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Grand Canyon knocks off No. 25 San Diego State 79-73 for its first win over ranked opponent

San Diego St Grand Canyon Basketball lamont butler
Posted at 7:36 AM, Dec 06, 2023
and last updated 2023-12-06 10:36:47-05

PHOENIX (AP) — Ray Harrison stood at the center of the court, searching for an escape route as Grand Canyon's students charged toward him.

No chance.

GCU's “Havocs” had him surrounded and, after one of the biggest wins in program history, Harrison joined in the celebration.

Harrison scored 23 points, Gabe McGlothian had 15 points and 13 rebounds, and Grand Canyon beat No. 25 San Diego State 79-73 on Tuesday night for its first win over a ranked opponent.

“I've never experienced anything like that,” Harrison said. “I was trying to get up out of there, but there was a dude in my face saying, ‘Nope, you’re staying right here.' It was dope.”

The Havocs camped out by the hundreds to see the Antelopes play the reigning national runner-up. San Diego State's return to the AP Top 25 this week after a three-week hiatus only added to the rowdiness in one of college basketball's most unique environments, where students chant, dance and cheer in unison.

The Havocs were treated to a game that started as a defensive struggle and turned into an offensive outburst to start the second half.

The Antelopes (7-1) got hot and didn't stop until late, using a 17-4 run to take a 13-point lead with 4 1/2 minutes left. Grand Canyon kept the Aztecs at bay from there despite not hitting a field goal over the final 4:27 to win its first game in 10 tries against ranked opponents.

Tyon Grant-Foster added 18 points for the Antelopes, off to their best start since joining Division I in 2013-14.

“What an awesome night, from the crowd to the excitement of the game,” Grand Canyon coach Bryce Drew said. “Obviously, being able to beat our first ranked team in our home gym is extra special.”

Jaedon LeDee led San Diego State (7-2) with 24 points and 12 rebounds, but it wasn't enough.

The Aztecs trailed by seven at halftime and made shots early in the second half, but faded during a key stretch as the Antelopes revved the crowd. San Diego State went more than four minutes without a field during Grand Canyon's big run, leaving the Aztecs without enough time to complete a comeback in a hostile environment.

“We fought to the end, but didn't play well enough to win on the road,” San Diego State coach Brian Dutcher said.

San Diego State has been one of the nation's best defensive teams, a hard-nosed identity that took the Aztecs to last season's national championship.

The Antelopes showed they can play a little D, too.

Grand Canyon collapsed in the lane to force difficult shots and the Aztecs missed several open 3s. San Diego State missed 13 of its first 16 shots and went scoreless over the final 2:54 of the first half.

McGlothian scored the final four points of a closing 9-0 run that put Grand Canyon up 35-28.

The teams switched gears to start the second half, trading baskets and leads until GCU went on an 17-4 run to go up 69-56. San Diego made a late push, cutting the lead to five, but it was too late.