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BYU Role Players Steal Spotlight Against | Analysis by Brian Moineau
Don’t let the star steal the story: BYU’s unsung pieces that made the Iowa State upset possible There are nights when a singular performance steals the headlin…

Don’t let the star steal the story: BYU’s unsung pieces that made the Iowa State upset possible

There are nights when a singular performance steals the headlines — and rightfully so. AJ Dybantsa’s near triple‑double (29 points, 10 rebounds, 9 assists) in BYU’s 79–69 upset of No. 6 Iowa State on February 21, 2026, was one of those nights. But if you watched the whole game, you saw something else: a supporting cast that stepped up in ways the box score and highlights don’t fully capture. That collective lift turned a brilliant individual night into a signature team win. (byucougars.com)

Why this win matters beyond the highlight reel

  • BYU earned its first Top‑10 victory of the season, a marquee result that improves resume and belief. (byucougars.com)
  • Iowa State came in hot — a top‑10 team with national expectations — meaning this wasn’t a fluke; it was earned. (espn.com)
  • The win came after BYU lost a key rotation player (Richie Saunders), so the responsibility shifted to others and they delivered. (991thesportsanimal.com)

The unsung contributions that swung the game

  1. Kennard Davis Jr.: The reliable secondary scorer

    • Davis scored 17 points and provided timely shooting and offensive rebounding that sustained BYU through Iowa State’s runs. His floor spacing and willingness to crash the glass helped maintain possessions that became crucial late. (byucougars.com)
  2. Mihailo Boskovic: Confidence when it mattered most

    • In his third career start, Boskovic delivered a career‑best 13 points — including a big corner 3 with 1:20 left that pushed the lead back to double digits. That’s the kind of shot a freshman forward remembers. (byucougars.com)
  3. Khadim Mboup and the rebound margin

    • BYU dominated the boards (39–28), translating defensive rebounds into transition chances and limiting second‑chance points for Iowa State. Mboup’s activity and the team’s collective effort on the glass were foundational. (vanquishthefoe.com)
  4. Defense and timely stops

    • BYU’s ability to get stops at key moments — including forcing contested possessions on Iowa State’s sharpshooters — created the transition opportunities Dybantsa capitalized on and kept momentum on the home side. Coach Kevin Young highlighted the defensive fight as pivotal. (heraldextra.com)

The narrative shift: from reliance to resilience

Before this game, many narratives framed BYU as “AJ plus helpers.” Saturday’s result showed the helpers are not merely interchangeable pieces; they are decisive contributors. When the Cyclones closed within three late, it wasn’t another Dybantsa hero ball that finished it — it was a sequence that involved drawing defenders, kicking to the open man, a Boskovic 3, and rebounding grit that preserved possessions. That kind of team basketball is what separates one‑off wins from program momentum. (heraldextra.com)

What this suggests for the rest of the season

  • Opponents can no longer schematically focus only on Dybantsa; BYU has shown credible secondary options who can punish over‑help and capitalize on attention. (byucougars.com)
  • Confidence gained from beating a top‑10 opponent at home is intangible but real — it can change how players attack late‑game situations and how coaches deploy lineups. (heraldextra.com)
  • If BYU continues to win the rebound battle and get contributions from its role players, they’re not just dark‑horse candidates — they’re dangerous. (vanquishthefoe.com)

Plays to watch (so you notice the helpers next time)

  • The offensive rebound that turned into a Dybantsa finish at 16:39 of the second half — an example of how extra possessions changed the scoreboard. (heraldextra.com)
  • The late kickout to Boskovic for the corner 3 at 1:20 left — not a highlight that would trend, but a finish that sealed the game. (heraldextra.com)
  • Team defensive rotations on Milan Momcilovic when he got into early foul trouble — the attention on stopping the Cyclones’ sharpshooters bought BYU transition looks. (heraldextra.com)

My take

This wasn’t just a night for AJ Dybantsa — it was a night BYU earned by committee. Stars create separation, but championships and résumé‑building wins are often assembled by the supporting cast: the rebounder who scrapes for seconds, the young starter who drills a corner triple, the wing that takes a contested charge or a late defensive stop. BYU’s victory over Iowa State was a reminder that basketball is a team sport in the deepest sense. Keep watching those quiet box‑score lines; they’re telling a bigger story.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

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