Even though Bennett Stirtz was enduring an off shooting night, Florida still knew Iowa’s leading scorer was a threat. So with the defending-champion Gators holding a 72-70 lead with 8.9 seconds left in their second-round NCAA Tournament matchup Sunday, they didn’t want Stirtz to beat them with a three.
He didn’t — but he beat them with an assist on the 3-pointer to win the game.
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Stirtz took an inbounds pass, raced up the right side of the court, and as two Florida defenders converged on him, he slipped a bounce pass to a wide open Alvaro Folgueiras, who took a step behind the 3-point line in the corner and sank a dagger that sent the top-seeded Gators home early. They’re the first No. 1 seed to fall in this year’s NCAA Tournament, and No. 9-seeded Iowa heads to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1999.
ARE. YOU. JOKING.
IOWA LEADS. THIS IS MARCH. #MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/sNDHTqaGj1
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 23, 2026
Folgueiras, a 6-foot-10 junior from Spain, was ready for the moment, and told Stirtz as much before the play.
“This dude came up to me,” Stirtz said in the postgame press conference, referring to Folgueiras, “and he’s like, ‘I’m going to be ready and I’m going to make it.’ That’s what he actually did.”
Stirtz was then asked where his confidence in Folgueiras comes from, and he said a bond from the team hanging out together so much over the past year.
“We’re unselfish, too,” he said. “So we like seeing other people succeed more than ourselves. That’s what also makes it so special.”
Folgueiras finished the game with 14 points, second on the team behind Tavion Banks’ 20. Stirtz, meanwhile, managed 13 points despite missing all nine of this 3-point attempts. He connected on three deep balls in Iowa’s first-round win over Clemson, but still only shot 23.5% from the field in that game, finishing with 16 points.
Bennett Stirtz gets his first bucket from deep to fall 😮💨#MarchMadness @IowaHoops pic.twitter.com/BLe4Jv30Zl
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 20, 2026
Those numbers are down from Stirtz’s season average of 19.7 points on 47.8% shooting, but that’s what can happen when opponents devise game plans to specifically stop you. It’s a credit to the Hawkeyes’ depth that they gutted out two wins despite Stirtz being held mostly in check. And Stirtz’s five assists on Sunday show he’s still able to contribute, while he once again played all 40 minutes of the game.
Stirtz said afterward that Sunday’s game was the biggest of his career considering the stakes involved, but acknowledged that the next game will be bigger. Iowa will face No. 4 seed Nebraska on Thursday in the Sweet 16, the first such appearance for the Cornhuskers. As Big Ten rivals, Iowa and Nebraska have already squared off twice this season, with the Hawkeyes pulling out a 57-52 win at home Feb. 17 (when Stirtz scored 25), and the Cornhuskers defending their home court in an 84-75 overtime win March 8.
Stirtz isn’t as much of an unknown as he was last year in the NCAA Tournament, when he and head coach Ben McCollum — whom Stirtz followed to Iowa — led 11th-seeded Drake to a first-round upset of Missouri, followed by a second-round loss to Texas Tech. Stirtz scored 21 points in each of those games, drawing national attention.
And the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16 is a long way from where Stirtz began his college career, at Division-II Northwest Missouri State, where McCollum coached at the time. But they’ve risen the ranks together and Stirtz is now an All-Big Ten second teamer and projected first-round NBA Draft pick.
McCollum was one of the few coaches who recruited Stirtz coming out of Liberty (Mo.) High School, where Stirtz was coached by his father, Roger. But Stirtz was thrilled to get an offer from a program coming off three straight D-II national championships.
“It was pretty simple, and luckily, it was simple,” Bennett told Sports Spectrum for a Summer 2025 magazine feature. “I didn’t really have many offers. If I had other offers, I probably wouldn’t have gone and played for Coach Mac, to be honest. God worked it out that way, and He obviously has a plan.”
Only God satisfies.
To learn how @bennett_stirtz went from a Division II unknown to a March Madness star, check out his feature in our latest magazine!https://t.co/QnbAc5bIUr pic.twitter.com/Jf6qdDUwE8
— Sports Spectrum (@Sports_Spectrum) August 15, 2025
Taking time to discern God’s plan and develop a relationship with Him truly began in college for Stirtz.
“That’s really where my faith and my relationship with Jesus just started to strengthen because I went to Him every day,” he told Sports Spectrum. “In high school, to be honest, I didn’t really do that. I just started getting in the Word every day.”
Following his strong junior year at Drake, Stirtz said he turned down “a lot of money” from other programs in the transfer portal because he wanted to stay with McCollum.
“Money is never going to satisfy you,” he told Sports Spectrum. “Fame will never satisfy you. Nothing in this world is going to satisfy you except for God.”
Being grounded through his faith is what helps Stirtz — who calls himself a “Christ follower” on X and Instagram — deal with the fame and recognition coming his way. He aims to deflect the glory to his Heavenly Father, as he did Sunday when interviewed on the court after the game.
“Win or lose, give glory to God,” he told TNT Sports. “He gave me a platform and I just want to use it for Him.”
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“That’s one of the reasons why — and probably the biggest reason why — I play basketball,” Stirtz told Sports Spectrum last year. “Just having the platform and using the platform in the right way to give the glory to Him.”
Stirtz and Iowa will tip off against Nebraska at 7:30 p.m. ET Thursday in Houston.
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