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Jon Scheyer loses to Louisville coach Pat Kelsey for the coveted ACC award
Last season, Louisville’s basketball team finished 8–24 and only managed three ACC victories. Pat Kelsey, the head coach of the Cardinals, is the ACC Coach of the Year this year.
In his first season at Louisville, Kelsey defeated Jon Scheyer, the head coach of Duke, to win the honour. Louisville finished 18-2 and 25-6 overall in the ACC, which was terrible by major conference standards. Kelsey’s 17-win improvement over the previous season placed him on the Naismith Men’s College Coach of the Year watchlist and represents the best turnaround in men’s Division I basketball this season.
This year’s Cardinals, who are virtually completely made up of transfers, have brought new life to a program that had suffered three consecutive defeats. They had won 25 games in the regular season, the most since Rick Pitino took over in 2016–17. Pitino won Conference Coach of the Year in 2005, making him the final Louisville coach to accomplish so.
Louisville is projected by the Bracket Matrix as the field’s top six seed, with potential to advance throughout the ACC Tournament. The Cardinals were selected ninth by league coaches in the preseason and are now the second seed in the annual tournament. With a 20-point victory against Stanford to close off the regular season, Louisville will go into the tournament on a nine-game winning run.
More ACC postseason accolades are won by Louisville basketball.
Chucky Hepburn (24), a guard for Louisville, had a chance to speak at Saturday’s senior celebration at KFC Yum! Centre. Imagn Images/Scott Utterback/Courier Journal/USA TODAY NETWORK
The ACC has recognised several Cardinals besides Kelsey. Chucky Hepburn, who transferred from Wisconsin to Louisville, was voted the league’s Defensive Player of the Year for his 2.4 steals per game, which puts him in the top 10 nationally.
In addition, Hepburn got one vote for ACC Player of the Year, which went to Cooper Flagg (coaches are not allowed to vote for their own players), and was chosen to the all-conference first team.
With 16.3 points and 5.9 assists per game in 2024–25, the senior Hepburn enjoyed his finest season to date. Additionally, he hit 85 percent from the free throw line, which was by far his greatest career percentage.
This season, Hepburn has authored two games with ten or more assists and six 20-point performances. In addition, he broke the Louisville single-game marks for free throws (17) and assists (16).
Terrence Edwards Jr., Hepburn’s teammate, was selected to the All-ACC Third Team. While playing his first four seasons at James Madison, he transferred and averaged 15.8 points, 2.7 assists, and 3.5 rebounds per game.
This story was syndicated with permission after initially appearing on NCAA Basketball on ClutchPoints.
Reyne Smith talks on his friendship with Pat Kelsey ahead of Louisville basketball’s senior day
Louisville basketball sharpshooter Reyne Smith, the only player on the squad who has spent all four years under coach Pat Kelsey, will have an emotional senior day.
Smith, who is from Tasmania, has always had a talent for shooting the ball. Kelsey has helped him become perhaps the greatest in Division I this season.
This is the narrative of Smith falling in love with the game, meeting Kelsey, and forming a friendship that will endure their entire lives.
Pat Kelsey’s pause revealed more about his connection with Reyne Smith than the accolades the Louisville basketball coach bestowed upon the Australian player.
“He’s a winner,” Kelsey told reporters during the Cardinals’ season-opening exhibition against Young Harris College in October. “Sometimes, people mistake him for what Skip Prosser used to call’suburban jump shooters.'” That is not Reyne.
“That’s his deal — and he shoots the blood out of the ball — yet he’s tough as nails and appears on every single scouting report. He is always precisely where he is supposed to be. It’s almost like having another assistant coach because he understands what we do and how to execute it so effectively. He’s a selfless guy who puts the team first.”
Then comes the pause. Perhaps Kelsey was reminded of the day Smith committed to play for him at Winthrop, when he jumped into the pool at his Rock Hill, South Carolina, home after getting the news. Perhaps it was a realisation of how much time had gone — or that concentrating solely on the next item in front of him would not avert the inevitable.
“It’s a shame I only get to coach him for one more year,” he told me. “Because he’s a joy.”
