Monday, November 24, 2025
Submit Press Release
Got Action
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
Got Action
No Result
View All Result

No. 13 Gonzaga Seeks Statement Win Over No. 11 Alabama in Vegas

November 23, 2025
in NCAA Basketball
0 0
0
Home NCAA Basketball
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Gonzaga opens its Players Era Festival run on Monday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena with a heavyweight test against Alabama, a fast-starting SEC contender sitting at 3-1 with marquee wins over St. John’s and Illinois and a narrow loss to top-ranked Purdue. The Zags arrive unbeaten at 5-0 and ranked No. 13, stepping into their toughest matchup of the young season against a program that earned a No. 2 seed in last year’s NCAA Tournament and reached the Elite Eight before falling to Duke. This marks only the third meeting between the programs, now tied 1–1, after Gonzaga won the 2022 matchup on Drew Timme’s 29 points.

This year’s Players Era Festival packs three games into three days across two venues, drawing the deepest November field in the sport. Gonzaga and Alabama sit in the MGM Grand Arena pod alongside Rutgers, Tennessee, Kansas, Notre Dame, Syracuse, Houston, UNLV, and Maryland, while the Michelob ULTRA Arena pod features Creighton, Baylor, St. John’s, Iowa State, Auburn, Oregon, Michigan, and San Diego State. With point differential serving as the primary tiebreaker after the first two games—and points allowed and points scored next in line—every possession in this year’s tournament carries weight across the entire weekend. In a field this packed with high-intensity matchups, the event doubles as both a lucrative NIL opportunity and the first major résumé-building showcase of the season for programs across every conference.

There’s plenty to speculate about as Gonzaga rolls into Vegas on the heels of a 72-point win over Southern Utah. Will they be rested or rusty after a week without a game? Is Mario Saint-Supery ready to steer the offense against elite guards? Can Tyon Grant-Foster’s rim pressure and energy on the glass tilt a game this big? And how high is the ceiling when Graham Ike and Braden Huff share the floor against top-15 talent? Alabama is the kind of opponent that forces answers, and Gonzaga arrives at the perfect moment to start discovering them.

Alabama arrives in Las Vegas looking every bit like the top-15 outfit the rankings suggest. Coach Nate Oats has the Tide operating with one of the nation’s most explosive attacks, built around LaBaron Philon Jr., who’s averaging 20.5 points and 5.8 assists while carrying the SEC’s newest high-usage guard role with surprising poise. He’s flanked by Aden Holloway (17.8 PPG), Houston Mallette (12.0 PPG), and Latrell Wrightsell Jr. (10.0 PPG, 57 percent shooting), a trio that spaces the floor and scores in bunches when Alabama pushes tempo. The frontcourt rotates through Amari Allen (8.0 RPG) and Aiden Sherrell (4.0 RPG, 1.0 BPG), both mobile enough to run with Oats’ pace-and-space system. Their win over No. 8 Illinois showed the full blueprint: 90 points, 13 threes, and a spread floor that punished late help, all powered by Philon’s 24 points and relentless downhill pressure. Oats’ philosophy remains unchanged—shoot early, shoot often, and force teams to defend the entire width of the floor—but the numbers reveal the core tension of this year’s group: Alabama owns a top-10 offense and a defense sitting outside the top-35, which means high-level opponents who stay disciplined can keep pace and expose the Tide’s tendency to get lost in the half-court defense.

Three Keys to the Alabama Game

1. Make LaBaron Philon Earn Everything

Alabama enters the game with the No. 8 offense in KenPom, and that ranking reflects how much is built around LaBaron Philon’s ability to create the first crack in a defense. He’s averaging 20.5 points and 5.8 assists, and he dictates tempo, spacing, and rhythm. If Philon gets downhill early in possessions, Alabama becomes almost impossible to guard because the kickout threes come in clean rhythm. But when teams push him wide, take away the first driving lane, and make him play deeper into the clock, the entire offense slows dramatically — which is exactly what Purdue did in their win.

Gonzaga has the personnel to do that. Warley, Saint-Supery, and Innocenti all bring enough size to force Philon to dribble east–west instead of north–south, and that alone can erase Alabama’s most dangerous possessions. Gonzaga enters with the No. 3 defense in KenPom, and this is where that ranking has to matter: they must turn Philon from a downhill engine into a patient, late-clock creator. If Philon spends half the night probing without turning the corner, Alabama’s efficiency drops out of its elite tier, and Gonzaga keeps the game in a scoring range they can manage.

