7. Iowa State Cyclones

8. Arizona Wildcats

9. North Carolina Tarheels

10. Baylor Bears

11. Tennessee Volunteers

12. Auburn Tigers

13. Purdue Boilermakers

14. Arkansas Razorbacks

15. Creighton Bluejays

16. Texas A&M Aggies

17. Cincinnati Bearcats

18. Illinois Fighting Illini

19. Indiana Hoosiers

20. Texas Tech Red Raiders

21. Kentucky Wildcats

22. Texas Longhorns

23. Marquette Golden Eagles

24. Kansas State Wildcats

25. Miami Hurricanes

26. Ohio State Buckeyes

27. Xavier Musketeers

28. BYU Cougars

29. Maryland Terps

30. St. John’s Red Storm

31. UCLA Bruins

32. Oregon Ducks

33. Wake Forest Demon Deacons

34. Florida Gators

35. Ole Miss

36. USC Trojans

37. Grand Canyon Lopes

38. Providence Friars

39. Mississippi State Bulldogs

40. Rutgers Scarlet Knights

41. Memphis Tigers

42. McNeese Cowboys

43. Michigan State Spartans

44. Michigan Wolverines

45. VCU Rams

46. Dayton Flyers

47. St Mary’s Gaels

48. Washington Huskies

49. UCF Knights

50. Louisville Cardinals

51. Boise State Broncos

52. Clemson Tigers

53. New Mexico Lobos

54. Arizona State Sun Devils

55. Utah State Aggies

56. Colorado State Rams

57. Seton Hall Pirates

58. SMU Mustangs

59. South Carolina Gamecocks

60. Nevada Wolfpack

61. TCU Horned Frogs

62. Villanova Wildcats

63. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets

64. Saint Louis Billikens

65. Syracuse Orange

66. Nebraska Cornhuskers

67. Pittsburgh Panthers

68. Iowa Hawkeyes

69. NC State Wolfpack

70. Butler Bulldogs

71. Princeton Tigers

72. Virginia Cavaliers

73. Saint Joseph’s Hawks

74. Oklahoma Sooners

75. West Virginia Mountaineers

76. Georgia Bulldogs

77. UAB Blazers

78: Wisconsin Badgers

79. San Diego State Aztecs

80. Missouri Tigers

81. Northwestern Wildcats

82. Loyola Chicago Ramblers

Here’s where our TCH analysts have the Bulldogs ranked:

StevenMaxwellKamCody
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It’s hard to believe, but this year’s Gonzaga squad might be Mark Few’s best chance at a national championship. It’s hard to believe because every season at Gonzaga seems to be championship or bust. Coach Mark Few has never missed the NCAA tournament in 25 years at the helm and the Zags have also made nine straight Sweet 16s. The starting five consists of Ryan Nembhard, who set Gonzaga’s all-time single season assist record. Alongside Nembhard is Nolan Hickman. Hickman shot 33.6% from three during his first two years at Gonzaga while averaging 6.5 points per game. Last year, Hickman shot 41.3% from three and averaged 14 points per game. Hickman’s progression might make him the X factor on this Gonzaga team next year.

The third starter will likely be Michael Ajayi, a 2024 NBA Combine Invite and transfer from Pepperdine. Ajayi, a former JUCO product, is familiar with the West Coast Conference as he played last season at Pepperdine. After transferring from Pierce College, Ajayi led the WCC in scoring last year and put himself on the radar as a legitimate NBA draft prospect. If not Ajayi, it would be Khalif Battle. Starting on February 24th last year, Battle averaged nearly 30 points per game for Eric Musselman’s Arkansas squad last season. Both Ajayi and Battle will be seamless fits into Gonzaga’s high-low ball screen continuity offense. The final two starting spots will go to Graham Ike and Ben Gregg. Ike has potential to become an All-American this season.

Despite going 27-8 last season, last year could have been considered a down year for Gonzaga despite the Sweet 16 appearance and emphatic Round of 32 win over Kansas. Last year’s early season struggles had a lot to do with the lack of depth this Gonzaga team had. They lost Eastern Washington transfer, Steele Venters, before the season even started (it’s worthing noting Venters is out for the second consecutive season for the Zags), while Drew Timme, Julian Strawther, and Rasir Bolton all entered the NBA draft or graduated. Meanwhile, Hunter Sallis and Efton Reid both transferred to Wake Forest in that same offseason. As a result, Gonzaga returned just 34.5% of their minutes and 28.3% of their scoring from the 2022-23 season to last season. As a result, last year’s team had no depth. This year is different.

Not only is Gonzaga testing themselves early by playing in Battle 4 Atlantis, playing UCLA in the Intuit Dome, playing Kentucky in Seattle, and playing UConn in MSG, but the WCC Conference is better than it’s been in years. Aside from Gonzaga, Saint Mary’s, San Francisco, and Santa Clara all have legitimate NCAA Tournament aspirations, and it’s conceivable that this can be a three bid league for the first time since 2021-22. While KenPom has the Zags 9th, they have finished in the top 25 of KenPom every year since 2011. They are so, so consistent, and now just need to accomplish that coveted national championship. As previously stated, this squad has as good of a chance as any. I have been adamant about it all offseason, but Gonzaga is my pick to cut down the nets this upcoming season.


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