A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2022 SPORTS NCAA MEN’S BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT NCAA WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT Gonzaga rallies to reach Sweet 16 Ducks fall to Belmont in 2 OT BY TIM BOOTH Associated Press PORTLAND — Drew Timme gathered his Gonzaga teammates at midcourt, pointed at the scoreboard showing a 10-point halftime deficit for the top overall seed and expressed a few choice words. Timme’s goal was to spark his teammates with words. He did it with his play on the court, too. Or as Memphis coach Penny Hardaway said, “the Drew Timme effect came into play.” Timme scored 21 of his 25 points in the second half, and Gonzaga rallied from a 10-point halftime deficit to beat No. 9 seed Memphis 82-78 on Satur- day night, March 19, in the sec- ond round of the NCAA Tour- nament. Trailing at the half for only the fourth time this season, Gonzaga leaned on its star ju- nior to reach its seventh straight Sweet 16. The Bulldogs (28-3) will face No. 4 seed Arkansas in the West Region semifinals on Thursday, March 24, in San Francisco. “What I said was, no matter what happens, no matter what the score is, win or lose, this could very well be the last 20 minutes of basketball you ever play, and go out with no regrets,” Timme recalled. That was the G-rated version. But his point was made and the Bulldogs responded. Andrew Nembhard added 23 points, Rasir Bolton scored 17 and Gonzaga never trailed after a basket from Timme and Bolton’s 3-pointer with 10 min- utes remaining that made it 61-57. Timme made 10 of 16 shots and grabbed 14 rebounds. “The way we came out fight- ing in the second half I thought it was more who we are,” Gon- zaga coach Mark Few said. “And then we just did a great job down the stretch executing all our late game stuff.” Memphis (22-11) didn’t go away despite Gonzaga’s surge. The Tigers pulled even at 66 on DeAndre Williams’ basket. Af- ter Nembhard’s 3 put the Bull- dogs up 76-69, the Tigers still made it a one-possession game “They had every oppor- tunity to fold, and when KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — it got really hot, a lot, The Belmont Bruins made and they just always had history a year ago with the an answer,” Brooks said. program’s first women’s “They always fought. They NCAA Tournament win. found a way. They made They found a way to top a play. That’s our team. that. That’s what we’ve been. Destinee Wells knocked That’s who we are. It was down a pair of free throws really cool to be in that at- with 1:02 left in double mosphere. Great perfor- overtime, and Belmont mance.” knocked off No. 5 seed After Wells split two free Oregon 73-70 Saturday, throws with 4.5 seconds March 19, for the Bruins’ left, Oregon had a final second straight win as a chance. But Sedona Prince’s 12 seed to open an NCAA long 3 bounced off the rim Tournament. as the Bruins rushed the Belmont (23-7) upset court to hug each other and 14th-ranked Gonzaga in Prince hung her head in the sterile Texas bubble dejection. with no fans on hand last Oregon had the ball for year in the NCAA Tourna- much of the final minute ment. This time, the Bru- in the second overtime and ins won their 13th straight couldn’t get a shot to fall. and 19th in 21 games with The Ducks won a jump a victory made all the more ball situation with 29.8 precious by being able seconds remaining. They to celebrate immediately kicked the ball out to in the arena with family, Endiya Rogers whose 3 hit friends and fans. off the far rim, and Madi- “It’s so hard to rank them son Bartley got the rebound because last year we made with 6.5 seconds left to start history,” Belmont senior the Belmont celebration. forward Conley Chinn Oregon coach Kelly said. “It was the first time it Graves said his Ducks had had been done in our pro- plenty of chances and cred- gram. But I mean, just to- ited Belmont. day, you kind of can’t get it “It just seemed like we did not make that right play better than that. That was other than the shot at the pretty sweet.” end of regulation when we They will play fourth- needed to,” Graves said. seeded Tennessee, an 80- The Bruins led 50-44 67 winner over Buffalo, with 5:02 left in the fourth on Monday in the second before Oregon rallied with round. a 9-3 run capped by Te- This was the first dou- Hina Paopao’s 3 from the ble-overtime game in the NCAA Tournament since left corner with 7.9 sec- onds left tied it at 53. All Dayton and St John’s in Pac-12 forward Nyara Sa- the first round in 2013. bally blocked Nikki Baird’s This was a thriller from 3-point attempt at the start to finish with 10 ties buzzer to force overtime. and Wells’ go-ahead free Both teams had a chance throws was the seventh lead change and the only time to win at the end of the first Belmont led in the second overtime tied at 64. Sabally overtime. missed a layup in the final Belmont coach Bart seconds before she blocked Brooks loved how his Bru- a couple inside chances by ins never quit. Bartley before the buzzer. BY TERESA M. WALKER Associated Press Sean Meagher/The Oregonian-TNS Memphis center Jalen Duren (No. 2) fights for a rebound against Gonzaga forward Drew Timme as the Tigers and Bulldogs meet in the second round of the men’s NCAA Tournament at Moda Center in Portland, Oregon, on Saturday, March 19, 2022. with 32 seconds left on Lester Quinones’ 3-pointer. Nembhard, the only con- sistent free-throw shooter for Gonzaga on the night, made four at the foul line in the final 25 seconds. “We hung in there long enough. But we couldn’t get the shots, we couldn’t get the stops, and they did,” Hardaway said. Williams scored 14 points for Memphis but sat a big chunk of the second half with foul trou- ble. Tyler Harris had 11 of his 13 points in the first half and Qui- nones finished with 10. The matchup between fu- ture NBA lottery picks Chet Holmgren of Gonzaga and Ja- len Duren of Memphis never fully materialized because of foul trouble. Duren finished with seven points and seven re- bounds but played just 19 min- utes and sat for more than 10 minutes of the second half after picking up his fourth foul. Holmgren had nine points, nine rebounds and four blocks before fouling out in the final seconds. For a while, Memphis looked willing and able to spoil what was essentially a Gonzaga home game a 6-hour drive from its campus. Memphis dominated the latter stages of the first half and built a 41-31 lead at the break as nervous energy filled Moda Center. “We knew we could go out there and play with those guys,” Williams said. “The crowd got into it, they were very resilient. They played together. They were poised. And like coach said, they showed us the bar.” Timme erupted to start the second half, scoring the first 11 points for the Bulldogs and in the process helping land Du- ren and Williams in foul trou- ble. Timme knocked down a 3-pointer, hit a pair of tough jumpers and scored on a slick baseline reverse to erase a big chunk of Memphis’ half- time lead. From there, he got help from Bolton and Nembhard. The trio combined for 42 of Gonzaga’s 51 points in the sec- ond half. “I just want to step up for my team in those types of mo- ments,” Nembhard said. “I know they have ultimate confi- dence in me, coaching staff has ultimate confidence in me so I just want to step up and make those kinds of plays for us.” March 26-27 Saturday 9:00 am–5:00 pm Sunday 9:00 am–3:00 pm DESCHUTES COUNT Y FAIR & EXPO CENTER REDMOND • OREGON PRESENTED BY PASSENGER/LT/SUV TIRES TOURING A/S PASSENGER ALL-SEASON TIRE OUR BEST PASSENGER ALL-SEASON TIRE OUR BEST ALL-TERRAIN TIRE ROAD CONTROL REPUTATION OPEN RANGE A/T ALL-SEASON TREAD SMOOTH, QUIET RIDE SUPERIOR PERFORMANCE QUIET RIDE SUPERIOR BRAKING QUIET RIDE 5 Buck Breakfast WINTER TIRES SAT. 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