With a crowded senior day versus Stanford at the KFC Yum! Centre on Saturday, Kelsey is likely to say the same thing about players on his debut U of L roster. Smith’s family travels from Tasmania to accompany him to Denny Crum Court, which will have a different impact.
“He’s like a son to me,” Kelsey said after a Feb. 16 win against Notre Dame. Smith became only the third player in school history to hit 100 shots from beyond the arc in a season.
“It’s hard to put into words,” Smith told The Courier Journal later that night. “It’s starting to feel a little more real: It’s coming to the end.”
Smith, of course, is the only Card who has spent his whole four-year college career with Kelsey and his crew. He was the first to transfer in last March, only hours after the coach named his renovation “The ReviVILLE” on X, previously Twitter. All he’s done since then is improve his skills and become a fan favourite, making umbrella hats a must-have accessory in the student section.
“It’s kind of emotional to see the success he’s had this year; because he came with me from Charleston,” Kelsey elaborated. “He’s better here than he was there—and he was really excellent there. It’s absolutely amazing to see, and it’s a credit to hard effort.”
This is the story of Smith discovering basketball, his shot, Kelsey, and a second family.
He’s always been able to shoot it.

Nov 27, 2024; Paradise Island, Bahamas, BHS; Louisville Cardinals guard Reyne Smith (6) shoots during the first half against the Indiana Hoosiers at the Atlantis Resort. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images
During an interview on The C.L. Brown Show in January, Smith revealed that he began playing Australian rules football as a child in Ulverstone. He started playing basketball in first grade and remained with it because of the individuals it made him close to.
A wise decision; by his early teens, he was competing in a national championship competition. His coach was Louisville assistant Michael Cassidy, a fellow countryman who is new to coaching.
“I should find a photo,” Cassidy told The Courier Journal last summer. “The guy is tiny and little, but he’s always been able to shoot it.
“We’ve always joked about how we can’t stay away from one other. It’s been like four separate programs.”
When Smith placed second in made 3-pointers during the week-long contest, he decided to dedicate himself to the sport in the hopes of one day being Australia’s best marksman. He spent a lot of time on YouTube, namely viewing a Sports Science video on Klay Thompson’s jumper, and worked hard in the gym.
Smith informed Paul Rogers of the Cardinal Sports Network that he was confidence in his ability to shoot the ball after setting the Cardinals’ single-game record of 10 three-pointers against SMU on January 21. “I work way too hard to even think twice about my shot.”
“There are very few people I’ve ever coached,” she added, “who are as invested in their game as he is.”
Cassidy eventually came knocking with an invitation to play for the elite Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra. It was founded in 1981 to improve the country’s prospects of winning an Olympic medal, and it has produced basketball players like Andrew Bogut and Patty Mills.
Smith was determined to advance his game to Division I level, so this was a no-brainer; he moved away from home at the age of 17. Since then, the distance has only increased.
“My mom’s like my biggest fan and wants me to chase my dreams,” she remarked. “She hates seeing me leave; but she knows that this is something I love to do.”
‘Comfortable’

Jan 21, 2025; Dallas, Texas, USA; Louisville Cardinals guard Reyne Smith (6) reacts with the bench after a made three-point basket against the SMU Mustangs during the second half at Moody Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images
Kelsey had success recruiting at the Australian Institute of Sport (Xavier Cooks) before to Smith’s arrival, developing contacts with coaches along the way. When the young guard began to build a reputation for himself, they contacted the Cincinnati native on his behalf.
“I’ve always loved watching Reyne play,” said Washington Wizards assistant Adam Caporn, who was the senior teacher at the institute’s Basketball Australia Centre of Excellence while Smith and Cassidy were there. “(He) can play anywhere and help a team anywhere with that level of shooting and toughness.”
Kelsey offered Smith two things if he committed to Winthrop. The first was that, in accordance with Australian customs, he would not have to address him as coach. The second move was the aforementioned backflip into his pool.
“I didn’t think anything of it,” Smith said. “When I called him to say I was committing, I kind of forgot about it.”
