Portland just authored the defining result of its season — and one of the NCAA year’s loudest upsets.
On Feb. 5, 2026, the Pilots (10-14) knocked off Gonzaga (22-1) 87-80 in a game that flips the West Coast picture on its head, puncturing a Bulldogs run that came in on a five-game win streak and extending Portland’s own uneven stretch (LLLWL) with a statement victory.
What happened
Portland won the game on the only number that ultimately matters: 87 points against a Gonzaga group that had been nearly untouchable all season. The Pilots didn’t need overtime, and they didn’t need a perfect month to justify it — they needed one night where the execution held and the pressure landed.
Gonzaga’s 80 points were enough to win most nights, especially for a team that arrived at 22-1 and in peak form (WWWWW). Portland simply outpaced it, turning the matchup into a make-plays finish where the underdog didn’t blink.
Turning point
The separation came in the final push, when Portland created enough scoring margin to keep Gonzaga from turning it into a one-possession game late. In a matchup without overtime, that closing stretch mattered: Portland’s ability to keep scoring — and keep Gonzaga chasing — is what turned a competitive night into an 87-80 upset.
What it means going forward
For Portland
At 10-14, Portland’s record still reflects a season of turbulence, but this win changes the conversation. Beating a 22-1 Gonzaga team is the kind of result that can stabilize a locker room and reset expectations for the stretch run. More importantly, it gives the Pilots proof of concept: they can play at a top-tier pace and finish a high-leverage game.
For Gonzaga
Gonzaga’s first loss in a long time arrives with a clear message: even elite teams can’t assume control on the road — not when an opponent is willing to push the scoring ceiling. At 22-1, the Bulldogs remain in a dominant position, but the 87 points conceded will be the number they revisit as they move forward.
Final
Portland 87, Gonzaga 80 — Feb. 5, 2026 (venue: TBD).

