Syracuse's Jim Boeheim hopeful for start of his 45th season
Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim is ready for his 45th season at his alma mater, albeit a different setup this time. Wary of the coronavirus, he dons a mask in practice and wears an electronic gadget that alerts him when he gets too close to somebody for too long.
“I have absolute hope that we’re not going to lose any games," said Boeheim, who turns 76 on Tuesday. “But we’ll have to adjust when it happens.”
Syracuse (18-10, 10-10) finished in the middle of the pack in the Atlantic Coast Conference last season before the pandemic halted everything in March. They're picked to finish there again.
Syracuse returns four starters — guards Buddy Boeheim, the coach's youngest son, and Joe Girard, center Bourama Sidibe and forward Marek Dolezaj — but has to replace its most complete player, small forward Elijah Hughes. He departed to pursue a pro career after leading the ACC in scoring and earning first-team, all-conference honors.
Helping to fill that void will be 6-foot-5 swingman Alan Griffin, a transfer from Illinois. He averaged 8.9 points and 4.5 rebounds as a sophomore with the Illini and hit 41.6% (47 of 113) of his 3-point attempts. Also new to the lineup is 6-5 guard Kadary Richmond, and the coach said the freshman “is going to play.”
“Playing time kind of works itself out. The players decide who plays. I don’t,” Boeheim said.
The Orange averaged 74.3 points last season and relied a lot on the long ball, hitting 259 of 787 attempts (32.9%) from behind the arc. Buddy Boeheim (97), Hughes (78) and Girard (70) added their share of 3-pointers.
A glaring deficiency of that team was its negative rebounding mark (minus-1.3). The good news is that all four returning starters have added muscle during the pandemic and sophomore forward Quincy Guerrier, a bruising rebounder, is almost completely recovered from an injured groin.
CENTER STAGE
The
BLOSSOMING BUDDY
and figures to have a bigger role as a leader. He said the long layoff has helped his game.
“I knew I had a lot of time to get better so I could work on different things every day," Buddy said. "I think my shot's quicker. I think I'm getting to my spots faster and more effectively ... making it harder to locate me.”
MOTOR MAN
Griffin, son of former NBA player Adrian Griffin, wants to prove that he’s more than just a shooter and he’s already convinced his coach.
“I think he’s probably the most high-motor player I’ve seen in a while,” Boeheim said. “I haven’t seen that many perimeter players that have that kind of motor. He’s in a lot of stuff. He gets involved in a lot of different things.”
VOCAL JOE
Girard was a leader in high school in Glens Falls, New York and graduated as the state's all-time leading scorer. Boeheim made him the starter at point guard and he had
“Freshman year I was still trying to be a leader," Girard said. “This year I'll be a little bit more vocal. Last year we had older guys, veterans who could help me out with that.”
LATE SCHEDULE
The Orange still haven't completed their non-conference schedule but do know they will open the season Nov. 27 at home against Bryant and will play three of their first four ACC games on the road, starting with Boston College on Dec. 12. The ACC schedule also includes road games against Duke, North Carolina, Louisville, and Virginia. Also on the docket is a home game against Georgetown in January and a road contest against Rutgers in early December as part of the ACC/Big Ten Challenge. Basketball tickets in the Carrier Dome are not available at this time.
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