Five newcomers joined them this summer: freshmen Leon Bond, Ryan Dunn, Isaac McKneely and Isaac Traudt, plus graduate transfer Ben Vander Plas, who was an All-Mid-American Conference performer at Ohio University. The roster also includes one sophomore, swingman Taine Murray, who played sparingly last season.
These international tours are especially beneficial, Bennett said, “whenever you have a big incoming class, and Ben’s part of that class. We have five new people, and Taine’s in his second year. It’s just a good way for them to get practices and get some game experience. You’re not really worried too much about the win-loss [aspect].”
The Cavaliers will play their first game Saturday in Rome, their second game Monday in Florence, and their third and fourth games Aug. 18 and 19 in Rapallo. The level of competition on these tours usually varies from game to game, but “there’s a team we’re playing twice that we’ve heard is really good, so that might be a great opportunity to see what you can do,” Bennett said. “But I feel like the value is in getting 10 quality practices that you normally wouldn’t get. Every coach will tell you that.”
The NCAA permits a team that’s headed out on a tour to hold 10 additional practices in the summer. After a two-week break last month, the Cavaliers reconvened at JPJ for practices that, at various times, included alumni Huff, Anthony Gill, Sam Hauser and Mamadi Diakite. Other former Cavaliers, including Ty Jerome, De’Andre Hunter, Jack Salt and Justin Anderson, also trained at JPJ this summer.
“It’s wonderful,” Bennett said of seeing former players back in town. “It just gives you a great sense of joy, and we’ve got to keep finding ways to connect with our guys. I told our staff, and even the alumni, that we try our best, during the time they’re here with us, to pour into them and show them the right ways. And I think when they leave and they come back, they sometimes get reminded that this is a pretty amazing place. The place itself, the people, the camaraderie that we have, and what’s been built here. It makes me smile that they enjoy it when they come back, and they have a good, warm, fuzzy feeling, even if their time here wasn’t perfect, which is part of it.”