Gonzaga opens the 2026 NCAA Tournament on Thursday night in Portland, and the No. 14 seed waiting for them has had a season worth knowing about before tipoff.
Kennesaw State arrives as the Conference USA champion, though the road to that title ran through just about everything a basketball program can face in a single year. The Owls lost their leading scorer, preseason C-USA Player of the Year Simeon Cottle, to a federal gambling investigation in January, stumbled to 10-10 in conference play, and
entered their own tournament as a six seed. Then they won three games in three days against three higher seeds and cut down the nets.
That’s how a 21-13 team from Kennesaw, Georgia ends up as the No. 14 seed in the West Region, facing a Gonzaga squad that comes in at 30-3, WCC regular season and tournament champions, on Thursday night at 7:00 PM PST on TBS. It’s the first meeting between these two programs.
Gonzaga comes in riding the momentum of a WCC Tournament championship, capped by a six-three performance from Mario Saint-Supéry against Santa Clara in the title game. Graham Ike, who was named Third Team All-American earlier this week, now leads a team that has had some time to rest and get healthy after their annual trip to Vegas. Braden Huff remains out with a bum knee, but the Bulldogs that show up in Portland on Thursday night should be as close to full strength as they’ve been in months.
And that’s a dangerous thing for the Kennesaw State Owls.
Meet the Owls
Coach Antoine Pettway spent 15 years on Nate Oats’ staff at Alabama before taking the Kennesaw State job in 2023, and he brought the entire playbook with him. The Owls play at the 19th fastest adjusted tempo in the country according to KenPom, they crash the offensive glass at the 39th best rate in Division I, and they draw more free throws than almost anyone in the sport, averaging 27 attempts per game, which ranks second nationally. The whole philosophy is built around relentlessness: push before the defense is set, attack the rim, live at the line, and keep coming. When it’s working, it can be genuinely difficult to slow down.
RJ Johnson is the engine of it right now. The 6-foot-4 junior guard took over the starting lineup after Cottle’s suspension in January and has since averaged 18.2 points, 5.1 assists, and shot 42.4% from three over the final 17 games of the season, numbers that would make him a featured player on most tournament rosters. Frankquon Sherman does the dirty work up front, pulling down 8.4 rebounds a night and providing the kind of physical interior presence that has given more polished teams problems all year.
Freshman Amir Taylor came on late in the season and brings length and shot-blocking off the bench at 6-foot-9. And then there’s the conference tournament, where a different player led the team in scoring in each of the last five games, including reserve guard Jaden Harris coming off the bench for 18 points and four threes in the championship win over Louisiana Tech.
And there is something else worth understanding about this program, something that doesn’t show up in a box score. Pettway took over after the death of Amir Abdur-Rahim, the coach who built Kennesaw State into a program capable of going dancing in the first place. Abdur-Rahim passed away in 2024 at 43 years old, and the weight of that tragic loss has been with this program all season. After winning the C-USA championship last weekend, Pettway stood at the podium and said simply: “I’m just standing on the shoulders of that giant.” That is the kind of thing that gets a team through a season of turmoil, a 10-10 conference record, and three straight elimination games. This is a team playing for something bigger than basketball right now.
Now, none of this is to say the matchup doesn’t favor the Zags considerably. It does. Kennesaw State’s non-conference schedule was soft, their only tests against high-major programs ended in losses, and the size and depth differential in this game is significant. But Gonzaga fans have watched a 10-seed named Steph Curry bury them in the opening round before. The bracket line next to an opponent’s name is never the whole story in March.
Keys to the Game
Key #1: Feed the Post
Graham Ike should have been a Second Team All-American. The dude is averaging 19.7 points on 57.3% shooting, has 14 double-doubles on the season, and has scored 35, 34, and 30 points in three separate WCC games down the stretch. He is playing the best basketball of his career, and with this being his final NCAA Tournament, the moment is squarely his.
Undoubtedly, he’s exactly who Kennesaw State is preparing for. Opposing coaches have thrown every conceivable scheme at him this year, doubles, early traps, switching guards onto him at the point of catch. None of it has worked for long. He reads the defense quickly enough to make the right play before the help arrives, and at this point in the season, that feel is as sharp as it’s ever been.
Kennesaw State has no realistic answer for him inside. Frankquon Sherman is their best option at 6-foot-7, a hard-nosed player but undersized for this assignment. Their defensive rebounding rate sits at 214th nationally, which means every Ike miss in the post is a live ball. Get him the ball early, let the defense’s response dictate what happens next, and don’t drift into early perimeter possessions that let KSU organize. The Zags average 18.3 assists per game and rank 4th nationally in assist-to-turnover ratio, and that ball movement is most effective when it originates from inside pressure rather than outside it. Establish Ike first. Everything else opens from there.
Key #2: Protect the Ball
Kennesaw State plays at the 19th fastest adjusted tempo in the country and they don’t need half-court sets to hurt you. They need chaos, and they generate most of it in the first few seconds off live-ball turnovers and offensive rebounds, pushing before a defense can organize. Every errant pass or lazy dribble in the backcourt is potentially two points the other way before Gonzaga even has a chance to get set.
The Zags turn it over just 9.7 times a game, which ranks among the best in the country, and that number has to stay low on Thursday. The specific answer likely involves one of the backcourt configurations Few has been rotating through lately, with Braeden Smith, Mario Saint-Supéry, and Jalen Warley all seeing ball-handling duties at various points. Smith’s value in this game is obvious: elite vision, low turnovers, and the ability to find Saint-Supéry and Adam Miller in the spots where they’ve been doing the most damage from outside. But keeping Warley in the offensive backcourt more than usual could be equally important for a different reason. At 6-foot-7 with good hands, Warley is a far better option than Smith for tracking down a streaking KSU guard in transition. Let Smith run the offense and find our shooters. Let Warley be the safety valve when the Owls try to push.
Key #3: No Dumb Fouls
This is the oldest blueprint for beating Gonzaga in March. Get the bigs in foul trouble early and watch the offensive and defensive infrastructure start to crack. Ike sitting with two fouls before halftime is a completely different game for the Zags and it’s one the Owls would be more than happy to try their hand at. The entire offensive structure, the post entry, the kick-outs, the second-chance opportunities, all of it gets compromised the moment Ike has to start playing cautious. And Kennesaw State is specifically built to hunt exactly that, drawing 27 free-throw attempts a night, second in the country, with an entire offensive system designed to get into bodies and force contact on every single possession.
Grant-Foster and Warley need to be disciplined too, but Ike is the name that matters most here. He absorbs contact on the offensive end all night and occasionally picks up fouls on the defensive end that are entirely avoidable. The Owls are going to drive, and drive again, and keep driving until someone reaches. Stay vertical at the rim. Don’t take bad angles trying to draw charges. Trust the length and let KSU try to finish through a straight-up contest rather than handing them a trip to the line and a potential three-point play. Giving up a hard-earned bucket is survivable. Watching Ike sit in the chair at the under-eight timeout with three fouls is not.
Key #4: Make Them Pay Off the Ball
Kennesaw State is going to game plan for Graham Ike. They have to. And one of the best ways to slow down Ike is to bottle up our point guards and deny entry passes at the point of attack. Which means guys like Emmanuel Innocenti, Davis Fogle, and Tyon Grant-Foster are going to find themselves with more space than they’re used to seeing off ball against a mid-major defense that hasn’t faced this kind of wing movement all season. When KSU collapses on the post entry, those are the guys sliding into the gaps, relocating to the corners, and presenting the kick-out decisions that make Few’s system so difficult to guard from start to finish.
The Owls are built to pressure and scramble, which means their rotations close out hard and fast. That’s exactly the situation where a patient wing who holds his spot and catches in rhythm can do real damage. Innocenti has spent the year drawing Gonzaga’s toughest defensive assignments and knows how to operate in tight spaces off the ball. Fogle finds the soft spots in a collapsing defense and converts the quiet looks that don’t make highlights but absolutely show up in the final score. Miller stretches the floor and forces KSU to respect the corner. And Grant-Foster, at 6-foot-7 with the athleticism to attack a closeout off the catch, is a matchup problem for any mid-major wing asked to recover and contest at that size and speed. Feed Ike, let the defense react, and let those four punish the rotation.
Final Thoughts
Sixteen straight first-round wins is a remarkable thing. It is also, as any Zag fan old enough to remember a Davidson guard named Steph Curry will tell you, exactly the kind of number that makes March feel dangerous.
That’s not pessimism. That’s just what this month does to you after thirty years of watching basketball. Every team in this field thinks they can win. Kennesaw State has spent an entire season proving they can survive anything, and they are not here to simply fill out the bracket.
But this Gonzaga team is good. Really good. A top ten defense, a Third Team All-American in the final tournament of his career, and a supporting cast of wings and guards that Few has been quietly sharpening all season for exactly this moment.
It’s March. The bracket is set. The Bulldogs are in Portland, healthy, rested, and playing the best basketball they’ve played all year. After everything this season has asked of these dudes, the moment they’ve been building toward for the last year is finally here. The kind of basketball where every possession has weight, every stop feels earned, and none of the regular season noise matters anymore.
It’s here. Let’s go, Zags.













