Friday, May 22, 2026
Submit Press Release
Got Action
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
Got Action
No Result
View All Result

Season Recap: Mario Saint-Supery Ran Gonzaga’s Offense His Way, and It Worked

May 22, 2026
in NCAA Basketball
0 0
0
Home NCAA Basketball
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


The 2026-27 season carries more uncertainty than any Gonzaga campaign in recent memory. New conference, new roster, new identity. Eleven players gone. The three players Few is counting on to hold it together are a senior coming off a knee injury, a sophomore wing who spent the first half of last season in garbage time, and a Spanish point guard who had never played a college game before November. That point guard is Mario Saint-Supery, and what he does this year will go a long way toward determining what kind of team Gonzaga actually is.

To understand what Coach Mark Few is asking of him this season, you have to understand what he actually did last year, because the gap between the player who logged eight minutes against Alabama in November and the player who scored 21 in the final WCC Tournament game in March is both dramatic and instructive.

Saint-Supery played all 35 games with 17 starts last season, averaging 8.6 points, 3.8 assists, and 2.8 rebounds in 23 minutes per game on 41% shooting from the field and 40.3% from three. He led the team in assists and three-pointers made, earned a spot on the WCC All-Freshman Team, and by February had effectively won the starting point guard job over Braeden Smith. Smith transferred to Notre Dame in the offseason. Few is doubling down on Saint-Supery and fewer point guards in the country will enter the season with more to prove.

From Shared Minutes to Undisputed Starter

Saint-Supery came to Gonzaga having already played professionally in Spain’s ACB league and represented his country at EuroBasket as the youngest player on the roster since Ricky Rubio. He was definitely skilled and dynamic as a playmaker, the question was whether Few would trust such a young player to run the offense on his own, and when. Braeden Smith started the season at the one after a redshirt year under the tutelage of Ryan Nembhard, and Saint-Supery’s minutes through November and into December were inconsistent, ranging from 8 against Alabama on November 25th to 32 against Maryland the night before. His role was unsettled in ways that reflected a coaching staff still figuring out how to deploy him rather than any obvious deficiency in his game.

Through his first five games he had 20 assists against just seven turnovers. His shooting was another matter: 71.4% against LMU on January 5th, 0% against Seattle two days earlier. The home/away splits are the weirdest part of Mario’s stat-line: 48% shooting and 9.2 points at home, 34.5% and 7.9 on the road. Against more disciplined defenses in hostile environments, the improvisational style that made him exciting in the Kennel exposed real limitations under sustained pressure.

After Braden Huff’s season-ending knee injury on January 14th, the math of what Gonzaga needed from its point guard changed entirely. Smith, who had spent his redshirt year mastering Nembhard’s controlled, system-first approach, was genuinely good at executing within structure, but what he was not built for was the possession that falls apart at the elbow and requires a guard to read three defenders mid-drive, change the angle, and deliver a leaping pass to a cutter before his feet hit the floor. That is not a criticism of Smith. Nembhard didn’t do that either, and Nembhard was outstanding. It’s a description of a style mismatch between a player and the situation his team suddenly found itself in.

Saint-Supery’s minutes expanded steadily after Huff went down; Smith’s contracted in mirror image. By February 15th at SCU, Smith played 7 minutes. By February 19th at SF, he played 2. By season’s end it was clear to all involved who Gonzaga’s primary ballhandler would be moving forward.

Saint-Supery’s 133 assists led the team. His 46 steals were second on the roster. His assist-to-turnover ratio of 2.6 directly refutes the Josh Perkins comparison I made in the Saint-Supery season preview from back in October. Perkins was brilliant and combustible in roughly equal measure. Saint-Supery was eventually a player who could be both brilliant and careful, which is a considerably more useful combination.

The WCC Final against Santa Clara was the undisputed proof of Mario’s value to the Zags. Gonzaga trailed for most of the first half, went down eight, and didn’t take its first lead until thirteen minutes into the second half. Saint-Supery finished with 21 points on 6-of-12 from three, five rebounds, and four assists, leading the team in scoring in the final WCC game the program will ever play.

Saint-Supery finished the year leading Gonzaga in assists and three-pointers made. The 133 assists against 52 turnovers across 35 games, a 2.6 ratio, is the number that best captures what he brought to this team. He averaged 3.8 assists per game while committing just 1.5 turnovers, and his 46 steals were second on the roster.

