By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE –– He’d seen plenty of UVA men’s basketball games at John Paul Jones Arena. Until Tuesday, however, Kadin Shedrick had never played in one.
In his JPJ debut, Shedrick showed why the Cavaliers’ coaching staff is so high on his potential. The 6-11 redshirt freshman contributed 12 points and a game-high eight rebounds in 18 minutes off the bench to help No. 15 Virginia defeat Saint Francis (Pa.) 76-51 on Tuesday.
Pillar Player of the Game
🏀 @kcshedrick
1⃣2⃣ points
8⃣ rebounds
🔶⚔️🔷 #GoHoos pic.twitter.com/NHtP9AslY3— Virginia Men's Basketball (@UVAMensHoops) December 2, 2020
Had there been a typical crowd at JPJ, Shedrick would have received a loud ovation when he checked out with 6:25 to play. But with the COVID-19 pandemic ongoing, attendance was limited to family members of the Cavaliers (2-1) and the Red Flash (1-2).
“It’s different,” UVA head coach Tony Bennett said on a Zoom call after the game. “It’s so different. I think we’ve made this place so special and so alive, so now it has to be about [what’s] between the lines and bringing energy and bringing execution. And there’s familiarity because you practice in here, but as far as the crowd [providing a] homecourt advantage, no more.”
Four players scored in double figures for UVA: redshirt seniors Jay Huff (13 points) and Sam Hauser (11), junior Trey Murphy III (10) and Shedrick, whose 12 points were a career high. Shedrick hit 5 of 6 shots from the floor.
Huff said Shedrick has made strides in “his mid-range jump shot and his 3-point shooting as well. I know we haven’t seen much of it yet, but he’s improved dramatically in that area. Then also I saw a lot of fight in him today, and that’s something that we’ve seen a lot in practice recently, too. He’s just been getting a lot of offensive rebounds. His long arms help a lot with that, so he’s going to be a big piece moving forward.”
It’s impossible, Bennett said, to miss Shedrick: “his length, his dimensions. He’s long and he’s very active, and he’s continuous. He plays hard on the glass and he’s working. He’s still learning.”
After the pandemic cut short the 2019-20 season, the University switched to online classes in mid-March, and Shedrick went home to Raleigh, North Carolina. Knee problems, however, kept him from training as much as he had hoped, and he hadn’t made many physical gains by the time he returned to Charlottesville in July.
Shedrick experienced another setback once the fall semester started, contracting mononucleosis in early October.
“I had it the whole month of October,” said Shedrick, who lost 25 pounds, dropping from 223 to 198. He’s back to about 215 pounds and hopes to regain the rest of the weight he lost by the end of the month.
The illness “was very frustrating for me,” Shedrick said. “Mono definitely had me pretty down, and I knew when I came back I would just have to push even harder to try and earn what I wanted to get. And so that’s what I did. I worked with [strength and conditioning coach] Mike Curtis and I made sure I ate a lot, got plenty of sleep, and got back to health, and [head athletic trainer] Ethan Saliba also helped me a ton with that, too.”
That Shedrick didn’t have a more productive offseason was unfortunate, Bennett said, “but he’s getting opportunities now, and I think he gives us a dimension that was good, and I was really pleased with his effort and his output tonight.”
In terms of his skills, Shedrick said, “I feel 100 percent. In terms of my stamina, it might be down a little bit still. I get winded a lot faster than I used to, I think, but it will come back in time.”
