logo
Duke let Jeremy Roach go. Now Baylor guard can help exact March Madness revenge.

Duke let Jeremy Roach go. Now Baylor guard can help exact March Madness revenge.

USA Today22-03-2025

Duke let Jeremy Roach go. Now Baylor guard can help exact March Madness revenge.
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Defending champs UConn vs No. 1 seed Florida leads Sunday slate
Mackenzie Salmon previews the best games during Sundays slate of games in the round of 32 including the defending champs UConn taking on Florida.
Sports Seriously
RALEIGH, N.C. — What's going to happen here Sunday isn't primarily about Jeremy Roach.
It's about Duke vs. Baylor, Sweet 16 on the line, at least two future lottery picks on the floor and a coach in Jon Scheyer who's trying to do this year what Baylor's Scott Drew accomplished four years ago when he won the national championship.
But it's also about how modern college basketball works.
After four years playing point guard at Duke, encompassing 108 starts and 11 NCAA Tournament games and a Final Four, Roach's career ran out of real estate. Despite having one more year of eligibility due to the COVID-impacted 2020-21 season, it was made clear to him that it was time to move on.
'It was handled with love, honesty and we felt mutually both ways that it would be the best thing for him in his career and where we had to go because of that,' Scheyer said.
Sitting 1,000 miles away in Waco, Texas, Drew saw opportunity. Though he had a highly-rated point guard coming into the program in Rob Wright and another star freshman in V.J. Edgecombe, Baylor combed through the transfer portal looking for experience – and particularly postseason experience. It didn't hurt that when Baylor lost to Duke last season in Madison Square Garden, Roach played all 40 minutes and had 18 points.
'You try to get some balance,' Drew said. 'You don't want all freshmen; you don't necessarily want all upper classmen. At the same time, when we won a national championship (in 2021) we had two point guards in Davion Mitchell and Jared Butler. If you can have four point guards out there, I think everybody would like that if you could get them to buy in. You have to play with the ball, without the ball. We thought Jeremy would be great compliment with Rob and vice-versa and could really help teach some of our younger players some things he's learned.'
But the transfer portal isn't a fairy tale for everyone. While Roach may have seen himself parlaying his Duke experience into taking the reins at another program, he has found himself as more of a role player with his college career winding down.
That's how the business works. Baylor's team functioned better with Wright as the primary point guard. Drew officially made the switch in February. And now here they are, hoping that Roach can be some kind of X-factor against his former team.
'He's kept a great attitude, and when we made the decision to bring him off the bench, we talked to him and he said, 'Whatever is best to help the team,' ' Drew said. 'He said it might help the team. He's really helped Rob, and those two can play together. You can always have two point guards on the court. What you can't have is none so he'll do a good job making sure everyone is ready to go tomorrow like he's done every game. I know it means a little more to him, obviously, but Jeremy is somebody that is capable of having big games and hopefully he has one (Sunday).'
Roach, of course, has been following Duke all season from afar. He joked Saturday that it would be hard not to, given how often the Blue Devils play on national television. And when he saw Baylor get paired with Duke in the same part of the tournament bracket, he realized he should have seen it coming.
'Knowing the committee, they like a story and stuff like that,' Roach said. 'Not trying to put too much into it, not trying to get too emotional about it. I'm with Baylor, so I'm just focusing on what we've got to do to win this game and how hard we have to play for 40 minutes.
'I'm definitely excited for the matchup. Not trying to make anything bigger than what it is, it's just another basketball game. I just want to focus on what Baylor has to do, personnel, scout, stuff like that, getting ready mentally and physically.'
Of course, there's probably more to that than Roach wants to engage in 24 hours before the potential final game of his college career.
In September, during an interview with Field of 68, the former McDonald's All-American admitted that he wanted to stay at Duke but 'stuff didn't meet up, and it was just my time to go.' Maybe there are no hard feelings, but it wouldn't be human if he didn't take this personally.
Maybe that will work in Baylor's favor, and Roach gives the Bears a true March moment tinged with redemption. Or perhaps Roach will press too hard to make an impact, which has been kind of a theme of his season at Baylor and one of the reasons they're now bringing him off the bench.
If he considers this season a disappointment, Roach isn't showing it. And Sunday, he'll have an opportunity to get the last laugh.
'I think this year has been a lot of good benefits for sure, a learning experience for sure but I have enjoyed every moment,' he said. 'It's my last year and wanted to make the most of it so that's really it right there.'
Follow Dan Wolken on social media @danwolken.bsky.social
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former Michigan State basketball star Malik Hall signs with professional team in Israel
Former Michigan State basketball star Malik Hall signs with professional team in Israel