2. Push Alabama’s Shooters Into Their Least Efficient Spots

Alabama spaces the floor with real scoring threats, but almost all of them depend on where and when they catch the ball. Aden Holloway (17.8 PPG, 34.6 percent from three) is a rhythm scorer who thrives when the ball arrives early in possessions. Houston Mallette (10.5 PPG) is at his best when the pass hits him exactly on time. Latrell Wrightsell (10.0 PPG, 57.1 percent field goal) feasts on open, in-rhythm looks. All three become noticeably less efficient when they’re forced to dribble, relocate, or shoot late in the clock.

This is where Gonzaga’s defense has to carry the game. Oats’ teams shoot in volume and with confidence — but the secret is that their worst threes look just like their best ones, except they come two seconds later than planned. Purdue exposed this by forcing Alabama’s shooters into catch-and-shoot attempts a few steps off their favorite spots, and Gonzaga’s length on the perimeter can replicate that. If Holloway’s early pull-up threes turn into contested side-step attempts, or if Wrightsell’s rhythm catches come outside the primary window, Alabama’s No. 8 offense becomes significantly less lethal.

This is also where Gonzaga’s rebounding matters. Purdue beat Alabama by grabbing 52 rebounds to Alabama’s 28, choking off second-chance threes, and keeping Alabama out of transition. Gonzaga doesn’t have to dominate by +24, but they do have to end possessions cleanly.

3. Use Depth to Score From Every Level

Alabama’s biggest vulnerability is the defensive end of the floor—they enter the matchup 36th in KenPom defense, and their scheme depends heavily on aggressive stunts, long closeouts, and recovery speed instead of stability. Against teams with only one or two creators, it works. Against teams that can score from multiple positions and change the rhythm of the offense by shifting ballhandlers, it breaks.

This is exactly where Gonzaga must lean on its depth. With Mario Saint-Supery likely starting, the Zags add a downhill guard who can collapse the defense early in possessions and force Alabama’s helpers to commit. Beside him, Tyon Grant-Foster becomes one of the swing pieces: his ability to get to the rim, pressure gaps, and attack the offensive glass gives Gonzaga a serious advantage in second-chance scoring, and his presence on the weak side punishes Alabama’s habit of drifting out of position for transition scoring opportunities.

Add in Graham Ike’s 17.0 points and 9.2 rebounds, Braden Huff’s playmaking from the high post, Jalen Warley’s steady creation, and Adam Miller’s floor-spacing, and Gonzaga has a lineup capable of stressing Alabama’s defense at every level of the floor. The goal isn’t to rely on any single scorer; it’s to constantly shift the point of attack: post touches, empty-side drives, slot actions, second-chance opportunities, and ball reversals that make Alabama guard multiple layers of the possession.

Alabama handles one-dimensional teams. Gonzaga’s best path is becoming the opposite: five attackers, five threats, and a rhythm that never lets the Crimson Tide load up on any one player or action.

Gonzaga walks into Las Vegas with momentum, depth, and a defense that has quietly climbed into the top tier of the national metrics, and Monday night offers the first real chance to show what this version of the Zags can be. Alabama will score — they always do — but the matchups tilt toward a Gonzaga team that can rebound, defend in space, and attack from more spots than the Tide can comfortably cover. With Mario Saint-Supery pushing the pace, Tyon Grant-Foster crashing the glass, Graham Ike anchoring the interior, and a rotation full of guards who can make the right read under pressure, this is the kind of early-season test that can announce a team’s ceiling. The Zags have the toughness, the versatility, and the identity to win a game like this, and if they impose their style early, they will walk out of the MGM Grand with a statement victory and a clear path towards a top-10 (perhaps even top-5?) ranking.



Source link

Tags: AlabamaGonzagaSeeksstatementVegaswin
Previous Post

CBB weekend winners, losers: The March drama arrives early

Next Post

Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 12 Shadow Reports, lineup locks and projected scores

Related Posts

The Players Era Festival sucks and the fullcourt press in college basketball media is gross
NCAA Basketball

The Players Era Festival sucks and the fullcourt press in college basketball media is gross

November 24, 2025
Texas A&M gives AD Trev Alberts six-year extension
NCAA Basketball

Texas A&M gives AD Trev Alberts six-year extension

November 23, 2025
CBB weekend winners, losers: The March drama arrives early
NCAA Basketball

CBB weekend winners, losers: The March drama arrives early

November 23, 2025
Career Night by Corey Camper Jr. Leads Nevada to 77-64 Win over UC Santa Barbara
NCAA Basketball

