No. 12 Gonzaga’s decisive 65-56 semifinal victory over Oregon State extends a historic run to 29 straight West Coast Conference championship games, a final flourish before the Bulldogs’ Pac-12 move, while capping a tumultuous season for the Beavers and their now-former coach.
The scoreboard in Las Vegas read 65-56, but the story resonated far beyond the final margin. With a methodical, defensive-minded win, No. 12 Gonzaga locked up its 29th consecutive trip to the West Coast Conference Tournament championship game, an unprecedented streak of conference coronations that now stands as a farewell gift to the league they dominated for decades.
This wasn’t just another semifinal victory; it was a final statement. The Bulldogs (29-3) are headed to the Pac-12 next season, making this WCC tournament their last as league members. Every possession in their 65-56 win over Oregon State carried the subtle weight of an era ending.
And for Oregon State, the loss came with its own devastating context: it was the final game for Wayne Tinkle, who was fired earlier after 12 seasons leading the program according to the Associated Press. His team finished 17-16, a season of turmoil concluding in the desert with a semifinal exit.
The Ike Engine: A Double-Double Masterclass
The engine of Gonzaga’s latest triumph was, once again, Graham Ike. The WCC Player of the Year delivered a classic performance: 24 points, 11 rebounds, 10-of-17 shooting. It was his 14th double-double this season and the 45th of his career.
Ike was the only Gonzaga player in double figures, a testament to his singular importance and the team’s collective, if unglamorous, efficiency. His ability to score in the paint and own the defensive glass was the program’s calling card in a game where beautiful offense was scarce.
His final basket—a tough, contested putback in the second half—symbolized the night. Nothing came easy, but Ike found a way, embodying the grit required to maintain a 29-year dynasty.
The Defensive Identity That Fueled a Dynasty
Gonzaga’s legacy is built on offensive fireworks, but this victory was forged in defense. The Bulldogs displayed the two-way prowess that defines their best teams.
- Paint Domination: Entering as the nation’s leader in points in the lane (45.2 per game), Gonzaga outscored Oregon State 38-24 inside. This interior control was the game’s foundational advantage.
- Transition Killers: The Zags generated 16-0 fast break points. By forcing turnovers and sprinting the floor, they turned defensive stops into immediate demoralization.
- Early Execution: The defining surge was a 15-2 first-half run where Gonzaga’s defense inflicted a 10-second violation and a shot clock violation. Oregon State missed its first nine shots and shot a frigid 28.6% in the first half.
This is the Gonzaga template at its purest: control the glass, protect the rim, and let your best player go to work.
A Farewell Tour, Perfected
Consider the historical weight of this moment. For 29 years, the WCC tournament final has had a constant: Gonzaga. This streak encompasses the rise from mid-major darling to national powerhouse, from Hank Gathers and Kim Kilgore to this current group led by Ike.
That this run extends into a farewell season is poetic. The Bulldogs are not just leaving a conference; they are exiting as its undisputed standard-bearer. Their last WCC championship game appearance—whatever the result—will be the final entry in a record book they wrote almost entirely themselves.
The move to the Pac-12 represents the ultimate validation of that sustained excellence. They are not just joining a major conference; they are bringing a 29-year tournament dynasty with them as their credential.
Oregon State’s Bitter Finale
The other side of the scoreboard tells a story of unresolved tension. For Oregon State, this was the last stand in more ways than one.
Under Wayne Tinkle, the Beavers had moments of success, including a memorable run to the Elite Eight in 2021. But this season, marked by inconsistency and mounting pressure, ended with his dismissal as reported by the Associated Press. The team showed resilience, hanging around in the second half, but the early deficit proved too much.
Notably, Oregon State entered the game having lost just once in 11 contests when holding opponents under 70 points. Their defensive strength was their identity, yet Gonzaga’s offense—and specifically Ike’s inside presence—broke through that identity from the start.
Now, the program moves into an uncertain future, searching for a coach who can recapture the magic of that 2021 run while navigating a changing Pac-12 landscape that lost Gonzaga as its newest intended member.
What This Means for the Big Picture
For fans, this game was a bridge between eras. For Gonzaga, it’s about momentum. Their 29-3 record and WCC title game berth cement them as a perennial Final Four contender, regardless of conference affiliation. They carry a 29-year culture into the Pac-12, immediately altering that conference’s power dynamics.
For Oregon State, the focus shifts entirely to coaching and roster construction. Can they find a leader to build around a defensive core that, for much of this season, was elite? The firing of Tinkle suggests a desire for a new direction, but the standard he set with that Elite Eight run remains the program’s high water mark.
And for the WCC, this is the end of an epoch. No more will the conference tournament be defined by the relentless expectation of Gonzaga’s presence. The league’s identity will now be built elsewhere, with Saint Mary’s and Santa Clara needing to assume the mantle of standard-bearer.
The final chapter of this 29-year story is one game away. Whatever happens in the WCC championship, the legacy is already written: a run of sustained excellence that reshaped a mid-major conference and earned its way into a power league.
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