GLENDALE, ARIZ. – South Carolina coach Frank Martin walked up to Gonzaga's 7-1, 300-pound man mountain who grabbed his face in pain lying on the baseline in the first half of Saturday's Final Four matchup.
Martin looked genuinely concerned about the opposing big man, slapped in the eye on a blocked shot. Przemek Karnowski wasn't OK at first. He left for the locker room but returned and contributed to the biggest victory in school history.
Gonzaga blew a 14-point second-half lead, but Nigel Williams-Goss' 23 points and Karnowski's clutch late baskets were enough to give the top-seeded Zags a 77-73 victory over No. 7 seed South Carolina at the University of Phoenix Stadium.
"The journey that we've been on has just been unreal," Williams-Goss said. "We just never stopped believing. We had the utmost confidence in ourselves the whole season long."
Depth was the story in the first national semifinal. The Zags (37-1) got major contributions outside of their All-America guard and starting center, while the Gamecocks came up just short with leading scorer Sindarius Thornwell quiet in the first half and late in the game.
Thornwell couldn't get open for a tying three-pointer and was fouled with 3.5 seconds left. The SEC Player of the Year was forced to miss the second of two free throws, and the Gamecocks failed to control a critical rebound.
Killian Tillie then hit two free throws with 2.2 seconds left to put Gonzaga into Monday's championship game. It will try to be the first one-loss team to win a title since North Carolina State in 1974.
Thornwell was averaging 25.8 points in four NCAA tournament games, but he went scoreless from the floor until a three-pointer with 3:03 left in the first half. He shot 4-for-12 and finished with 15 points. P.J. Dozier led South Carolina with 17 points and nine rebounds, and Chris Silva added 13 points and 13 rebounds.