Autry leads Orange into a new era after Boeheim’s retirement
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Things will be just a tad different for Syracuse basketball this season. OK, a lot different.
Retired after 47 years at the helm is Hall of Fame coach Jim Boeheim, along with his 1,116 wins, five Final Four appearances and 2003 national championship. Departed are the veteran transfers: shooting guard Joe Girard, who led Syracuse in scoring and 3-point shooting, and center Jesse Edwards.
And gone also — for the most part — is Syracuse’s signature 2-3 zone defense, which befuddled opponents for years, but had become increasingly ineffective.
Patrolling the sideline as coach will be former Syracuse star and longtime assistant Adrian Autry, whose challenge is returning the program to what he calls “the Orange Standard.” For most Syracuse fans, this would mean a return to the NCAA Tournament, something that hasn’t happened the past two seasons — the first time that’s happened since the late 1960s.
The Orange have struggled mightily since joining the ACC. Since a 28-6 record and secondplace finish in its inaugural ACC season in 2013-2014, Syracuse has finished no higher than sixth, with an overall record of 172-126 and a conference mark of 84-84.
Syracuse had its first losing campaign since 1968-69 two seasons ago, finishing 16-17, and is coming off a 17-15 record last year.
There are reasons for optimism, though.
All six of last season’s freshmen return, including point guard Judah Mintz, a projected
NBA lottery pick who made the All-ACC freshman team by averaging 16.3 points, 4.3 assists and more than a steal a game. Also returning are sharpshooting forward Chris Bell and 6-foot-9 Maliq Brown, who can play both forward and center.
Poised for a breakout season is junior forward Benny Williams, a former five-star recruit, who gave a hint of his potential with a 17-point, seven rebound effort in Syracuse’s ACC Tournament loss to Wake Forest.
JJ Starling, a Notre Dame transfer, joins Mintz in what could be one of the nation’s more dynamic backcourts. Starling averaged 11 points a game and earned a berth on the All-ACC freshman team despite battling an array of injuries.
Newcomers with potentially large roles include transfers Naheem McLeod (Florida State), at 7-4 the tallest player in program history, and 6-6 sophomore Chance Westry (Auburn), a former top-40 recruit.
Autry vows to play man-toman defense most of the time, which is music to the ears of SU fans, while knowing he can revert to the 2-3 system when necessary.
Schedule
Syracuse opens against New Hampshire on Monday but has tough matchups against Colgate, which has defeated the Orange in successive years, then No. 9 Tennessee at the loaded Maui Invitational. Also in that event, Syracuse could have to face either No. 3 Purdue or No. 11 Gonzaga and then potentially No. 1 Kansas, No. 5 Marquette or UCLA.