- Associated Press - Friday, February 21, 2014

PROVO, Utah (AP) - Sloppy play and poor shooting are always a dangerous combination. It proved to be the formula for a loss for Gonzaga in the same week it reclaimed its status as a ranked team.

The 25th-ranked Bulldogs turned the ball over 16 times and shot just 22.2 percent (4 of 18) from 3-point range in a 73-65 loss to BYU on Thursday night.

The poor outside shooting came against a team that has had season-long issues with perimeter defense. BYU did a good job Thursday. They tracked shooters with efficiency and kept solid outside shooters like Kevin Pangos and Gary Bell, Jr. from finding much of a rhythm.

“It hurt,” Gonzaga coach Mark Few said. “Obviously, they were dialed in and trying to chase Kevin and Gary a bit. We still had some pretty good looks out there. Gary had a lot of good looks. We just didn’t knock them down. They did a good job of locating Kevin and staying in tune with him wherever he was. The other guys just missed them.”

BYU learned its lesson after the Bulldogs torched the Cougars repeatedly from the outside in an 84-69 win in Spokane last month. They focused on taking that part of the offense away from Gonzaga and forcing them find other ways to score.

“The emphasis in practice was just to guard the 3-point line,” Cougars guard Anson Winder said. “Whatever you do, guard the 3-point line. That’s how they beat us at their place. We let them get a lot of 3s and they ended up beating us by a lot. In practice, we just made an effort to guard the 3-point line as best as we could.”

Winder did his part to keep BYU from also going cold offensively. The junior guard earned a rare start and responded with 17 points. Matt Carlino added 15 and Eric Mika chipped in 13 points and eight rebounds to help the Cougars (19-10, 11-5 West Coast Conference) snap a five-game losing streak to Gonzaga (23-5, 13-2).

Sam Dower had 14 points and Pangos added 13 for the Bulldogs who shot 40.7 percent (22 of 54) from the field and could not overcome the turnovers that BYU turned into 18 points.

“You just can’t do that on the road,” Few said. “You cannot do that on the road anywhere, let alone here.”

The loss kept the Bulldogs from winning the WCC regular season championship outright. Gonzaga has won or shared the title in 13 of the last 14 years.

The Cougars have struggled to keep up with WCC opponents from the outside.

On Thursday, they did not let it become an issue.

“I thought we did a way better job this time around of staying with shooters,” BYU coach Dave Rose said. “They really like to penetrate and bring shooters back behind the penetration and slide them to the corner. The penetration is basically (designed) to get you sucked in and I thought our guards did a better job of staying out on shooters.”

The Cougars scored six straight points to open the second half, taking a 45-39 lead on a jumper from Kyle Collinsworth. It was part of a 9-0 run for BYU that started with a buzzer-beating 3-pointer from Haws to close the first half.

Pangos and Drew Barnham hit 3-pointers on consecutive possessions to help the Bulldogs cut BYU’s lead to 54-52.

The Cougars pushed it back to 60-52 after Carlino took his own steal in for a layup with 7:45 remaining.

The Bulldogs closed within four points three times, the last getting within 69-65 on a 3-pointer by Pangos with 1:01 left. Carlino made two baskets and hit three free throws in the final minute to help the Cougars close it out.

“I thought down the stretch BYU did a good job of amping it up on the glass and it really hurt us,” Few said.

BYU scored baskets on its first four possessions - culminating in a layup from Collinsworth off a steal by Haws - to take a 9-3 lead. Gonzaga answered with a 10-2 run that Bell punctuated with a layup to put the Bulldogs ahead 13-11.

Skyler Halford scored baskets on consecutive possessions to ignite a 13-3 run for BYU. When Mika capped the spurt with a three-point play, the Cougars held a 28-18 lead with 8:19 left before halftime.

Strong bench play helped BYU take a double-digit lead before halftime. The BYU reserves produced 21 points before Gerald Coleman finally made a layup with 4:48 remaining in the half to get Gonzaga’s first bench points.

Coleman’s basket came as part of a 15-2 run that kept BYU from pulling away. Ryan Edwards capped the rally by converting a three-point play and making a layup on the ensuing possession to give Gonzaga a 39-36 lead with 18 seconds left in the half.

BYU avoided trailing going into the locker room when Haws drained a running 3-pointer to beat the buzzer and tie it at 39.

Missed free throws and turnovers threatened to unravel the Cougars by halftime. Fortunately for the Cougars, they corrected those issues after coming out of the locker room.

“We would have had a big lead at the half if we had held onto the ball a little bit better,” Mika said. “We did that in the second half and it turned out big for us.”

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