Kelsey then raced outside, flipped his phone camera around, and asked his son, Johnny, to record him diving into the lake while wearing his clothing.
“I’m like, ‘Oh my God,'” Smith explained. “Coaches with so much enthusiasm are hard to come by in Australia. “It was quite funny.”
Kelsey have great expectations for Smith. When his signing became official, the coach stated, “I don’t want to put too much pressure on him; but I believe he could be Winthrop’s next great Australian.” However, that never materialised. Instead, he followed him and Cassidy to Charleston, where he broke the program record for most 3-pointers made in a game twice as a junior, finishing with 1,212 career points on 37% shooting from distance.
Smith praised Kelsey and his team for making him feel at ease during his adjustment to life in America. That’s one of the reasons he was so eager to join what they were creating in Louisville. Despite receiving offers from other institutions through the NCAA transfer site last spring, he chose not to pursue them.
“Especially during holidays like Thanksgiving (or) Christmas, PK’s always stressing to make sure that I’m OK and I’ve got something going on; and, if not, I can always come to his house,” Smith informed me.
“That’s what’s been so amazing for me: him underlining how welcome I am to come over anytime I want, and a variety of other staff members stating that if I ever need a home-cooked dinner, I can come over. Things like those simply make it feel so much simpler, and you feel a lot more at ease in that setting.”
‘It won’t endure forever.’

Nov 28, 2024; Paradise Island, Bahamas, BHS; Louisville Cardinals forward Noah Waterman (93) and Louisville Cardinals guard Terrence Edwards Jr. (5) and Louisville Cardinals guard Reyne Smith (6) react during the second half against the West Virginia Mountaineers at Imperial Arena at the Atlantis resort. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images
Smith, who had lived and breathed Kelsey’s culture for three years, came into the 2024-25 season as an expert at maintaining a forward-thinking attitude. But he was also acutely aware of the wider picture: time was of the essence.
“You kind of go in every day just with a different appreciation,” Smith claimed, “and understanding that it’s not lasting forever.”
Smith, as Kelsey mentioned after the Notre Dame win, had a smooth adjustment from the Coastal Athletic Association to the ACC. Entering March, he was nine 3s away from breaking his career high of 112 from 2023-24 and 19 shy of overtaking Taquan Dean’s 122 from 2004-05 for the top place in the U of L record book.
“His light is neon,” Kelsey explained. “Name a (shade) of green that’s greener than green and he’s got it.”
“When a play gets called for him, and you’re on the end of the screen, you just really want to do your job,” said sophomore forward James Scott, who played with Smith at Charleston before following him to the Cards. “Because you know that, if you do your job and he gets any type of space, he’s going to hit the shot.”
Smith’s 3.71 triples per game stood second in DI entering March and, if he continues at this rate, will be the highest by an ACC player since JJ Redick averaged 3.90 for Duke in 2005-06. He was also on track for the second-best conversion rate from outside the arc of his career, at 38.5%. Then there were his career-best 81 rebounds and career-low 20 turnovers.
“He’s a really good all-around player,” Kelsey explained.
Although he will soon leave Kelsey & Co. behind, Smith’s playing career is far from done. Snipers with his range are likely to find a home in the professional ranks, and he should be called upon to represent Australia in international events, including as the 2021 FIBA U19 World Cup. But when the ball stops bouncing, he wants to be a coach. He replied that teaching the game is too much pleasure to give up totally.
“He’s a great leader; he’s unbelievably bright basketball-wise; he’s got a dynamic personality,” Kelsey told me. “I’ll try to talk him out of this ridiculous racket, but what’s in your blood stays in your blood. Typically, you have no control over the situation.”
Kelsey’s regimen is also having an impact on him.
“I’m forever in debt to this staff for what they’ve done for me — for not only my basketball career but also for me as a person; kind of shaping my life so, when I leave the program, I’m not only a better basketball player but also a better man,” Smith said. “They always talk about how proud they are of me, but the feeling’s mutual.”
Brooks Holton, a Louisville men’s basketball reporter, may be reached at bholton@gannett.com and followed on X at @brooksHolton.
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