Harvey Tyler led Eastern Washington to the NCAA tournament. / Eastern Washington athletics

The axis of college hoops in the Northwest is the 16 miles between Spokane and Cheney.

Eastern Washington University (26-8) earned the Big Sky Conference’s automatic bid with a 69-65 triumph over Montana in Missoula Saturday to join Gonzaga (32-2), the West Coast Conference champions, in the 68-team NCAA Tournament field that will be selected Sunday (CBS, 3 p.m.).

Meanwhile, the state’s largest programs, Washington and Washington State, will sit out the Big Dance. Again.

In Las Vegas Saturday night, Seattle University’s upstart bid for the tourney came crashing down in the Western Athletic Conference title game. Regular-season WAC champion New Mexico State was in charge from start and won 80-61, ending the unlikely shot of the Redhawks (16-15), which won the school’s first postseason games since 1964 Thursday and Friday to get to the final.

In the Pac-12, Arizona won its first Pac-12 tourney title in 13 years with an 80-52 walkover of Oregon, which also is likely to get an at-large bid.

Harvey Tyler, the nation’s leading scorer entering Championship Week, led Eastern with 18 points.

“We’ve worked a long time for this moment right here,” Harvey said. “It’s just nice to come out on top . . . You dream about this moment when you’re a kid. Just to be in that moment, seeing that confetti, it’s like something you watch on TV.”

Eastern will make its second tourney appearance in school history (first was in 2004).

Former University of Washington recruit Martin Breunig led Montana (20-12) with 23 points and 17 rebounds. It was the first time in five Big Sky Conference title matchups with Eastern that the Grizzlies lost.

 

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2 Comments

  1. Congrats to both the Eags and Zags…good luck the rest of the way. And congrats to the Chieftains for reaching the WAC final; hope this is something that will be built on next season.

    FWIW, the Seattle basketball team that did reach an NCAA tournament (for the eleventh year in a row), Seattle Pacific, lost their second-round DII game to Cal Baptist on a buzzer-beater Saturday after beating BYU-Hawaii Friday. The Falcons’ point guard is a 6’4″ guy from Spokane named Riley Stockton (you may have heard of his uncle), who averaged 10 points, 6 rebounds and 4 assists per game while shooting 56 percent from the field (41% on 3-pointers. Oh, and last season, 14 of their 16 players had GPAs of 3.0 or better for a team GPA of 3.6. Sorry for the ramble but I didn’t think SPU should be ignored.

  2. BTW, according to Bleacher Report, Seattle U will host Pepperdine Wednesday night in the first round of the CBI. Hail to the Chieftains!