College Basketball

St. John’s lands Utah transfer Deivon Smith in huge get

One of St. John’s top priorities this offse✨ason was rebuilding its backcourt and it landed a key piece in the endeavor Monday morning. 

Utah’s Deivon Smith, one of the top lead guards in the transfer portal, verbally committed to Rick Pitino and💛 the Johnnies after taking an official visit late last week.

St. John’s could end up pairing him with Seto🦄n Hall star Kadary Richmond, whom it is still chasing. Richmond has taken visits to St. Johꦺn’s and Oklahoma. 

The 6-foot Smith set a Pac-12 single-season record with five triple-doubles las꧙t season, a major difference-maker who will help replace departed star Dani𒉰ss Jenkins.

Utah Utes guard Deivon Smith driving to the basket against Colorado Buffaloes guard KJ Simpson during a basketball game at T-Mobile Arena
Deivon Smith is transferring from Utah to St. John’s. Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

He was also hearing from, among others, Washington, West Virginia, Oklahoma State and Louisv🌼ille. 

It will be a homecoming of sorts. Smith’s mother, Toni, hails from Broo🎃klyn and his father Sean is from Connecticut.

He🅰 grew up in Decatur, Ga., and started his career at Mississippi State.

Smith has never played in the Garden, but got a chance to see it during his v꧟isit.

It will be his new home. So will the Big East, one ♉of the country’s premier leagues. 

“I just wanted to be pushed and get a different challenge,” Smith told The Post. “I want to be great. I paid attention when they called me, paid attention to all the details and they were the best fit. … [Pitino] definitely praised my game, just showed me ways I can be successful in his program and in the future. He definitely believes🐼 in me a lot. It made my decision easier.” 

Pitino wrote on X that Smith hꦡas similarities to H🙈eat guard Terry Rozier, his former star at Louisville. 

“Super excited to have Deivon Smith joining th🐼e Johnnies,” he posted. “Reminds me of Terry Rozier. Total Dog who rebounds, creates, and scores.” 

“I love it. I know they have some good guards,” Smith said𓃲. “I know it’s going to be a fight each and every night I step on the court. I love the big moments.” 

Utah guard Deivon Smith goes to the basket as Stanford guard Michael Jones defends.
Utah guard Deivon Smith goes to the basket as Stanford guard Michael Jones defends. AP

Smith averaged 13.3 points, 7.1 as🉐sists and 6.3 rebounds last season, and shot a career-best 40 percent from 3-point range.

He credited that improvement to being given freedom by Utah to play his game and not worry about getting pulled ꧃if he made mistakes. 

“Bottom line, he’s really good. Really quick, hard to keep in front [of], can guard the ball,” a high-major assistant coach familiar with Smith sai🐻d. “He’s more of a playmaker than a big-time scorer, and that’s really the one and only thing. You want him to play with other good players so you can maximize them. 

“T⭕hat’s a good g⛄et. He’s probably one of the three best point guards who hit the portal.” 

Smith’s addition leaves the Johnnies with two open scholarship🉐s.

It has also added transfers Vince Iwuchukwu (USC) and Aaron Scott (North Texas) a🐠nd returns the young core of Simeon Wilcher, Brady Dunlap, RJ Luis and Zuby Ejiofor.

St. John’s♏ is also monitoring the ཧlawsuit filed by Jordan Dingle and Chris Ledlum.

They are suing the NCAA for an extra year of eligibilityꦉ after their waivers were denied.