of these outstanding honors? Very proud! Growing up you train and go to AAU tourneys so you have to get up early and stay up all night. You want to give your kid a chance to play college basketball, and he ended up playing at an elite level for the majority of his career. I was just reflecting on all of his career accolades with my oldest son. Tyger passed Tyus Edney last night for #2 on the UCLA all-time AST list and his 3:1 AST/TO ratio is the best of anyone by far. How many parents can say that they got to watch their kid even play in the Final 4, much less as 1 of the main contributors on his team?! Nobody can ever take that away from us.

In his 6 postseason games this month he has made 33-37 FTs with 41 AST/4 TO: do you feel like he has been playing the best basketball of his life this month? If you look at his stats this is the best year he has ever had. Talking to him, even though his shot has not been falling as much he says this is the most comfortable he has ever felt on the court. He looks so fluid and has so much confidence. I am not sure what he would say but he is doing a great job of running the team/making the right pass/taking the right shot.

You played basketball at Luther College: who is the best athlete in the family? If you want to go off of straight athleticism…it would be me. I was the only 1 in my family who could dunk consistently: my wife might roll her eyes at that but it is true! Tyger is cerebral/skilled but does not get enough credit for his own athleticism.

You are the founder of a youth basketball organization called Handles & Buckets: what makes your group different from other groups? Our approach: we call ourselves a skills program that happens to have AAU teams. We stress fundamentals/development and are a 1-stop shop: camps, leagues, travel ball, skills, etc. We participate in leagues year-round and have 16 different travel teams. We provide everything for the kids that come out of our program. Every single person has improved over time and we take pride in that: other programs might have cut some of our players but we coach them as if they were elite-level talent. If a 5th grader is not the top 5th grader around, we still have success stories where he ends up making his middle school team in the years ahead. We have elite kids but do not just limit it to that. Myself/my wife/my son/my daughter have all seen the process that Tyger has gone through from elementary school to now: we have a unique advantage/perspective because we have seen it from every single level. We want to help kids not just on the court but also by serving as a resource. My wife’s passion is to conduct classes for parents of young kids to give them information and help them navigate through the process that we have been through ourselves. We can help with all different facets of the journey: we can make your kid better at basketball AND help you decide which tourneys/camps to send him to because we have a pretty good grasp of the youth basketball landscape. We started from nothing and it is a pretty cool thing to be able to help so many kids. I was a teacher/coach for 20+ years so to be able to keep working with kids on my own and run it as a family (my 2 oldest kids are the directors and my wife is our operations manager) has been an amazing thing. My oldest son was “Client Zero” but to have 1 of your main “clients” playing high-level college basketball and potentially going pro says a lot about being able to run a program successfully.

I could have conducted an entire interview just about the game last night vs. Gonzaga: what will you remember the most about that “instant classic”? I thought that it was a good game and we were in a good position for most of it. The 2 things that hurt us were the 11-minute stretch in the 2nd half when we did not make a single FG and the fact that we got almost doubled-up on the boards (Gonzaga had a 50-26 REB advantage). If the Bruins had made just a few more shots or only been out-rebounded by 10-15 then they would have won the game. All that being said, they were still in a position to win it at the very end, which says a lot when you consider how they played for most of the 2nd half. I was not like this in the stands yesterday but after a night of sleep I can reflect on it a little better. To be down by 10 PTS with under 3 minutes left and then come all the way back to take a lead…and then have it take a Suggs-type of shot to beat them: I am so proud of the way that UCLA fought back. Even though Tyger did not make a shot in the 2nd half he had several AST to help fuel the comeback. He also did not shy away from the moment, which is why he took the final shot that would have tied the game. He had a tough 2nd half and it hurts to lose: a lot of people picked them to go far this year but I am still proud of how they competed.

