Spring 2026

Star Dominique Daniels leads Cal Baptist to 1st NCAA Tournament, aims to give ‘all glory to God’

Let the madness begin.

Following a jam-packed weekend of conference tournaments, the bracket for the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament was officially released on Sunday evening. And as fans scramble to dissect every matchup before filling out a bracket, one name to know is Dominique Daniels Jr. of California Baptist University.

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Cal Baptist, a small private Christian university in Riverside, California, is one of two teams making its first-ever appearance in the Big Dance (the other is Queens University in Charlotte), in large part because of Daniels’ heroics in the closing minutes of Saturday’s Western Athletic Conference Tournament.

The No. 2-seeded Lancers found themselves down six against No. 1-seeded Utah Valley in the championship game with two minutes remaining, and Daniels was having an off shooting night at the worst possible time. But suddenly, he hit one 3-pointer at the 1:50 mark and another on the ensuing possession to tie the game at 60. Then Utah Valley drained one of two free throws, putting the ball back in Daniels’ hands with 39.7 seconds left and a chance to win it.

After nearly losing his dribble, Daniels hit a deep 3-pointer from the top of the key to give CBU a 63-61 lead with 14 seconds left. Utah Valley couldn’t equalize on its final possession, and the Lancers’ bench erupted in celebration. Cal Baptist earned a No. 13 seed in the NCAA Tournament and will face No. 4-seeded Kansas in the first round.

Daniels played the entire game and once again led his team in scoring (23 points), afterward being named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament. He has scored more points this year than any CBU player in a single season (741), and he’s fifth this season in scoring among all Division-I players (23.2 points per game).

The diminutive 5-foot-10, 185-pound senior with the heart of a lion helped his team to its best season in the program’s brief Division-I history, winning 25 games. The Lancers only moved to the D-I level in 2018-19 and first became eligible for postseason play in 2022-23.

Few may know about Daniels — yet. And that’s something he’s perfectly fine with. He wants others to know the One who should be glorified.

“It’s all glory to God at the end of the day,” he said, as he often does, after scoring a school-record 47 points in a win against Utah Valley in January. “He’s the reason why I’m able to do what I’m able to do. He put me in this position for a reason, and I just give Him all the praise and all the glory and all the honor at the end of the day.

“I wouldn’t be able to do this without Him. It’s no credit to me. He put the hard work in me, He put the determination in me, so I give all credit to God.”

In addition to frequently giving glory to God after his big performances, Daniels says he also prays before every game. He lists the Bible verse Hebrews 11:1 in his Instagram bio, a verse that reads, “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.”

 

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Daniels may become a nationwide darling in the days ahead as the country learns about one of college basketball’s most dynamic players. But no matter the attention he gets for his play, he knows his basketball ability is nothing but a gift from God.

CBU’s opening-round game against Kansas from Viejas Arena in San Diego is scheduled for 9:45 p.m. ET Friday.

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Former D-II, NAIA powerhouse Cal Baptist moves to Division 1

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