Virginia basketball has secured a commitment from 2026 four-star center Favour Ibe, a 7-foot-1 prospect from Mt. Zion Prep in Maryland. Ibe is the first member of head coach Ryan Odom's 2026 recruiting class.
Key points
Virginia basketball adds 2026 four-star center Favour Ibe
Ibe is 7-foot-1 and from Mt. Zion Prep in Maryland
He averaged 16.5 points and 13.5 rebounds per game
Ibe is the first commitment for coach Ryan Odom's 2026 class
He replaces Ugonna Onyenso as backup center
Favour IbeVirginia CavaliersMt. Zion PrepKentucky
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 22: Head coach Ryan Odom of the Virginia Cavaliers reacts against the Tennessee Volunteers during the second round of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Xfinity Mobile Arena on March 22, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 22: Head coach Ryan Odom of the Virginia Cavaliers reacts against the Tennessee Volunteers during the second round of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Xfinity Mobile Arena on March 22, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Virginia’s offseason roster picture is starting to come into focus.
After adding UC Irvine transfer Jurian Dixon and Arkansas State transfer Christian Harmon earlier in the portal cycle, the Cavaliers have now landed a commitment from 2026 four-star center Favour Ibe. The 7-foot-1, 235-pound big man out of Mt. Zion Prep in Maryland visited Charlottesville earlier this week and left pledged to Ryan Odom and company. This makes him the first member of Odom’s 2026 freshman class.
The Cavaliers have spent this offseason trying to do two things at once. They have needed to capitalize on the momentum of Odom’s first season while also avoiding unnecessary disruption to a roster that already returned most of its core. That is a tricky balance. Compared to 2025, Virginia was looking to supplement its roster instead of rebuilding.
Dixon and Harmon addressed important questions by adding guard/wing depth, but fans were still clamoring for a replacement for fan favorite Ugo Onyenso at the backup five.
Ibe fits that description.
Ibe is huge, mobile, and still developing. Rivals recently jumped him from No. 126 to No. 82 overall recruit in the 2026 class and the best high school center still available. Playing for Mt. Zion Prep, Ibe averaged 16.5 points and 13.5 rebounds per game in league play, the kind of interior production that makes the high-major interest easy to understand.
Ibe has been recruited like a high-major big for a while. In 2024, he held power-conference offers from Maryland, Arizona State, Georgia, , and . In 2025, that list grew to include Villanova, , , Alabama, , Kansas State, and . Recently, he made visits to Tennessee, Alabama, and Villanova in addition to Virginia.
That is big news as it highlights Virginia’s ability to land top high school talent over other high-major powerhouses after a transfer portal season that was filled with a lot of almost for UVA. Virginia didn’t have to settle for the dregs because the portal market dried up. The Cavaliers beat out real programs for a player whose recruitment accelerated late and whose physical tools are extremely easy to understand.
Ibe will be coming to Charlottesville to replace as Virginia’s backup center.
That is a very specific role, and it became a very important one last season.
Onyenso arrived at Virginia as a fascinating but imperfect transfer. He had been a highly regarded recruit, spent two seasons at , flashed elite shot-blocking ability, transferred to Kansas State, and then came to UVA without much national attention. At the time, the signing made sense, but it was not treated as some major portal victory.
By March, that looked silly.
Onyenso became one of the most important players on Virginia’s roster because he gave the Cavaliers something that very few teams in the country had: an elite rim protector coming off the bench. He was not asked to be a featured scorer. He was not asked to carry possessions. He was asked to run the floor, finish easy looks, protect the rim, rebound, and change the geometry of the game defensively. His defensive prowess earned him a spot on the All-ACC Defensive Team.
He did exactly that.
Then, in the ACC Tournament, he announced himself on the national stage.
When Johann Grünloh got into foul trouble against NC State, Onyenso stepped into a season-high workload and completely changed the game with eight blocks. Against Miami, he added 17 points and four more blocks in a dominant semifinal win. Then, in the ACC Championship against Duke, he blocked nine shots and finished with 21 blocks across the tournament.
That 21-block run shattered the ACC Tournament record of 14, set by in 1995! It also earned Onyenso ACC All-Tournament First Team honors and pushed him to 105 blocks on the season, second in UVA history behind only the great Ralph Sampson.