USA Today

time44 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Former Michigan State basketball star Malik Hall signs with professional team in Israel

Former Michigan State basketball star Malik Hall signs with professional team in Israel After a solid season in the NBA G League this past year, it appears Malik Hall is heading overseas to continue his professional basketball career. The former Michigan State Spartans has signed with a team from Israel's top division, according to a post shared by 247Sports' beat reporter Stephen Brooks. Hall played this past season with the Greensboro Swarm and Motor City Cruise of the NBA G League, where he had an impressive rookie season. Hall appeared in 22 games during the season, averaging 8.8 points and 4.3 rebounds across 22.9 minutes per game. Hall starred for the Spartans for five seasons from 2019 to 2025. During his time at Michigan State, he appeared in 153 games (64 starts) and averaged 8.2 points and 4.6 rebounds per game. He was one of the Spartans top players during his senior season, helping lead Michigan State to the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Robert Bondy on X @RobertBondy5.

Yaxel Lendeborg discusses Michigan basketball roster, sets Final Four goal for 2025
Yaxel Lendeborg discusses Michigan basketball roster, sets Final Four goal for 2025

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Yaxel Lendeborg discusses Michigan basketball roster, sets Final Four goal for 2025

Yaxel Lendeborg discusses Michigan basketball roster, sets Final Four goal for 2025 Yaxel Lendeborg isn't wasting any time getting acclimated to Michigan basketball. The No. 1 player in the transfer portal had committed to the Wolverines earlier in the process, despite still appearing to be NBA-bound as he departed UAB. Yet, he ended up withdrawing and will play in Ann Arbor for one season after all. As it turns out, he already has a pretty good idea of what the roster looks like, what it can do, and how it can help him improve as a player. "I feel like I have a pretty good knowledge of it right now," Lendeborg told Brian Boesch on the Defend the Block Podcast. "I know our bigs are really athletic, really long shot blockers. A lot of us are pretty good rebounders, so it's going to be a little bit of a battle on the boards. "We have Elliot Cadeau, who's -- I think they said, the best passer, the best passer in college basketball, which is amazing as well. Something that I could probably try to take from him, just see what he sees on the floor, something to learn about. And, we have a lot of good shooters like Nimari Burnett. I think they said he shot 45 percent, which is ridiculous. "We just got Trey (McKenney), (Mr.) Basketball -- you know, that's great. I haven't looked into many of the other guys as much, but I know that we have a good roster formulated, and we have a lot of length, which is something great as well." Coming from UAB, Lendeborg isn't used to his team having high and lofty expectations. But the Wolverines are coming off a Big Ten Tournament championship and a Sweet 16 run. Now, those expectations are risin,g and the program is aiming higher. With Lendeborg on the roster, that helps elevate the program, as well. And he's not shying away from heightened prospects when it comes to what the maize and blue can do in 2025-26. "Oh, yeah. I'm super excited," Lendeborg said. "You know, "I feel like it's giving me more of a chip on my shoulder to try to be the best that I can be, just not let the fans down, not let the people that support us down, you know. So I am super excited. I'm happy to get up to that stage. I made a promise as well that I want to at least take us to the Final Four. So, I'm going to do whatever I can to get us there." Lendeborg joins transfers Cadeau, Morez Johnson Jr., and Aday Mara, as well as freshmen McKenney, Winters Grady, and Patrick Liburd as new faces who will reshape the Michigan basketball roster in 2025-26.

