Kendall Pollard lives up to promise with Dayton Flyers

Senior from Chicago part of special senior class
Dayton’s Kendall Pollard, left, guards Trey Landers as the team shoots around before the first practice of the season on Monday, Oct. 10, 2016, at the Cronin Center. David Jablonski/Staff

Dayton’s Kendall Pollard, left, guards Trey Landers as the team shoots around before the first practice of the season on Monday, Oct. 10, 2016, at the Cronin Center. David Jablonski/Staff

Editor’s note: The Dayton Flyers start the season Nov. 11. In the 26 days leading to the opener, the Dayton Daily News will explore different aspects of the program in the A-Z Guide to Dayton Basketball. This is the 16th installment. P: Pollard.

Four years ago this month, Kendall Pollard tried calling Dayton Flyers coach Archie Miller to tell him he had picked UD over Rhode Island. He tried three times and didn’t get an answer, so he called Tom Ostrom, who was the assistant coach in charge of recruiting him and Kyle Davis, another Chicago native who committed to the Flyers that fall.

“Coach Ostrom, when I told him I was ready to be a Flyer, he said that’s the best thing he heard since his wife said, ‘I do,’” Pollard told the Dayton Daily News at the time.”

Entering the 2016-17 season, Ostrom can look back on the recruitment of Pollard and Davis with fondness. Those two, along with senior guard Scoochie Smith, can end their careers as the winningest class in UD history. Dayton has won 78 games in the last three seasons. No class has won more than 97. Senior Charles Cooke, who practiced with UD two seasons ago and debuted last season, also gets a big share of the credit.

"It's a credit to the three kids as much as anybody," Ostrom said. "They're every-day guys. They rarely miss a practice, if ever. Scoochie has missed maybe one practice in his entire career, Kyle maybe two or three. Kendall had serious injuries last year, which derailed him, but they never have little stuff that keeps them out. They come to practice every single day. None of them are going to leave here as the all-time leading scorer or all-time leading rebounder or all-time leading assists person most likely, but they're going to leave here winning and that's what they're going to be known for, as winners at the highest level.

“The way they approach the process every day, the way they approach practice every day, individual instruction, weigh-lifting, their diet, that’s what contributes to it. It’s a little bit day by day, 365 days a year, added to it where they get a little bit better every day. As freshmen, they helped us go to the Elite Eight. As sophomores, they had starring roles where they played 32, 35, 38 minutes and had another special year, and they did last year as well, getting to three straight NCAA tournaments.”

PHOTOS: Best shots of Kendall Pollard

After having offseason knee and wrist surgery, Pollard continues to make progress as the start of the new season nears. He was cleared full full-contact practices earlier this month, didn’t play in the Red and Blue Game on Oct. 22 but played Saturday in a scrimmage against Marquette.

Pollard, a 6-6 forward from Simeon Career Academy in Chicago, enters his final season with 806 career points. He's tied for 65th in school history with Allen Elijah (1972-75). He won the A-10's Most Improved Player award as a sophomore as his scoring average jumped from 2.2 to 12.7 and his rebounds jumped from 1.3 to 5.3

Last season, Pollard’s knee trouble caused his scoring to fall to 10.3 and his rebounding average fall to 4.9.
When Dayton recruited Pollard, it saw his promise more than anything because Pollard played on a team that starred Jabari Parker, the nation’s top recruit. Parker now plays for the Milwaukee Bucks.
“He wasn’t the most highly-decorated player,” Ostrom said. “He may not even have been the second- or third-best player. But you saw it senior year when Jabari got hurt, he stepped into a different role and really thrived in that role. You just saw upside, a great athleticism. He plays bigger than he is. You saw a lot of potential with him. You saw a little bit of that when he was a freshman with bits and pieces toward the end of the year he was really starting to come on. His sophomore year he just completely took off.”
Pollard and Davis fit into the same mold. The Dayton coaches liked them because of their winning spirit, attitudes and toughness. That’s what they continue to bring as seniors.

"Kendall came here kind of quiet and kind of shy," Ostrom said. "He's very close with his mom. Him more than Kyle got homesick early. He wasn't sure and away from home and on his own the first time. Now he's come into his own. He's a man and a leader on the team. He's really grown up. His sophomore year, toward the end of the year, he was as good as anyone in the league. He was playing with unbelievable confidence. You could rely on him so much. Unfortunately last year, he was hurt for about half the season."

Time will tell how Pollard’s injury and the offseason training time he missed affects him. The coaching staff has been cautious with him, which is why it was such a good sign that he played Saturday in the scrimmage.

“For four weeks, we had him on the court and really started to wear him out conditioning wise,” Miller said at A-10 Media Day on Oct. 18. “We got his weight down to about 230, which is the goal to practice. I’m going to try to get him about 5 more pounds if we can. I want him to play as light as we can as since he’s been in Dayton. I think it’s good for his body, and I think he’ll be quicker. Just in watching him play, he’s not the Kendall we’re accustomed to seeing, but he is Kendall, and it’s been a big jump in practice having him around.”

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