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No. 24 Gonzaga Tops USF 69-41

SPOKANE, Wash. (CBS/AP) -- San Francisco coach Rex Walters wasn't happy with his team's lack of toughness in a blowout loss to Gonzaga.

"They won all the 50/50 balls, and the toughness points," Walters said of No. 24 Gonzaga, which won 69-41 on Monday night.

San Francisco has now lost 25 straight games to the Zags in Spokane, a streak dating back to their last win here in 1989.

Walters said the teams remain worlds apart.

"Tonight it was IBM versus some mom-and-pop computer programmer," Walters said. "We have some stuff to do to get to that level."

While the Dons connected on just 14 of 55 shots in the game, way below their season average of 51 percent, Walters said the poor shooting was just a symptom of other problems.

"Playing really hard and being locked in and believing in what we do will take care of the shooting," Walters said.

Drew Barham scored 15 points, all on 3-pointers, to lead Gonzaga. Przemek Karnowski added 11 points for Gonzaga (12-2, 2-0 West Coast). David Stockton and Kevin Pangos finished with 10 points each.

"It was a full team effort," said Pangos, who is battling turf toe and was held eight points below his scoring average. "Everyone stepped up and played a big role. Everyone contributed."

Avry Holmes led cold-shooting San Francisco (8-6, 1-1) with 16 points. The Dons made just 25.5 percent of their shots, to 43 percent for the Zags. Tim Derksen and Mark Tollefsen added 8 points each, while Kruize Pinkins grabbed 10 rebounds.

Gonzaga has won 20 straight conference games spanning three seasons.

Gonzaga played without starting guard Gary Bell Jr., who has a broken hand, and starting forward Sam Dower, who has an injured back. The team announced Monday that Bell, third-leading scorer at 12 points per game, will miss the next four to six weeks because of the injury that occurred in Saturday's win over Santa Clara.

Dower, who fell hard on his back against Kansas State, is being evaluated on a day-to-day basis. He is averaging 13.8 ppg.

Players like Barham and Gerard Coleman have picked up the slack as five Zags scored in double figures. Coleman came off the bench to score 10 points.

`We knew everybody had their back," Barham, who made 5 of 10 from 3-point range and added 9 rebounds, said. "Everybody coming off the bench was going to give their best effort and what happened we could live with."

Louisville transfer Angel Nunez, playing in just his second game since becoming eligible, had six points, five rebounds and a blocked shot in 14 minutes.

"He's going to be a real threat," Pangos said.

Walters said the fact that Dower and Bell were not playing did not impact his preparations.

"I didn't care about that too much," Walters said. "It was Gonzaga versus USF and you have to play the game."

Gonzaga scored the first seven points of the game and the Dons had only two field goals in the first 8 minutes to fall behind 11-6. The Zags pushed the lead to 19-10 as San Francisco made just three of its first 16 shots.

The Dons were held without a field goal for more than five minutes and Barham and Pangos sank consecutive 3-pointers as Gonzaga extended its lead to 27-12.

Gonzaga went on a 9-2 run, including another Pangos 3, for a 36-16 lead. The Zags led 41-23 at halftime, despite shooting just 38.5 percent in the first.

San Francisco shot just 27 percent in the first half, making 7 of 26 shots. The Dons sank just four field goals in the final 11 minutes of the first half, including a 3-point buzzer beater by Holmes, who had 11 points in the half.

Gonzaga opened the second half with a 13-5 run, including a pair of 3-pointers by Barham, for a 54-28 lead.

San Francisco came in averaging 81.9 points per game and 51 percent shooting this season.

Gonzaga is 127-8 in the McCarthey Athletic Center since it opened a decade ago.

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