
Tucker DeVries is closest thing IU has to a returning player. How he'll help everyone else catch up
This is his second straight year adjusting to a new program, following his father, Darian, from West Virginia to IU. It's the second summer running he's assumed the role not just of leader but guide, for teammates intensely less familiar with his father's methods.
Even the Hoosiers' forthcoming trip to Puerto Rico is habit by now — this is the third summer running Darian DeVries has taken his team on a foreign tour.
'The biggest thing is just spending time together,' Tucker said Wednesday, of the importance of that trip. 'That's a full week of you're spending every minute together as a group. And usually when we come back in the fall from that trip — this is my third straight one — you can see a big difference in the chemistry.'
He knows it will be a requirement, for a team entirely new in Darian DeVries' first season as head coach in Bloomington.
Tucker DeVries is the closest thing Indiana has to a returner from last season. He's played for his father across the past four seasons, winning Missouri Valley Conference player of the year twice at Drake before following his dad to West Virginia.
He averaged nearly 15 points per game for the Mountaineers last winter, including 26 in a win against Arizona in the Battle 4 Atlantis, before a shoulder injury ended his season after just eight games.
Now, Tucker starts fresh one more time. He secured the necessary waiver for one more year of eligibility, and he figures to assume a prominent role in his father's first season at Indiana.
'He definitely is a lead-by-example type guy. You always seen him in the gym,' said fifth-year guard Conor Enright, who played with Tucker at Drake. 'He's always here early getting shots. I think he's just grown, and the fact that he's done this before, so he knows what he has to do again.'
That starts with starting. Tucker likely heads the queue for a place in his father's first five on the floor, given everything.
More than that, his understanding of Darian DeVries' offensive and defensive philosophies places him at the heart of what can make his father's first season in Bloomington successful.
At an open practice Wednesday, Tucker was among the most involved players, both with his words and his actions. He communicated with the ease of a player familiar with his team's fundamentals and terminology. And he stayed in the action on the ball, both as a shooter and a creator.
As the summer has worn on, the younger DeVries has seen his new teammates rise to meet the same expectations he's understood for years.
Puerto Rico, he knows, will be an important next step in pulling together the intangible qualities that build a winner. But his responsibility won't end when IU leaves San Juan.
Tucker has done this before. He's prepared to do it again, one more time.
'Trying to help guys, get in the right spots, and if they have a question and don't really feel like they want to go to a coach or they can always come to me and Conor and try and help them out the best,' Tucker said. 'But they've done a great job of learning everything and picking up on it. And I give them props, because they work really hard at trying to understand what we're trying to do as a whole. And I think it's we've made tremendous strides in that.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Indianapolis Star
an hour ago
- Indianapolis Star
Where is IU football ranked in preseason US LMB Coaches Poll Top 25?
BLOOMINGTON — Indiana football will open the season in the top 25 of the US LMB Coaches Poll for only the second time since 1991. The Hoosiers ranked No. 19 in the preseason poll released Monday. Indiana closed out 2024 ranked No. 10 in the coaches poll after going 11-2 and losing to Notre Dame in the first round of the College Football Playoff. The only other time IU cracked the preseason top 25 over the last three-plus decades was in 2021, but the program ended up going 2-10 and finishing at the bottom of the Big Ten. The Hoosiers brought back key returners on both sides of the ball and filled key vacancies with high-profile transfers including Cal quarterback Fernando Mendoza as they look to avoid that same fate this fall. Indiana will face three teams ranked in the preseason top 15 this year — No. 12 Illinois (Sept. 20), No. 7 Oregon (Oct. 11) and No. 3 Penn State (Nov. 8). Indiana football: What we learned from the first week of fall camp Re-live Indiana football's memorable run to the College Football Playoff with our commemorative book The preseason US LBM coaches poll Top 25 with team's records from last season in parentheses, total points based on 25 for first place through one point for 25th, ranking in last year's final poll and first-place votes received. Dropped out: No. 20 Missouri (10-3); No. 21 Army (12-2); No. 22 Syracuse (10-3); No. 23 Memphis (11-2); No. 24 UNLV (11-3); No. 25 Colorado (9-4). Others receiving votes: Oklahoma (6-7) 221; Missouri (10-3) 142; Louisville (9-4) 126; Southern California (7-6) 116; Utah (5-7) 86; Baylor (8-5) 76; Auburn (5-7) 50; Iowa (8-5) 49; Memphis (11-2) 34; Army (12-2) 33; Tulane (9-5) 31; Georgia Tech (7-6) 27; TCU (9-4) 24; Nebraska (7-6) 19; Syracuse (10-3) 16; Washington (6-7) 15; Navy (10-3) 14; Arkansas (7-6) 14; Duke (9-4) 12; Colorado (9-4) 12; Minnesota (8-5) 11; UNLV (11-3) 8; Florida State (2-10) 8; Kansas (5-7) 6; Vanderbilt (7-6) 3; Buffalo (9-4) 1. The US LBM Board of Coaches for the 2025 season: Tim Albin, Charlotte; Dave Aranda, Baylor; Tim Beck, Coastal Carolina; David Braun, Northwestern; Jeff Brohm, Louisville; Fran Brown, Syracuse; Troy Calhoun, Air Force; Jason Candle, Toledo; Ryan Carty, Delaware; Jamey Chadwell, Liberty; Bob Chesney, James Madison; Curt Cignetti, Indiana; Chris Creighton, Eastern Michigan; Spencer Danielson, Boise State; Ryan Day, Ohio State; Kalen DeBoer, Alabama; Manny