Gonzaga’s three-point shooting was a concern before the season started and revealed itself as a genuine liability by the end of it. In that context, Saint-Supery’s 40.3% from three on 119 attempts wasn’t just a good individual number, it was load-bearing. He was probably the only player defenses actually had to respect from deep, and his 87.8% from the free throw line also meant defenses couldn’t bank on sending him to the line when he attacked off the bounce.

The backcourt situation heading into 2026-27 is alarmingly thin as of this writing. Gonzaga had been connected to Stetson’s Ethan Copeland (a three-point specialist) and Campbell’s Jeremiah Johnson (a bucket-getter from anywhere). Copeland committed to Virginia Tech. Johnson committed to Tulsa. The search continues. The depth behind Saint-Supery at the point is, right now, nonexistent, and that has real implications for how the season plays out. A player who averaged 23 minutes as a freshman in a shared role is now looking at 30-35 minutes a night with no clear backup if he struggles, gets into foul trouble, or gets hurt.

As a playmaker, Saint-Supery will be asked to run the offense for a team with several new pieces, including incoming transfers Massamba Diop and Isiah Harwell, incoming Spanish G-League Ignite alum Izan Almansa, and a freshman class that will need time to learn Few’s system. As a scorer, with Fogle expected to carry significant offensive load on the wing and Huff projected as the focal point in the frontcourt, Saint-Supery needs to be a consistent third option at minimum, and on nights when Huff, Diop, and Fogle are contained or compromised by foul trouble, potentially more than that.

His 40.3% from three last year gives him the foundation to be that player. In the Pac-12, nearly half his games will be on the road against better competition than the WCC put in front of him. If that 34.5% road shooting number improves, Gonzaga has a genuine point guard. If it doesn’t, opposing defenses will have a blueprint for keeping Gonzaga’s offense one dimensional.

Here’s what a reasonable sophomore stat line looks like for Saint-Supery, based on his freshman numbers and his expanded role: 30-35 minutes a night (unless we significantly fill out the backcourt ASAP), 13-15 points, 5-6 assists, 3 rebounds, shooting somewhere between 43-46% from the field and holding near 40% from three. The assist number is the one to watch. He averaged 3.8 per game in 23 minutes as a freshman. In 30 minutes as the unambiguous starter and primary ball-handler on a thin backcourt, 6 assists per game is a conservative projection.

What will be asked of Mario on the defensive side, however, is significant. Saint-Supery averaged 1.3 steals per game last year, second on the roster, and his size and anticipation make him a genuine disruptor in the passing lanes. But his road steal numbers, 0.9 per game compared to 1.7 at home, tell the same story his shooting split does. The gambling tendencies that produce highlights in the Kennel get punished more consistently by organized offenses on the road. In the Pac-12, where he will face bigger, better, and more experienced guards more consistently than he did in the WCC, cleaning that up is not optional.

Before the season started, Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Wasserman projected Saint-Supery as the 34th pick in the 2026 draft. As we know, he elected to stay in Spokane. What would change that calculus is a sophomore season where the shooting volume increases without the completion percentage tanking, the scoring average climbs into the mid-teens, and he demonstrates he can run an offense against Pac-12 competition without becoming a defensive liability on the perimeter.

When you consider that Masamba Diop is a projected 2027 lottery pick, that incoming Houston transfer Isiah Harwell is a McDonald’s All-American who has already declared for the NBA Draft once, and that Izan Almansa is a former G League Ignite player who spent last summer in NBA Summer League with the Philadelphia 76ers, the incoming Gonzaga roster may be the most collectively NBA-ready group Mark Few has assembled in years. It will also be one of its youngest and least experienced. At the center of all the hype and all the hesitation stands Mario Saint-Supery.



Source link

Tags: GonzagasMariooffenseranRecapSaintSuperyseasonworked
Previous Post

2026 CJ Cup Byron Nelson Friday TV coverage: Watch Round 2

Next Post

Ronda Rousey’s Former Rival Miesha Tate Reflects On Their Iconic Feud

Related Posts

Dan Hurley, UConn get good news in transfer portal steal
NCAA Basketball

Dan Hurley, UConn get good news in transfer portal steal

May 21, 2026
Gonzaga to Open Players Era Against Kansas State
NCAA Basketball

Gonzaga to Open Players Era Against Kansas State

May 21, 2026
The Players Era 2026 brackets announced, headlined by Kansas, Florida and Houston
NCAA Basketball

The Players Era 2026 brackets announced, headlined by Kansas, Florida and Houston

May 21, 2026
Why Bill Self let Kansas’ starters walk to rebuild around the No. 1 recruit
NCAA Basketball

