Emmanuel Innocenti. E-Man. The Italian Stallion. A dude seemingly assembled from equal parts grit, hustle, and sheer will is packing his bags and leaving Spokane after two seasons of doing everything the hard way and making it look easy. He may be the best on-ball defender to ever suit up for the Bulldogs, and he’s also my pick for the best Zag ever to go by “Manny” — and yes, that’s a two-man list, and yes, Arop is the other one.
One year of eligibility remaining. His best season to date in the books.
39 minutes logged against Texas with the season on the line, doing what he always did and doing it better than anyone else on the floor: making key stops. And now he’s gone.
And it sucks. But like all things Innocenti-related, there’s a lot more to this story than meets the eye.
What the Box Score Won’t Tell You
This past season, Innocenti managed just 6 points a game. 3.8 rebounds. 1.7 assists. Numbers that get a guy overlooked in box scores and largely ignored in portal conversations. But anyone who watched this team intently knew exactly what they were watching. He was the guy Few trusted to neutralize the other team’s best player every single night, the connective tissue on a defense that ranked 12th in the country in adjusted efficiency, the one whose role kept expanding and whose minutes kept creeping up for two seasons because there simply wasn’t anyone else who could do what he did.
Losing him hurts. Jalen Warley’s done. Tyon Grant-Foster’s done. Adam Miller’s done. Braeden Smith is done. Graham Ike’s done. Six guys central to what the 25-26 squad was, gone in one fell sweep along with Steele Venters, Cade Orness, and Ismaila Diagne. The turnover in college basketball this offseason is unprecedented, but Innocenti’s departure stings most, and not because he was the best player on this team, but because he’s the hardest one to replace. This year’s transfer portal is already full of off-ball bucket getters and downhill slashers, but guys who chase ball-handlers for thirty seconds on every possession, who can guard one through four and actually take pride in doing so simply don’t come around that often.
From Petit Badien to the Kennel
To understand why losing him hurts the way it does, you have to understand a bit about where Innocenti came from. Born in Petit Badien, Ivory Coast, he moved to Italy at five with his father, spent two years in Senegal around age ten, then settled back in Italy once more, eventually landing in Bergamo and making his way to Rome, where he spent four years playing for Stella Azzurra Roma, one of the country’s premier youth academies.
From there, though, Innocenti packed up once again and moved to Stephenville, Texas, alone, to play his first season of college basketball at Tarleton State. He learned English (his third language) on the fly, averaged 6.6 points, 6.4 rebounds, and 1.6 steals per game as a freshman, and worked his way onto the WAC All-Defensive and All-Freshman teams in the process.
Meanwhile, Gonzaga was coming off a Sweet 16 loss and were sorely in need of some physicality and defensive stopping power, and Innocenti had that in spades. mark Few and co. didn’t need much convincing. He committed in May of 2024, packed his bags yet again, and headed northwest; his fourth country, his third basketball home, and the place where the whole improbable journey finally started gaining the national attention his efforts warranted.
An Absolute Dog…
It’s easy to forget that Innocenti was the primary catalyst that pulled Gonzaga out of their most alarming stretch of 2024-25, a mid-season nosedive that saw the Zags surrender 200 combined points in back-to-back losses to Oregon State and Santa Clara. The Santa Clara defeat was a 103-99 home loss that set the all-time record for points allowed inside the McCarthey Athletic Center. In response, Few blew up the starting lineup. In came Innocenti, a guy who’d been averaging a little over 12 minutes a night off the bench. With Innocenti now holding down the defensive side of things Gonzaga held their next two opponents to 61 points apiece and never looked back.
The problem for opposing offenses was never just that he was long and athletic, but that he was relentless, navigating screens, understanding angles, switching and hedging at exactly the right spots, guarding one through four without the structure collapsing around him. A physical presence on the wing the program simply hadn’t had in years, maybe ever.
As we know, last year’s team fell to Houston in the second round of the NCAA tourney, and after much offseason speculation about what role Innocenti would ultimately play in the upcoming season with Jalen Warley, Tyon Grant-Foster, Davis Fogle, and Steele Venters all holding legitimate claims to minutes on the wing, Innocenti arrived as a starter and played like one. Twenty-nine starts, 24.3 minutes per game, 209 points, 133 rebounds, 61 assists, 36 steals, anchoring a top-15 defense through some brutal stretches of uneven offensive play. When Braden Huff went down and Warley picked up a quad contusion late in the year, Innocenti expanded into the void. Over the final 11 games of the season he averaged 33.7 minutes, 8.3 points, 5.6 rebounds, 2.5 assists, and 1.5 steals a night. Again, the numbers might not leap off the page, but Gonzaga doesn’t finish the season with just four losses to its name without the guts and hustle of Emmanuel Innocenti.