His late-season surge was so loud that Onyenso has even started to receive second-round NBA Draft buzz. Meanwhile, Grünloh’s 80 blocks put him seventh on UVA’s single-season list, and he will return as the anchor of the Cavaliers’ defense in 2026.
That is the blueprint.
Again, Ibe is not Onyenso yet. But Virginia is clearly trying to preserve that archetype. Odom wants length at the rim. If Ibe can give UVA even a portion of what Onyenso provided last year, as a freshman, this commitment becomes a short-term success.
Offensively, the expectations should be reasonable, especially as a freshman.
At his best, Ibe should be able to screen, dive, catch lobs, clean up misses, and punish defenses that rotate late. That skill set becomes especially valuable next to guards who can bend the defense. Mallory’s development as a paint-touch creator will be crucial here.
The defensive side is where the upside is more obvious. At 7-foot-1 with legitimate length, Ibe gives Virginia another body who can deter shots at the rim. The question will be how quickly he can handle the physicality and speed of college basketball. High school size advantages do not always translate immediately. ACC guards are stronger, more patient, and much better at manipulating young bigs in ball-screen coverage.
However, given Ryan Odom’s success in 2025 developing Ugo Onyenso, there is hope that Ibe can see significant improvement throughout the season.
Also, Virginia does not need Ibe to be ready for 25 minutes per night. Grünloh is still the starter and with De Ridder and Barksdale playing at the four; Ibe’s job, at least early, should be much more specific.
A realistic freshman role is probably somewhere in the 10-to-15 minute range, depending on matchup, foul trouble, and how quickly he adjusts defensively.
Another big win for Virginia is that Ibe is a freshman.
That might sound strange in the portal era, when most programs are prioritizing older players, proven production, and immediate answers. Virginia has done some of that, too. Dixon and Harmon are veteran additions who should be ready to help right away. But good roster construction cannot only be about next season’s minutes distribution. It also has to be about building a pipeline of players who make sense within the system.
Ibe does.
Despite the realities of player movement in college basketball in 2026, Odom’s retention success this offseason gives Virginia reason to believe that Ibe can develop over multiple years in Charlottesville. He does not need to be rushed into a massive role right away. He can grow behind Johann Grünloh, learn the system, add strength, and gradually become the kind of rim-protecting center that Odom clearly values.
That is what makes this addition so sensible. Ibe gives Virginia a developmental big with legitimate high-major tools. He fills a clear roster need. He preserves the backup rim-protector role that became so important last season. And he does it without forcing the Cavaliers to reshape their offense or disrupt the returning core.
Zooming out, Ibe’s commitment also makes the roster much easier to picture.
A reasonable early rotation could look something like this: Mallory, Dixon/Harmon, Lewis, de Ridder, and Grünloh as the starting five, with the other of Dixon/Harmon playing starter-level minutes off the bench. Gertrude and Carrere remain guard/wing options, Barksdale fills forward minutes, and Ibe becomes the backup center.
It is a night and day difference from the roster Virginia had a few weeks ago that had some fans concerned.
If you had to look for a remaining hole on the roster, Virginia could probably still use another true ball-handler. Mallory is set for a major sophomore role, but asking him to be the only natural table-setter on the roster would be risky. Dixon and Harmon can help initiate offense, but neither profile as a pure point guard. Gertrude’s development could matter there as well.
But that is the point: Virginia is now talking about refinements, not foundational problems.
Ibe does not need to be a star right away for this commitment to matter. He gives the Cavaliers size, long-term upside, and a realistic backup center behind Grünloh. He also gives Odom another developmental piece who fits the exact frontcourt archetype that became so valuable last season.
For a team trying to build on a 30-win season without losing what made it good in the first place, that is a pretty significant addition.
Q&A
Who is Favour Ibe and what are his stats?
Favour Ibe is a 2026 four-star center from Mt. Zion Prep, averaging 16.5 points and 13.5 rebounds per game in league play.
What impact will Favour Ibe have on UVA basketball?
Ibe is expected to fill the backup center role previously held by Ugonna Onyenso, providing size and defensive capabilities to the Cavaliers.
Which other schools recruited Favour Ibe?
Ibe received offers from several high-major programs, including Maryland, Arizona State, Georgia, Louisville, and Villanova.
What does Favour Ibe's commitment mean for UVA's recruiting strategy?
Ibe's commitment highlights Virginia's ability to attract top high school talent amidst a challenging transfer portal environment.
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