Russ Smith (basketball)

Last updated

Russ Smith
Russ Smith (basketball) 2013.jpg
Smith in 2013
No. 2Tabiat Eslamshahr
Position Point guard
League Iranian Basketball Super League
Personal information
Born (1991-04-19) April 19, 1991 (age 33)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Listed weight166 lb (75 kg)
Career information
High school
College Louisville (2010–2014)
NBA draft 2014: 2nd round, 47th overall pick
Selected by the Philadelphia 76ers
Playing career2014–present
Career history
2014–2015 New Orleans Pelicans
2014–2015Fort Wayne Mad Ants
2015 Memphis Grizzlies
2015Iowa Energy
2016 Delaware 87ers
2016 Galatasaray Odeabank
2017Delaware 87ers
2017 Luoyang Zhonghe
2017–2018 Fujian Sturgeons
2019 Guizhou White Tigers
2020 Cariduros de Fajardo
2021 Sichuan Blue Whales
2021–2022 Fort Wayne Mad Ants
2022 Hapoel Be'er Sheva
2022–2024Pallacanestro Nardò
2024–presentTabiat Eslamshahr
Career highlights and awards
*Later vacated
Stats at NBA.com  OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Stats at Basketball Reference   OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg

Russ Antoin Smith (born April 19, 1991) is an American professional basketball player for Tabiat Eslamshahr of Iranian Basketball Super League. He played college basketball for the Louisville Cardinals, playing a starring role as a junior in helping them win the 2013 NCAA championship, while earning third-team All-American by the NABC and the Sporting News . [1] [2] As a senior at Louisville, he was named a consensus first-team All-American. As of March 5,2023, his 65-point performance remains the NBA G League single game scoring record.

Contents

High school career

Smith was born in New York City at NY Presbyterian Hospital to Paulette A. O'Neal and Russell Smith. He went to Archbishop Molloy High School in Queens, N.Y. and played basketball for head coach Jack Curran. He led the New York City Catholic league (CHSAA) in scoring as a junior averaging 24.5 points a game and as a senior averaging 29.6 points, [3] he also had a 7.3 rebound and 3.2 assist average his final season for the Molloy Stanners. His career high in points was 47, which he reached twice as a senior against St. Francis Prep and Christ the King. Smith was named to the 2009 New York State Sportswriters Association all-state team, made the first-team all-CHSAA "AA", and New York Daily News All-Queens first team as a senior. He played in the 2009 Jordan Brand Classic Regional Game at Madision Square Garden on April 18. Where he scored 27 points and earned co-MVP honors as his City team beat the Suburban team 129–120. Russ played prep school basketball at South Kent School in 2010 averaging 19.7 points and 3.9 assists a game as South Kent went 20–12 on the season. [4]

US college sports recruiting information for high school athletes
NameHometownHigh school / collegeHeightWeightCommit date
Russ Smith
G
Brooklyn, NYArchbishop Molloy High School, NY
South Kent School, CT
6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)165 lb (75 kg)Nov 15, 2009 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout: 2 stars.svg     Rivals: 3 stars.svg     247Sports: N/A   ESPN grade: 88

College career

Recruitment

Louisville overlooked Smith at first. Assistant coaches Ralph Willard and Steve Masiello were on a recruiting trip in South Kent in September 2009, looking at another player. They saw Smith, who they thought would be perfect for their system. Masiello had also known Smith's father since he was 15. Louisville started looking at Smith seriously, and Smith liked Louisville so much that he tried to commit before he had a scholarship offer. [3]

Freshman year

Upon coming to school, Smith chose uniform #2. Injuries limited Smith's playing time as a freshman. He had a broken foot, concussion, strained foot, and sore knee during the season and only saw action in 17 games. [4] Smith was so miserable with the injuries and lack of playing time he decided to leave Louisville and go back home. But that day against West Virginia, coach Pitino put him in and told him to play hard. He had 3 points, 2 rebounds, one steal, and played good defense in his nine minutes of action. [5] Helping spark the Cardinals' comeback from down 11 to win by 1, when Peyton Siva hit a layup at the buzzer. [5] After that, he decided to stay. The Cardinals reached the championship game of the 2011 Big East men's basketball tournament but lost to Connecticut. [6] Louisville finished the season 25–10, 12–6 in the 2010–11 Big East season tied for 3rd in the conference. They received an at-large bid and a #4 seed in the 2011 NCAA tournament where they were upset in the second round by #13 seeded Morehead State 61–62. [7]