When people look back on Tyger’s college career, how do you want him to be remembered the most, and what is the next step? It is crazy that my son could be considered 1 of the best PGs in the country this year and in UCLA history: I say that humbly but if you look at the past 4 years he really did all of that. His goal is to play in the NBA. He is not 6’5” but I still feel that he can be a great PG in the NBA. His path is unknown: he may or may not get drafted but I think that he can make an NBA roster and thrive once he gets there. He is a winner who has won at every level. When he was in high school at La Lumiere he played with a pair of future 1st round picks in Jaren Jackson Jr./Jordan Poole…yet he averaged 16 PPG/7 APG while making his teammates look good. He does not have to be a superstar but he still has superstar numbers. He was actually the leading scorer for the Bruins in the NCAA tourney last year. He does not have to be the main guy but will make your team better and help you win games. If you already have All-Star-caliber guys he will make them better and still put up numbers of his own. I feel like he can run a team and elevate the players around him. That is who he is: he makes people better and does whatever is necessary to win. In high school he was touted by coaches as a player who can impact a game without scoring a single PT…but if you need him to score 30 PTS or control the tempo of the game then he will do whatever is asked of him. Here is my “Lavar Ball” dad take: any NBA team that needs a point guard should not pass on Tyger Campbell!

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All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: UConn locker room availability

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with a few player interviews from the UConn locker room.

JR G Hassan Diarra


The UConn women’s team plays Ohio State in the Sweet 16 tomorrow: how close are your team and their team? We are pretty close so wish them good luck. I actually went to their game vs. Baylor at Gampel Pavilion last Monday.

Their coach (Geno Auriemma) has made 22 Final 4s: can you even comprehend such a #? It is unbelievably ridiculous! It shows how great he is, the great players he had on his roster, and is a credit to both him and his staff.

You began your college career at Texas A&M: is this weekend exactly why you transferred to UConn? Absolutely! This is what I envisioned, being a part of March Madness.

You are 1 of 3 teams in the Big East who are still alive (along with Creighton/Xavier): how great is your conference? It is big-time basketball due to big-time teams/players/coaches, which is why I wanted to be here.

In the 2022 NIT title game you scored 12 PTS/5-7 FG in a 1-PT loss to Xavier: what makes the difference when you are playing for a championship? Camaraderie, togetherness, passion, and game-planning. You just have to be yourself.

SR G Joey Calcaterra


You began your college career at San Diego: is this weekend exactly why you transferred to UConn? This is what I came here for. I expected to have success like this and to play on a stage like this to showcase my skills.

You are 0-7 in your career vs. Gonzaga with each of the 7 losses by 12+ PTS: what makes the Bulldogs so great? They are a fast-paced group with 5 weapons on the floor at all times, so we will need to bring our A-game.

Your nickname is “Joey California”: who gave it to you, and how do you like it? Coach Hurley gave me the nickname and I have embraced it. There have not been too many kids from California to end up at UConn.

Your team’s 3-PT shooting during the NCAA tourney has been amazing (9-20 vs. Arkansas, 10-22 vs. St. Mary’s, and 11-25 vs. Iona): do you think you can keep it going tomorrow? We cannot control whether our shots will fall so we will see how the game goes, but we have a great group of shooters.

Taylor Swift is performing in Vegas this weekend: which of your teammates is most likely to attend? Tristen Newton: he is a soft guy who likes to pretend that he is a tough guy!

JR G Andre Jackson Jr.


You are a co-captain along with Adama Sanogo: how crucial has your leadership been this month? It has been very important, but everyone has grown this year to be leaders: we are just the ones who set the tone.

The Zags had a 50-26 REB advantage vs. UCLA: how do you anticipate the battle on the boards tomorrow when they have to face 6’9” Adama Sanogo/7’2” Donovan Clingan down low? Rebounding often determines who will win the game so we need to box out and crash the glass.

Your team’s 3-PT shooting during the NCAA tourney has been amazing (9-20 vs. Arkansas, 10-22 vs. St. Mary’s, and 11-25 vs. Iona): do you think you can keep it going tomorrow? We will just go with whatever presents itself and get it to all of our dangerous shooters.

You and Gonzaga have 2 of the most efficient offenses in the nation this year: do you anticipate a high-scoring game? I do, so we will just try to limit their scoring, and if it is a low-scoring game that will play to our strengths.