Why Bill Self let Kansas’ starters walk to rebuild around the No. 1 recruit

May 21, 2026
Gonzaga Intertwined With New Multi-Team Event
NCAA Basketball

Gonzaga Intertwined With New Multi-Team Event

May 20, 2026
MAAC Check-In: Exclusive Offseason Q&A with Fairfield head coach Chris Casey
NCAA Basketball

MAAC Check-In: Exclusive Offseason Q&A with Fairfield head coach Chris Casey

May 20, 2026
Next Post
Ronda Rousey’s Former Rival Miesha Tate Reflects On Their Iconic Feud

Ronda Rousey's Former Rival Miesha Tate Reflects On Their Iconic Feud

Manchester United make progress in Ederson pursuit

Manchester United make progress in Ederson pursuit

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Leeds v Arsenal – live blog

Leeds v Arsenal – live blog

January 31, 2026
Jayson Tatum’s dagger helps Celtics edge 76ers in Game 3 thriller, seize series momentum

Jayson Tatum’s dagger helps Celtics edge 76ers in Game 3 thriller, seize series momentum

April 25, 2026
PSG Champions League fixtures, schedule and squad 2025/26

PSG Champions League fixtures, schedule and squad 2025/26

April 22, 2026
A Full Breakdown of the Pay Structure

A Full Breakdown of the Pay Structure

April 27, 2026
Aston Villa Europa League fixtures, schedule, squad 2025/26

Aston Villa Europa League fixtures, schedule, squad 2025/26

April 6, 2026
2026 NBA mock draft: Projecting all 30 first-round picks

2026 NBA mock draft: Projecting all 30 first-round picks

November 25, 2025
Avious Griffin Highlights Boxing Insider Promotion’s Card By Stopping Jose Luis Sanchez In 9.

Avious Griffin Highlights Boxing Insider Promotion’s Card By Stopping Jose Luis Sanchez In 9.

175
Anthony Davis could return to Mavericks’ lineup during upcoming Eastern road trip: Report

Anthony Davis could return to Mavericks’ lineup during upcoming Eastern road trip: Report

59
The Jordan Triangle Steps In “Barely Volt”

The Jordan Triangle Steps In “Barely Volt”

0
Manchester United make progress in Ederson pursuit

Manchester United make progress in Ederson pursuit

0
The Bounce: The Knicks have won 9 in a row. What’s it mean for their title hopes?

The Bounce: The Knicks have won 9 in a row. What’s it mean for their title hopes?

0
Season Recap: Mario Saint-Supery Ran Gonzaga’s Offense His Way, and It Worked

Season Recap: Mario Saint-Supery Ran Gonzaga’s Offense His Way, and It Worked

0
‘Push us in the right direction’ – Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri optimistic as McLaren bring more upgrades for 2026 Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix

‘Push us in the right direction’ – Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri optimistic as McLaren bring more upgrades for 2026 Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix

May 22, 2026
What if the Edmonton Oilers Offer Sheeted Pavel Dorofeyev?

What if the Edmonton Oilers Offer Sheeted Pavel Dorofeyev?

May 22, 2026
Was Steve Sarkisian Out of Line? Heartland College Sports – An Independent Big 12 Today Blog | College Football News

Was Steve Sarkisian Out of Line? Heartland College Sports – An Independent Big 12 Today Blog | College Football News

May 22, 2026
The Jordan Triangle Steps In “Barely Volt”

The Jordan Triangle Steps In “Barely Volt”

May 22, 2026
The Bounce: The Knicks have won 9 in a row. What’s it mean for their title hopes?

The Bounce: The Knicks have won 9 in a row. What’s it mean for their title hopes?

May 22, 2026
Three coaches on the hot seat from the Group of Six

Three coaches on the hot seat from the Group of Six

May 22, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn TikTok Pinterest
Got Action

Stay updated with the latest sports news, highlights, and expert analysis at Got Action. From football to basketball, we cover all your favorite sports. Get your daily dose of action now!

CATEGORIES

  • Baseball
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Football
  • Formula 1
  • Golf
  • MLB
  • MMA
  • NBA
  • NCAA Baseball
  • NCAA Basketball
  • NCAA Football
  • NCAA Sport
  • NFL
  • NHL
  • Tennis
  • Uncategorized

SITEMAP

  • About us
  • Advertise with us
  • Submit Press Release
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2025 Got Action.
Got Action is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
Submit Press Release

Copyright © 2025 Got Action.
Got Action is not responsible for the content of external sites.