torso-droit-1ed125d1-15cc-6a46-94b3-c98430268a39

 

NEWS NOW: He is gone Emmanuel Innocenti is leaving now to….

Gonzaga men's basketball lands Tarleton State transfer Emmanuel Innocenti |  Gonzaga Men's Basketball | swxlocalsports.com

 

A productive offseason in the transfer portal continued Wednesday afternoon for Gonzaga, which landed a commitment from Tarleton State’s Emmanuel Innocenti.

Innocenti, a native of Italy who just finished up his freshman season at Tarleton State, becomes the latest addition to a talented transfer class that already includes Pepperdine’s Michael Ajayi and Arkansas’ Khalif Battle.

The 6-foot-5 forward will have three years of eligibility remaining and would leave Gonzaga with two open scholarships if Ajayi withdraws his name from the NBA Draft and returns to college.

Emmanuel Innocenti, Basketball Player | Proballers

With six of seven rotation players back from last year’s Sweet 16 team and now three transfer portal additions, Gonzaga’s composed a roster that many analysts expect to be one of the nation’s most talented in 2024-25.

The addition of Innocenti, a young forward who earned WAC All-Freshman and All-Defensive honors last season, further affirms why the Zags could also have one of the deeper rosters in college basketball.

Innocenti, who was raised in Bergamo, Italy, averaged 6.6 points, 6.4 rebounds and 2.9 rebounds per game for a Tarleton State team that posted an overall record of 25-10, finished second in the WAC regular-season standings and advanced to the semifinal round of the postseason College Insiders Tournament (CIT).

He finished the season shooting 40% from the field, 30% from the 3-point line and 80% from the free throw line.

Innocenti, the only freshman on a WAC All-Defensive team that also featured four seniors, ranked fifth in the conference averaging 1.6 steals per game – a number that would’ve led Gonzaga’s roster in 2023-24, slightly edging Anton Watson (1.5 spg).

Innocenti started in 33 of 35 games for Tarleton State, playing 31.7 minutes per game and registering 1,109 minutes last season – the most for a freshman in Tarleton State’s Division I era.

He scored a season-high 19 points, going 7 of 12 from the field during a WAC regular-season game against Texas-Arlington, and posted a season-high 13 rebounds on two occasions during nonconference play.

Prior to Tarleton State, Innocenti played four seasons for Stella Azzurra Roma in Rome, scoring in double figures on three occasions during his last season with the Italian club. Innocenti also has experience at the international level, representing his county at the U18 FIBA European Championships in 2022. He averaged 11.1 points and 7.1 rebounds while averaging 25.6 minutes in seven games at the competition.

Innocenti was born in the Ivory Coast before moving to Italy at the age of 5 and briefly relocating to Senegal when he was 10 years old, according to a story from Euroleaguebasketball.net.

The 19-year-old will call Spokane home for at least the 2024-25 season, joining a Gonzaga team that’s been projected in the top-10 of most way-too-early college basketball polls and rankings.

The Bulldogs should be particularly deep at the wing/forward positions, returning starter Ben Gregg along with Dusty Stromer, who alternated between the shooting guard and small forward positions during his freshman season.

GU also returns little-used reserve Jun Seok Yeo and Steele Venters, the former Eastern Washington sharpshooter who missed the 2023-24 season with an ACL injury. Ajayi, the WCC’s top scorer last year with Pepperdine, is also expected to compete for a starting role next year if he returns to school. The Kent native is competing this week at the NBA Draft Combine in Chicago.

Mark Few and his staff have reportedly been in contact with Braeden Smith, another talented mid-major transfer who was the Patriot League Player of the Year last season at Colgate. Smith, a Seattle native, is reportedly leaning toward Gonzaga, according to The Spokesman-Review’s Vince Grippi, but is also planning visits to Davidson, Washington and Cal, per The Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman.

Local journalism is essential.

Give directly to The Spokesman-Review’s Northwest Passages community forums series — which helps to offset the costs of several reporter and editor positions at the newspaper — by using the easy options below. Gifts processed in this system are not tax deductible, but are predominately used to help meet the local financial requirements needed to receive national matching-grant funds.

Meet Our Journalists
Emma Epperly
Emma Epperly
Emma Epperly does a lot of everything. As a general assignment reporter, she is called on to cover car accidents, interview movie stars, pitch in on breaking news and take on whatever story the day presents her with. She has come to appreciate the unexpected.

Follow along with the Zags
Subscribe to our Gonzaga Basketball newsletter to stay up with the latest news.

Sign up

TOP STORIES INGONZAGA BASKETBALL
WCC expansion: What Grand Canyon and Seattle mean for the conference — and what they say about Gonzaga’s future
WCC expansion: What Grand Canyon and Seattle mean for the conference — and what they say about Gonzaga’s future
Colgate transfer guard Braeden Smith planning Gonzaga visit
Injury limits Gonzaga’s Anton Watson at G League Camp; Washington State’s Isaac Jones nabs NBA Combine invite
Dave Boling: How WCC’s addition of Grand Canyon, Seattle U impacts Gonzaga’s decision to remain in conference

SPONSOREDCONTENT
Dani Rice, Asotin, was partially paralyzed in a routine medical procedure. She says she’s grateful WA Cares will pay for home care when she needs help. (Courtesy WA Cares)
More than 65,000 Spokane-area workers soon will begin building WA Cares benefits
In every community across Washington, families are facing the challenge of accessing and affording long-term care.Follow Us

Facebook
Newsletter
Twitter

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *