ANAHEIM, Calif. — For stretches of its 72-58 win over Florida State in the Sweet 16 on Thursday, Gonzaga struggled to score. The top offense in America had been contained as Leonard Hamilton’s squad turned a double-digit halftime deficit into a four-point, winnable game late.
But FSU scored just two points in the final 4:11 against a Bulldogs squad that avenged last season’s loss to the ACC contender at the same stage of the NCAA tournament. And they offered proof this energized scoring outfit can stop elite teams, too.
If the latter continues, Gonzaga could advance to Minneapolis and leave with Mark Few’s first championship — with defense.
“You know, they had a lot of offensive talent,” said Zach Norvell Jr., who finished 4-for-8 from the 3-point line against FSU. “Trying to switch things up on them, contest every shot. … Early, they were physical. We wanted to be more physical than them, take the fight to them both on offensive and defensive ends, trying to switch up schemes and don’t let them get too comfortable.”