Sophomore year

During his sophomore year in 2011–12, Smith provided a spark off the bench. He was second in scoring despite being sixth in mins played for the Cardinals. [8] In January 2012 he earned the nickname "Russdiculous" given to him by head coach Rick Pitino, who has named a race horse "Russdiculous" also. [9] Smith set a school record for steals in a season with 87 steals in his 39 games played. [4] Louisville won four games in four nights to win the 2012 Big East tournament championship. The Cardinals advanced to the Final Four of the 2012 NCAA tournament, upsetting #1 seed Michigan State 57–44 in the sweet sixteen and defeating #7 seed Florida in the regional final, where Smith led Louisville with 19 points in the game. [10] Before losing in the national semifinals to arch-rival and eventual national champion Kentucky. Smith averaged 11.5 points, 2.5 rebounds, 1.9 assists, and 2.2 steals a game for the Cardinals, who finished the season with a 30–10 record. [11]

Junior year

Smith (left) and Peyton Siva (right) with the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament trophy. Russ Smith Peyton Siva championship trophy.jpg
Smith (left) and Peyton Siva (right) with the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament trophy.

Before the start of the 2012–13 basketball season the Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team was picked to finish 1st in the Big East Conference in polls done by Big East writers [12] and coaches. [13] Louisville finished the regular season with a 26–5 record and 14–4 in the Big East to tie for a share of the Big East regular season championship with Georgetown and Marquette, who also finished with a 14–4 conference record. [14] Smith learned about the death of his high school coach Jack Curran before the start of the 2013 Big East tournament. Louisville played Villanova in their first game of the tournament, Smith scored 28 points and said "Today was definitely Coach Curran Day for me, and it will be the rest of my life" in postgame interview that aired live on ESPN. [15] Russ was named to the Big East All-Tournament Team [16] and his team won the Big East tournament Championship game versus Syracuse by a score of 78–61 after trailing by 13 at halftime. [17]

Louisville, with a 29–5 record, was selected the #1 overall seed for the 2013 NCAA tournament. [18] In his first two games of the NCAA tournament at Rupp Arena he had 23 points versus North Carolina A&T and had 27 against Colorado State. Louisville fans liked what Smith was doing on the floor so much they started chanting RussArena [19] near the end of the Colorado State game and made a Twitter hashtag #RussArena. [20] He tied his career high of 31 points and the Cardinals beat the Oregon Ducks 77–69 in the Sweet Sixteen. [21] In Louisville's 85–63 regional final win against Duke, Smith recorded 23 points and was subsequently named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament's Midwest Region. During the Duke game Smith witnessed Kevin Ware suffer a horrible broken leg accident that left the team very emotional. Ware said "Just go win this game for me. Just go win this game. Don't worry about me, I'm fine." while being attended to by medical staff who was preparing him for a trip to the hospital. Louisville outscored Duke 64 to 43 after the Ware injury and credited Ware's positive attitude about his injury for their win. [22] In Louisville's next game Smith had 21 points in a 72–68 win over Wichita State in the Final Four. [23] Smith averaged 18.7 points, 3.3 rebounds, 2.9 assists and 2.1 steals this season for the Cardinals who won the national championship over Michigan with a 35–5 record. The championship was later taken away for recruits receiving impermissible benefits. [24]

Senior year

On April 24, 2013, Smith announced he would stay at Louisville for his senior year in an attempt to improve his draft stock the upcoming year. [25] On February 28, he was named one of the 10 semi-finalists for Naismith College Player of the Year. [26]

Louisville finished the season with a 31–6 record, earning a 4 seed in the tournament. Louisville opened against Manhattan in the second round, Smith led the game in scoring with 18 points. [27] After Manhattan, Louisville advanced 66–51 against Saint Louis. Smith tallied up 11 points and tied for the most assists with 7. [28] Smith ended his college career with 23 points in the Sweet Sixteen, losing against Kentucky. [29]

Smith was selected on the Associated Press First Team All American list. [30] On January 22, 2022, his No. 2 jersey was retired by the Cardinals. [31]

College honors

Professional career

New Orleans Pelicans (2014–2015)

On June 26, 2014, Smith was selected with the 47th overall pick in the 2014 NBA draft by the Philadelphia 76ers. [36] The next day, his rights were traded to the New Orleans Pelicans in exchange for the rights to Pierre Jackson. [37] Following the draft, Smith noted his frustration in some draft analysts questioning his efficiency. He was frustrated by teams waffling over his ability to play point guard at the NBA level, and was frustrated that several unnamed big-time NBA draft prospects avoided workouts with him in the two-month build-up to the draft. [38] He later signed his rookie scale contract with the Pelicans on July 15. [39] During his rookie season with the Pelicans, he had multiple assignments with the Fort Wayne Mad Ants of the NBA Development League. [40]