Yaxel Lendeborg discusses choosing Dusty May, Michigan over NBA draft
Yaxel Lendeborg discusses choosing Dusty May, Michigan over NBA draft

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Yaxel Lendeborg discusses choosing Dusty May, Michigan over NBA draft

Yaxel Lendeborg discusses choosing Dusty May, Michigan over NBA draft Michigan basketball made a big coup via the transfer portal, not only getting former UAB standout Yaxel Lendeborg to commit to the Wolverines, but also getting him to withdraw from the NBA draft after it appeared he'd likely be league-bound. But now it's time for Dusty May and the enigmatic forward to get to work. Lendeborg would have likely been a first-round NBA draft pick had he stayed in the process, but with something of a promise of further developing and being selected higher with a guaranteed contract. But that notion isn't the only thing that attracted Lendeborg to Ann Arbor. Initial impressions on Dusty May and Michigan Lendeborg's first impression of the Michigan basketball head coach and the program are two separate things. While May made the early push for the former UAB star to get him to Ann Arbor, Lendeborg's first impressions actually came before they met in the process of May working to get him to transfer. "The initial conversation was great. I already liked Dusty May as a coach," Lendeborg told Brian Boesch on the Defend the Block Podcast. "My first year watching basketball, me and my friends (in) JUCO, we were watching March Madness, we're watching FAU and then another team watching this so I just started to like how he coached his team, how he looked. "Obviously, when he was coaching, because a lot of coaches are always just fired up, angry. He just seems so cool, calm, and collected. That's how I try to be as a player as well. So it's kind of nice to have that. It's refreshing. But when he came out to visit me, it was amazing. It was big time. It was huge for me and just like my emotions, because I always wanted a coach to be like a father figure for me, someone I can look up to. I feel like Dusty May is going to be a real big part of that. He can for sure be a father figure for me and help me grow as a person rather than just a basketball player." As far as Michigan itself, the big move started when Lendeborg visited Ann Arbor in April and ended with the combine. Lendeborg was blown away by everything that the Wolverines have to offer once he got to see Ann Arbor in person. Knowing the level of development that the coaching staff could bring, seeing the facilities and the city, and meeting with the staff helped ease Lendeborg's mind when it came to the idea of staying in college for one more year. But when he got to Chicago for the NBA combine, he learned that it might be his best route to see his commitment through. "Well, there was two things: No. 1 was when I came out here on my visit, it pretty much turned everything around for me," Lendeborg said. "Because the NBA, I was like, oh my gosh, I can make it. But then when I came out here, it was like, he's promising me like next year, I can be better than what I was last year, higher ranking draft-wise than I can be if I come here and put the work in. "And then, two, was this: I spoke to NBA teams, the majority of them were saying that it wouldn't be a bad idea to come back here, develop a little bit more, play at a higher level, just to see what I'm capable of doing. And I've always asked that question to make sure because my mind was always like, I want to come to Michigan, but the NBA is the NBA. You have to go when you have the chance. So just hearing that type of feedback from NBA teams is pretty much what helped me more lean towards Michigan." More on his game and his expectations with Michigan Lendeborg is a walking double-double, averaging 17.7 points per game, 11.4 rebounds, while also managing an average of 4.2 assists per game -- all at the forward position. He told Boesch that the best part of his game is the facilitation. But now that he's joining the maize and blue, he hopes that his shooting improves, while he reshapes his body to become more NBA-ready. "Most confidence I have in my game, I would say my passing ability and my rebounding -- for like a natural gift with passing, my favorite thing to do as well," Lendeborg said. "Things that will get better with the help of Michigan, of course, is my shooting, just shooting off the dribble or shooting a little quicker, and just being on target -- and my defense as well. Just helping my body out, my strength, my speed. "I have a lot of faith that they'll get me right, body-wise. I didn't really put up the most athletic numbers at the combine, but I do feel like that's going to change." Lendeborg is one of four transfer portal additions that Michigan basketball made this offseason. He joins North Carolina guard Elliot Cadeau, Illinois forward Morez Johnson Jr., and UCLA center Aday Mara becoming new Wolverines this year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store