Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 12, 1999, Page 12A, Image 12

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Gonzaga defeats depleted UM
By Jim Cour
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — The Gonzaga Bull
dogs figured Minnesota had some
thing to prove and they were right.
“If they had only five guys, we
knew they were going to come out
and play,” Gonzaga’s Matt Santan
gelo said after the Bulldogs held
on in the second half to beat the
depleted Gophers 75-63 in a first
round game in the NCAA West
Regional Thursday.
“I think this game shows you
the character and class of the peo
ple at the University of Minneso
ta,” Gophers coach Glem Haskins
said. “We were shorthanded, but
we're not making any excuses.”
Richie Frahm scored 26 points,
including five 3-pointers, and the
Bulldogs (26-6) needed almost all
of them for the school’s first
NCAA tournament victory.
The Gophers (17-11) were miss
ing four players who were ruled
ineligible because of allegations of
academic fraud. And two of the re
maining eight players — JoelPrzy
billa and Kevin Nathiel — fouled
out.
In addition, Kyle Sanden of the
Gophers could not play because of
a sprained ankle he suffered in
practice Wednesday.
Less than five hours after find
ing out they couldn’t play. Go
phers Kevin Clark, Miles Tarver,
Jason Stanford and Antoine Brox
sie tried to cheer their team into
the second round of the tourna
ment and they almost succeeded.
Trailing by 21 points, 51-30,
early in the second half, Minneso
ta almost caught Gonzaga with a
ragtag lineup that featured Dusty
Rychart. Rychart had career highs
of 23 points and 17 rebounds.
Rychart, a freshman walk-on
forward, found out he was going
to make his first start Thursday
morning.
"I knew I had to give it my best
shot,” Rychart said.
Minnesota cut the Bulldogs' lead
to 65-63 when Rychart sank two
free throws with 1:43 to go.
But that ended the Gophers’ run.
“We missed some good shots
and then we got a little tentative,”
Gonzaga coach Dan Monson said.
Frahm, who made five of 11 3
point attempts, responded with
his first of the second half with
1:21 left. For Gonzaga, a school
that John Stockton played for and
Bing Crosby attended, it was the
biggest shot of the day.
“That just shows you what kind
of a player Richie is,” Monson
said.
“I'm still shocked that I shot it.
I’m sure glad it went down,”
Frahmsaid.
Casey Calvary of Gonzaga fol
lowed Frahm’s critical 3-pointer
with a fastbreak dunk and hit a
free throw after he was fouled by
Rychart with a minute to go.
Santangelo and Frahm each had two
free throws in the final 48 seconds.
Gonzaga, playing in front of a
friendly crowd in its home state,
had four players in double figures.
Santangelo had 14 points and
eight assists, Jeremy Eaton had 12
points and Quentin Hall had 10
points. Calvary had 11 rebounds.
For Minnesota, Mitch Ohnstad,
starting his first game of the season,
had 12 points. But Quincy Lewis of
the Gophers struggled to get eight
points on 3-of-19 shooting.
Lewis, the Big Ten scoring win
ner who averaged 23.7 points as a
senior, was stopped by design.
Monson said.
“We used a diamond and one
defense on him,” Monson ex
plained. "If we were going to get
beat, it was going to be by some
body besides him.”
Lewis said it was hard to go out
a loser under the circumstances
that Minnesota was under.
"Stuff happens,” he said. “It
was hard, basically. What if? What
if? I’m just going to leave it at that.”
Funeral held for Yankee Clipper
By Steve Wilstein
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — His
brother’s words inside the
church and the crowd's emotion
al farewell outside perfectly cap
tured the two sides of Joe DiMag
gio — the quiet, dignified,
reclusive man, and the Joltin' Joe
who stirred fans’ passions.
Dominic DiMaggio, the last of
the three sons of Italian immi
grants who played in the major
leagues, spoke little about base
ball in his brief eulogy Thursday
and more about his brother’s
quest for privacy, his love of chil
dren and the one significant hol
low in his life.
Joe DiMaggio grew up playing
on the sandlots of San Francisco,
Dominic told a private gathering
at Sts. Peter and Paul Church,
and had everything in a Hall of
Fame career, except the right
woman to share his life. He mar
ried twice — in this church in
1939 to actress Dorothy Arnold,
and at San Francisco’s City Hall
in 1954 to Marilyn Monroe —
but never found happiness in
marriage.
To fill that void, Dominic said,
Joe DiMaggio dedicated his life
away from baseball to helping
children, privately and publicly,
including the establishment of a
children’s wing at a hospital in
Hollywood, Fla.
About 80 family members and
friends, along with baseball com
missioner Bud Selig, attended
the funeral Mass for the Yankee
Clipper, who died Monday at his
Florida home at the age of 84.
The mahogany casket, set before
the ornate marble altar under a
golden dome, remained closed.
There were no baseball me
mentos, nothing to suggest the
enormity of DiMaggio's impact
on the game and American cul
ture.
Outside, a small crowd of
about 200 came to pay its re
spects, and when the hour-long
service ended and the hearse
drove off to Holy Cross Cemetery
in nearby Colma, there were cries
of “Goodbye, Joe,’’ accompanied
by respectful, spontaneous ap
plause.
One of those who came was
J.D. Reynolds, son of former New
York Yankees pitcher Allie
Reynolds, who flew from his
home in Mustang, Okla. As a
child, Reynolds hung out in the
Yankee clubhouse, where his fa
ther had a locker two down from
DiMaggio’s.
“My dad said DiMaggio was
the greatest player he had ever
seen,” Reynolds said. “My dad
said he had a great record be
cause, when he was pitching,
someone would hit one and Joe
would run a mile to catch it.”
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