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GCU walked into the Globe knowing it would be a 40-minute fight. It turned out to be exactly that — and just a little more.
Despite 29 points from Makiah Williams and a second-half push that briefly put the game within one possession, GCU fell 70–65 to Wyoming in a bruising Mountain West battle that came down to late free throws and missed opportunities.
Even Start, Different Finishes

The first half felt like two teams trading punches without blinking. Wyoming and GCU went into the break tied at 28, each side struggling to establish rhythm from deep. The Cowboys shot just 5-of-13 from three in the opening half, while GCU countered with a balanced attack led by Williams and Jaden Henley.
But the second half was where the separation quietly formed.
Wyoming outscored GCU 42–37 after halftime, attacking the glass and capitalizing at the free-throw line. The Cowboys finished 14-of-19 from the stripe (73.7%) and earned key attempts in the final minute to ice it.
Williams Carries the Load for GCU
Williams was the most consistent offensive force on the floor. He finished with 29 points on 10-of-19 shooting and knocked down five triples. Time and time again, when the Lopes needed a bucket, it was Williams creating space and delivering.
Henley added 15 points, while Nana Owusu-Anane chipped in nine points and a team-high 12 rebounds. His activity on the glass kept Grand Canyon within striking distance, particularly in the second half when the Lopes trimmed the deficit to three.
But GCU struggled to get consistent secondary scoring. The bench combined for just 2 points — a stark contrast to Wyoming’s 34 bench points, a number that ultimately proved decisive.
Turnovers and Toughness

The numbers tell the story.
GCU shot a respectable 40.7% from the field and 35% from three, but 15 turnovers turned into 17 Wyoming points. Those empty possessions loomed large in a five-point game.
Meanwhile, Wyoming leaned into its physical identity. The Cowboys grabbed 38 total rebounds and repeatedly extended possessions. While the rebounding battle (38–36) was close on paper, Wyoming’s timing on key second-chance moments shifted momentum.
The Closing Stretch for GCU

With under a minute to play, Grand Canyon had a chance.
Williams drilled a three-pointer with three seconds left to cut it to 68–65, but Wyoming calmly stepped to the line and converted the final free throws to seal it. The Lopes never fully recovered from a mid-second-half stretch where the Cowboys built their largest lead.
Grand Canyon actually led for 28:37 of game time compared to Wyoming’s 5:17 — but in conference games, it’s not about how long you lead. It’s about who controls the final two minutes.
Wyoming did.
Grand Canyon now turns its focus forward with lessons to take from a narrow defeat: value possessions, find bench production, and close stronger.
Because in March, games like this aren’t just losses — they’re previews.
Full Photo Gallery courtesy of Grand Canyon University Athletics