Diaz, Duke; Dave Doeren, North Carolina State; Eliah Drinkwitz, Missouri; Sonny Dykes, TCU; Jason Eck, New Mexico; Mike Elko, Texas A&M Luke Fickell, Wisconsin; Jedd Fisch, Washington; James Franklin, Penn State; Marcus Freeman, Notre Dame; Hugh Freeze, Auburn; Willie Fritz, Houston; Alex Golesh, South Florida; Thomas Hammock, Northern Illinois; Blake Harrell, East Carolina; Tyson Helton, Western Kentucky; Charles Huff, Southern Mississippi; Brent Key, Georgia Tech; GJ Kinne, Texas State; Zach Kittley, Florida Atlantic; Tre Lamb, Tulsa; Dan Lanning, Oregon; Rhett Lashlee, SMU; Clark Lea, Vanderbilt; Lance Leipold, Kansas; Pete Lembo, Buffalo; Sean Lewis, San Diego State; Mike Locksley, Maryland; Chuck Martin, Miami (Ohio); Joey McGuire, Texas Tech; Bronco Mendenhall, Utah State; Jeff Monken, Army; Jim Mora, Connecticut; Eric Morris, North Texas; Billy Napier, Florida; Pat Narduzzi, Pittsburgh; Brian Newberry, Navy; Ken Niumatalolo, San Jose State; Jay Norvell, Colorado State; Gerad Parker, Troy; Brent Pry, Virginia Tech; Matt Rhule, Nebraska; Rich Rodriguez, West Virginia; Jay Sawvel, Wyoming, Willie Simmons, Florida International; Kirby Smart, Georgia; Mark Stoops, Kentucky; Jon Sumrall, Tulane; Lance Taylor, Western Michigan; Jeff Traylor, Texas-San Antonio; Scotty Walden, Texas-El Paso.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Anthony Richardson has a shaky Saturday practice after a strong week
Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson's practice work is being watched closely this summer and word from reporters during three practices this week was that Richardson was doing some of his best work. Saturday's session didn't earn the same kind of raves. The Colts had a red-zone heavy practice and Richardson struggled to complete passes while also throwing an interception. Reporters noted that Daniel Jones, who is competing with Richardson, also had a hard time. After the practice, offensive coordinator Jim Bob Cooter said the focus was on dropback passing and that is difficult in the red zone because of advantages the defense can deploy to stop it. As a result, Cooter said he found positive signs amid the overall performance. "The defense squeezes those zones, the man coverage is tighter," Cooter said, via the team's website. "We're trying new plays. We want to be really, really good at all that stuff. At the same time, these guys are working different progressions and where they can throw certain balls. We want to go through a practice and be really, really clean, but at the same time you don't want those guys to avoid sort of working on trying a throw or working on trying to hit a certain receiver in a certain spot, maybe a back shoulder type of throw. So red zone practices, when you sort them up at the end of the year, they don't always end up being your highest-production practices, but we do get a lot out of them. It's going to make us better moving forward. There's going to be some things we can coach off today's tape, but it was an encouraging day because we're working a lot of things and I think we got better at it." The Colts will be in Baltimore on Thursday to kick off their preseason schedule and that should mark a significant chapter in the quarterback competition.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Fever's Stephanie White reveals true 'rock' amid Caitlin Clark injury woes
Fever's Stephanie White reveals true 'rock' amid Caitlin Clark injury woes originally appeared on The Sporting News Amid all the furor around Caitlin Clark's explosive and entertaining playing style, is it really another Indiana Fever player who ranks as the team's best? As Clark continues to recover from a nagging right groin injury, her Fever teammates continue to win without her. Indiana stormed into Climate Pledge Arena on Sunday and left with a 78-74 victory over Seattle. It was the Fever's fifth consecutive win, all without Clark -- and all of a sudden, Indiana finds itself 1.5 games behind the New York Liberty for the best record in the Eastern Conference. MORE: Fever's Aliyah Boston shuts down Caitlin Clark narrative No one disputes what a healthy Clark is capable of achieving; she set the WNBA assists record as a rookie in 2024 and ended Indiana's eight-year playoff drought. But the fact is that this season, Clark has missed 17 of the Fever's 30 games -- and the Fever is 10-7 without her, including last month's Commissioner's Cup win over the Minnesota Lynx. Key to the Indiana resurgence is Aliyah Boston, the #1 overall pick in the 2023 draft. Boston is enjoying her best WNBA season yet; the three-time All-Star is averaging 15.5 points and 8.3 rebounds per game, and on Sunday she produced a 16-point, 12-board double-double against a Storm team with serious size and length. It led to head coach Stephanie White doling out serious praise for Boston, who to date has played 109 out of a possible 109 regular-season games. " She's really been the key," White told reporters on Sunday. "She came into this league predominantly playing on the low block, getting a lot of post-touches when she was in college and her rookie year. And then last year, her first year with Caitlin, playing a lot in the two-man. And then this year, we're asking her to be a facilitator as well. "She's really the rock of our team," White continued. "She's even-keeled. She's high IQ. Everybody trusts her on both ends of the floor. And she's our backbone, and she's been tremendous for us all year long. MORE WNBA NEWS: Fever's Caitlin Clark called out for eating on the bench while injured Fever's Sophie Cunningham continues scorching hot play with Caitlin Clark injured Minnesota Lynx pick up Dijonai Carrington in trade move that could completely derail the Wings' season Caitlin Clark's teammate calls Fever star's groin injury 'weird' Wings' Paige Bueckers reveals what she loves most about historic recent displays