There were some reports in the news that you had to switch hotels due to the substandard shape of your rooms and had some items stolen out of your team bus during practice: have you channeled your off-court nightmares into your on-court success? We are just locked in.

*I also got to ask Coach Hurley how close the men’s and women’s teams are and whether he can even comprehend Geno’s 22 Final 4s. He said he cannot fathom that # and that at some point you just have to stop counting. He confirmed that the coaches/players are really close and supportive because they are each other’s biggest fans. He thinks it is really cool that his team is holding up its end this month:

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All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: Gonzaga locker room availability

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with a few player interviews from the Gonzaga locker room.

SO G Joe Few


What makes your father such a good coach, and what makes him such a good father? He is always dedicated as a coach and puts the team 1st. However, when the game is over he puts our family 1st. I remember growing up that he went on so many road trips with the team but would always spend time with us as soon as he came home.

What are your memories of Jalen Suggs’ legendary 3-PT shot to beat UCLA at the 2021 Final 4, and how does it compare to Julian Strawther’s game-winner last night? I was at that game and it was an unreal shot. Lucas Oil Stadium was only at 25% capacity due to COVID, but after playing in empty arenas for much of the season it felt like an actual basketball game atmosphere and the players acknowledged us in the stands after the game. Julian’s shot last night was a mix of Jalen’s shot in 2021 as well as the Gonzaga-UCLA game from 2006 (when the Bruins scored the final 11 PTS in a stunning comeback win). That being said, I definitely thought that Julian’s shot was going in!

What is it like playing with Drew Timme? He just gets buckets so we keep going to him over and over. He is the best basketball player that I have ever seen in person.

Is the team worried about its FT shooting after only making 9-17 last night? It is always a focus. My philosophy is that when you have good nights at the line you should remember them going forward, but when you have a bad night like last night you should have a very short memory.

The Zags had a 50-26 REB advantage vs. UCLA: how do you anticipate the battle on the boards tomorrow when facing a UConn team that has 6’9” Adama Sanogo/7’2” Donovan Clingan down low? It has been a great factor in our success but we have been tested all tourney long: TCU is a good rebounding team but we beat them on the boards 43-36. When we were trailing in the 2nd half last night our rebounding really got us back into the game.

JR G Malachi Smith


Last year you were named conference POY at Chattanooga: is this weekend exactly why you transferred to Gonzaga? Personal accolades are nice but I will never forget winning games at this level.

A few weeks ago you were named conference 6th Man of the Year: is there a big difference in starting vs. coming off the bench? All I care about is winning so I will do whatever my coaches ask of me. I just try to control what I can control.

Your grandfather Larry Knight was drafted in the 1st round by the Utah Jazz in 1979: who is the best athlete in the family? I have to say him…but I am coming up! He still has some records from when he played at Loyola-Chicago.

You scored 12 PTS in the 2nd half last night to help fuel your team’s comeback: how were you able to play your best when it mattered the most? I have put the work in so I was not nervous. I am a confident/experienced player so while it was a surreal experience it was not surprising to me.

You faced both Xavier and Texas in non-conference play: any predictions for their game tonight? It is other people’s jobs to make predictions but I think it will be a high-scoring game. We played them both back in November and I can tell you that when Texas plays at home they are a completely different team.

SR F Anton Watson


You went to high school at Gonzaga Prep: where you destined to go to college at Gonzaga? I grew up in the area and remember watching their games my whole life.

The Zags had a 50-26 REB advantage vs. UCLA: how do you anticipate the battle on the boards tomorrow when facing a UConn team that has 6’9” Adama Sanogo/7’2” Donovan Clingan down low? It will be a big factor tomorrow. In addition to those 2 UConn big men their whole team crashes the boards.

Are you worried about your FT shooting (57% this year) after the team only made 9-17 last night? It has been a huge factor all year, and we all know that we need to hit them.

You and UConn have 2 of the most efficient offenses in the nation this year: do you anticipate a high-scoring game? I am unsure: their defense is great and ours has gotten a lot better during the year.

Taylor Swift is performing in Vegas this weekend: which of your teammates is most likely to attend? Drew Timme: she probably knows who he is and will give him a VIP pass!

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