Few deployed him on the opponent’s most dangerous perimeter player almost every night. Oklahoma’s Nijel Pack and Xzayvier Brown, neutralized. San Francisco’s Malik Thomas, contained. Santa Clara’s Christian Hammond held to a quiet night in the WCC Tournament championship despite the Broncos nearly stealing the game. The one glaring exception came at Portland in February, when Innocenti logged just 14 minutes and Pilots freshman Joel Foxwell carved the Zags up for 27 points. Few corrected the error immediately, and the very next game against Oregon State, Innocenti played 37 minutes and the defense looked like itself again.
Innocenti’s offensive limitations were legit, however. 28.4% from three, 60.6% from the line, and Few did what he could to scheme carefully around these limitations. But Innocenti had genuinely good mechanics and a smooth release, and occasionally it all came together. He hit five threes against Maryland at the Players Era Festival, 15 points in a 100-61 blowout that made the shooting concerns look briefly overblown.
In February he put together the two best back-to-back road performances of any Zag not named Graham Ike all season, scoring sixteen points and grabbing five offensive rebounds at Santa Clara on the 14th, then notching 12 points and a team-high eight rebounds (plus four steals) at San Francisco four days later. Ike’s offensive firepower stole the headlines, but those two road wins belonged to Innocenti as much as anyone on the floor.
Decision to Leave
Emmanuel Innocenti gave his heart, soul, and considerable supply of guts to Gonzaga basketball for two seasons, and it absolutely sucks to see him in the portal. To some, it may also a little perplexing. What could possibly be a better situation for a guy like him? A 29-game starter, 30-plus minutes a night, a borderline top-10 program, 31 wins, a conference championship. Walking away from that invites all kinds of speculation — NIL, playing time, fit, behind-the-scenes drama, whatever tea-leaf reading and wild speculation this time of year invites from college basketball fans with a sports-shaped hole to fill. The simple truth is we don’t know his reasons for leaving.
But what we can do is look at the context of his arrival to Spokane.
The Ivory Coast Emmaneul Innocenti was born into in 2003 was already a country in dire crisis. A civil war broke out in 2002, splitting the country in two for nearly a decade, displacing millions, killing thousands, gutting institutions and infrastructure. A second crisis followed a disputed 2010 national election. More violence, more displacement. The damage has been generational. Nearly 40 percent of the population still lives below the national poverty line. More than 40 percent are food insecure. Average life expectancy is fewer than 60 years. Per capita income sits around $2,300 a year nationally, which is itself a figure skewed sharply upward by the incomes earned in the former capital of Abidjan. Outside the major cities, the picture is even grimmer.
Earlier this year, Innocenti posted a video on his Instagram page from his first visit back to the Ivory Coast since he was a child. It’s a short but deeply moving clip of him tightly embracing his mother in a narrow corridor of a modest home, both of them clinging to one another, visibly overtaken by the emotion of the moment. The caption: “It’s been 15 years Mom, and seeing you again was the best feeling ever. Thank you for all the sacrifices you’ve done and thank you for not making me miss your love even from a distance. You have always been my role model and I am proud to be your son. Like we always say, I love you so much my twin.”
Fifteen years away from his family.
Emmanuel Innocenti is now 22 years old and has one year of eligibility remaining. The bulk of his family remains in Petit Badien. A meaningful NIL contract wherever he lands next wouldn’t just be money in a college athlete’s pocket. In this context it’s potentially life-changing for an entire family in a country where most people get by on a few dollars a day. Gonzaga’s NIL warchest cannot compete with what’s avaialble at most high-major programs who would be thrilled to welcome a guy like Innocenti into the fold. And I’m not suggesting that money is why Emmanuel Innocenti is leaving Gonzaga, but I will ask: if you were in his position, what would you do?
The Hard Truth
The Zags cannot and will not replace Innocenti. The defensive firepower and IQ that he played with simply doesn’t exist in the portal because it barely existed anywhere in college basketball to begin with. The on-ball defender who can guard one through four while maintaining the structural integrity of the entire defensive perimeter through timing and physicality alone while neutralizing the other team’s best player night after night and still occasionally burying a game-changing outside shot… that’s not a guy you just happen upon in April.
But if you zoom out a bit, Innocenti’s departure is not as tragic as it may seem. A kid born in a country at war, raised across three continents, who didn’t speak a word of English until he was eighteen, somehow ended up in Spokane and spent two years being exactly what this program needed. He earned a starting job nobody handed him, made Academic All-WCC, and gave everything he had to give every single night without complaint, without a highlight reel, without any of the recognition that kind of work deserves. Zag fans who were paying attention knew what they were watching. Mark Few certainly knew. The biggest shame of his departure is that the rest of the college basketball world never caught on to how special a player Innocenti truly is.
And it stings to lose him, yes. I can’t recall a Zag departure that has hurt more than this one, in fact. But if this is the right move for Innocenti and the people he loves, there isn’t a Zag fan alive who should feel anything but grateful for the two years he gave this program. The dirty work, the unglamorous hustle play, the stopping power, the will to win by doing all the little things so many other guys aren’t willing to do. That’s Innocenti. And that’s a lot to root for wherever he ends up.