Career Night by Corey Camper Jr. Leads Nevada to 77-64 Win over UC Santa Barbara

November 23, 2025
Top 2027 recruit Bruce Branch III reclassifies to 2026, reshaping early NBA Draft race
NCAA Basketball

Top 2027 recruit Bruce Branch III reclassifies to 2026, reshaping early NBA Draft race

November 22, 2025
Siena’s Albany Cup win shows off strengths and weaknesses
NCAA Basketball

Siena’s Albany Cup win shows off strengths and weaknesses

November 22, 2025
Next Post
Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 12 Shadow Reports, lineup locks and projected scores

Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 12 Shadow Reports, lineup locks and projected scores

Ex-Wake Forest, NBA player Rodney Rogers dies at 54

Ex-Wake Forest, NBA player Rodney Rogers dies at 54

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Jaren Jackson Jr. Calls GAME as Grizzlies Pull Past Rockets

Jaren Jackson Jr. Calls GAME as Grizzlies Pull Past Rockets

January 31, 2025
Forrest scores 94th-minute equaliser as Celtic sign off with a draw

Forrest scores 94th-minute equaliser as Celtic sign off with a draw

May 17, 2025
NHL Rumors: Alex Ovechkin’s Future, and Matthew Tkachuk’s Injury

NHL Rumors: Alex Ovechkin’s Future, and Matthew Tkachuk’s Injury

August 22, 2025
After 5 Straight Finishes, Aaron Kennedy Hoping For UFC Call Next

After 5 Straight Finishes, Aaron Kennedy Hoping For UFC Call Next

August 20, 2025
Kyle Tucker Was Diagnosed With Hairline Hand Fracture In June

Kyle Tucker Was Diagnosed With Hairline Hand Fracture In June

August 21, 2025
Another listless, flat tire of a performance – Dodgers Digest

Another listless, flat tire of a performance – Dodgers Digest

August 21, 2025
Anthony Davis could return to Mavericks’ lineup during upcoming Eastern road trip: Report

Anthony Davis could return to Mavericks’ lineup during upcoming Eastern road trip: Report

28
Avious Griffin Highlights Boxing Insider Promotion’s Card By Stopping Jose Luis Sanchez In 9.

Avious Griffin Highlights Boxing Insider Promotion’s Card By Stopping Jose Luis Sanchez In 9.

1
Premier League clubs head for crunch vote on spend limits and “anchoring”

Premier League clubs head for crunch vote on spend limits and “anchoring”

0
Nike Zoom GT Cut 3 “Christmas” II6580-001

Nike Zoom GT Cut 3 “Christmas” II6580-001

0
Arsenal 4-1 Sp*rs: Eze makes it all work out

Arsenal 4-1 Sp*rs: Eze makes it all work out

0
No. 13 Gonzaga Seeks Statement Win Over No. 11 Alabama in Vegas

No. 13 Gonzaga Seeks Statement Win Over No. 11 Alabama in Vegas

0
Premier League clubs head for crunch vote on spend limits and “anchoring”

Premier League clubs head for crunch vote on spend limits and “anchoring”

November 24, 2025
College Football Playoff, bowl projections after Week 13

College Football Playoff, bowl projections after Week 13

November 24, 2025
Arsenal 4-1 Sp*rs: Eze makes it all work out

Arsenal 4-1 Sp*rs: Eze makes it all work out

November 24, 2025
Kimi Antonelli praises ‘really risky’ Mercedes strategy after Las Vegas Grand Prix ‘redemption’

Kimi Antonelli praises ‘really risky’ Mercedes strategy after Las Vegas Grand Prix ‘redemption’

November 24, 2025
Bucs’ Baker Mayfield exits loss to Rams with left shoulder sprain

Bucs’ Baker Mayfield exits loss to Rams with left shoulder sprain

November 24, 2025
Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups to be arraigned in rigged poker games case

Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups to be arraigned in rigged poker games case

November 24, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn TikTok Pinterest
Got Action

Stay updated with the latest sports news, highlights, and expert analysis at Got Action. From football to basketball, we cover all your favorite sports. Get your daily dose of action now!

CATEGORIES

  • Baseball
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Football
  • Formula 1
  • Golf
  • MLB
  • MMA
  • NBA
  • NCAA Baseball
  • NCAA Basketball
  • NCAA Football
  • NCAA Sport
  • NFL
  • NHL
  • Tennis
  • Uncategorized

SITEMAP

  • About us
  • Advertise with us
  • Submit Press Release
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2025 Got Action.
Got Action is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
Submit Press Release

Copyright © 2025 Got Action.
Got Action is not responsible for the content of external sites.