Kadary Richmond is in the transfer portal, a move Syracuse may one day regret
Without question, Kadary Richmond’s departure from Syracuse stings. From the beginning, the 6-foot-5 freshman point guard demonstrated traits valued at the game’s highest levels: court awareness, facilitation, defensive length and instincts, and a fledgling jump shot that showed promise toward the end of the season. His decision to enter the transfer portal sent shockwaves through a chunk of the Orange fan base on Tuesday, not so much because of the player he has been but because of the player he could one day become.
Richmond, the only former top-100 recruit on this season’s roster, was arguably the most promising player in the program. But with starters Buddy Boeheim and Joseph Girard III returning in the backcourt next season, he is moving on, hopeful for a bigger role elsewhere. “I just felt like I wanted to go somewhere I could play without restrictions and have a chance to showcase my game,” Richmond told The Athletic on Tuesday afternoon. “Like, not having to think about certain things out there on the basketball court. More freedom. I learned a lot of things here. One thing I can show people now is that I actually have the ability to shoot the basketball.”https://spheresports.com.ng/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/GAMB2XFBLZAPLMUMR6ZICQAZQY.avi
Plenty of coaches will be calling Richmond over the next few weeks. The program that lands him is getting an elite playmaker off the bounce, one who showed he can get to the basket as well as any recent SU player. Before the season, Hall of Fame coach Jim Boeheim compared Richmond with former stars Tyler Ennis and Jonny Flynn, both first-round NBA Draft selections. It was a kind of praise Boeheim doesn’t just toss around with any talented player. “Outstanding,” Boeheim said in the fall. “He’s really good. We’ve had some really good freshman point guards, and he’s right there with all of them. He’s one of the best point guards in the country, one of the best young guards in the country. He’s one of the best freshman point guards we’ve had in a long time, and we’ve had some good ones.”
Boeheim knew early on the type of talent he had in Richmond. Throughout the season, teammates such as Buddy Boeheim and Quincy Guerrier also heaped praise on his ability to “completely change the game” seemingly each time he came off the bench with SU facing a deficit. His length deterred opponents from attacking his side of the zone, and he proved he could get by many defenders. Last year Carmelo Anthony told an NBA scout Richmond had impressed him at a 2019 tournament in the Bronx, close to Richmond’s Brooklyn, N.Y., hometown.
Richmond finished fourth in the ACC in steals per game (1.6) while averaging 6.3 points and 3.1 assists in 21 minutes per game as the Orange’s third guard. Per Pivot Analysis, Syracuse outscored opponents by 13.3 points per 100 possessions when he was on the floor. Without him, SU outscored opponents by only 2.6 points per 100 possessions. That differential was by far the largest on the team among the seven rotation players who logged at least 300 possessions. Syracuse was clearly a better team with Richmond on the floor. He keyed several comebacks, helped set up the sharpshooting Buddy Boeheim for open 3s and provided a slashing skill this team greatly benefited from.
“He just needs the opportunity to get the ball in his hand and really demonstrate his skills,” said Shawn Mark, his coach at South Shore (N.Y.) High.
Some tape of Kadary Richmond’s freshman season at Syracuse. Plenty of examples of defensive instincts, IQ, length and ability to run an offense by creating off the bounce. The 6-5 PG has great court awareness and vision. Former top-100 recruit from New York
Players have transferred from Syracuse for years, most often citing playing time as the reason. For the most part, they haven’t thrived at their next destination. From Taurean Thompson and Brycen Goodine to Jalen Carey and Matthew Moyer, none has really performed better elsewhere. The exception is B.J. Johnson. But this one feels different. There’s a reason NBA scouts had been inquiring about Richmond since he arrived on campus. Utilizing his 6-foot-10 wingspan, he was an excellent defender for a team that struggled at times to get stops. Since about midseason, former players and scouts wondered why he wasn’t playing more. Asked why, Boeheim repeatedly said all three Syracuse guards needed to contribute, which is true. Boeheim also cited Richmond’s conditioning as to why he didn’t see more time. “I don’t think his conditioning is where it needs to be,” Boeheim said last week, adding that Richmond was a summer away from becoming a “really good player.”
He was far from a perfect player, with a below-average perimeter shot (7-of-21 from 3) and a fair share of freshman mistakes. But his upside is evident. Richmond’s most impressive attributes had little to do with scoring. He understood pace and space, where his teammates were and how to navigate pressure. On March 21, he helped Syracuse get to the Sweet 16 with a thread-the-needle dribbling display through West Virginia’s full-court press, another example of his ball-handling ability and vision.
As of midday Tuesday, Richmond had heard from Illinois, West Virginia, Iowa State, Seton Hall, George Washington, Maryland and UConn. “I’m just open to all options right now,” Richmond said. He joins the rapidly growing transfer portal, which includes two of his teammates: John Bol Ajak and Robert Braswell. More could join them.