Memphis Grizzlies (2015)

On January 12, 2015, Smith was traded to the Memphis Grizzlies in a three-team deal involving the Pelicans and the Boston Celtics. [41] He was assigned multiple times to the Iowa Energy in his rookie season. [40] Smith made his playoff debut on May 3, 2015, in a 101–86 loss to the Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference semi-finals. [42]

On December 17, 2015, Smith was reassigned to the Iowa Energy, [43] but was recalled later that day. [44] He was reassigned again on December 22, [45] and recalled two days later. [46] On December 29, he was waived by the Grizzlies. [47]

Delaware 87ers (2016)

On January 13, 2016, Smith was acquired by the Delaware 87ers of the NBA Development League. [48] Two days later, he made his debut for the 87ers in a 119–104 win over Raptors 905, scoring a team-high 37 points in 28 minutes of action off the bench. [49] On February 1, 2016, he was named NBA D-League Performer of the Week for games played Monday, January 25 through Sunday, January 31. The honor was the first of Smith's career. He helped Delaware to a 2–1 week, averaging 28.7 points (fifth in the league) on 48 percent shooting (28-for-58) to go with a league-leading 8.7 assists, 4.3 rebounds and 2.0 steals. [50] On March 18, he recorded his first career triple-double after recording 20 points, 13 rebounds and 16 assists in a 116–98 win over the Fort Wayne Mad Ants. [51] On March 23, he set a D-League scoring record with 65 points on 24-of-42 shooting from the field in a 140–129 loss to the Canton Charge. [52] [53] As of March 3,2022, the record still stood as did his record of 105 points in consecutive games. [54] On March 29, he was waived by the 87ers after being deemed to have a season-ending injury. [55]

Europe (2016)

On July 27, 2016, Smith signed a one-year contract with Galatasaray Odeabank of the Turkish BSL and EuroLeague. [56] In December 2016, he parted ways with Galatasaray. [57]

Return to the Delaware 87ers (2017)

On January 20, 2017, Smith was re-acquired by the Delaware 87ers. [58]

China (2017–2021)

On June 3, 2017, Smith signed with Luoyang Zhonghe of China for the 2017 NBL season. [59] In his debut with Luoyang, Smith scored 62 points (including 7 3-pointers made) and recorded 3 steals in a 138–123 loss to the Anhui Lightning. [60] On July 5, 2017, Smith scored a career-high 81 points to go along with 8 rebounds and 7 assists in a 142–130 win over the Henan Golden Elephants. [61]

After that summer league's campaign wrapped up, he signed with the Fujian Sturgeons for the 2017-18 CBA season. [62] [63]

Fort Wayne Mad Ants (2021–2022)

On December 30, 2021, Smith was acquired and activated by the Fort Wayne Mad Ants of the NBA G League. [64] On January 7, 2022, in his first game in the G League since 2017, Smith scored 43 points in a 94–103 loss to the Raptors 905. [65] On January 31, he suffered a season-ending shoulder injury. Smith averaged 16.4 points, 1.7 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game. [66]

Hapoel Be'er Sheva (2022)

On September 2, 2022, he signed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. [67]

Tabiat Eslamshahr (2024–present)

On November 18, 2024, Smith signed with Tabiat Eslamshahr of Iranian Basketball Super League. [68]

The Basketball Tournament

Smith joined other Louisville basketball alumni for the 2023 and 2024 The Basketball Tournament aka TBT. He led The Ville team in scoring for the '23 season, losing in the regional championship. [69] He led the team in scoring again for the '24 season, and lost to the Kentucky basketball alumni's team La Familia in the quarterfinals'. [70]

Career statistics

Legend
  GPGames played  GS Games started MPG Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage 3P%  3-point field goal percentage FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game APG  Assists per game SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high

NBA

Regular season

YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
2014–15 New Orleans 604.8.200.167.5.3.0.0.8
2014–15 Memphis 606.0.400.200.923.51.0.5.04.2
2015–16 Memphis 1504.4.318.200.615.6.7.3.11.5
Career505.4.250.0001.000.2.2.2.01.2

Playoffs

YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
2015 Memphis 201.5.01.0.0.0.8
Career201.5.01.0.0.0.8

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References

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