Purdue’s basketball success isn’t stopping at the scoreboard. The Boilermakers were recognized this week by the National Association of Basketball Coaches for what they did in the classroom during the past academic year, adding another layer to a program that keeps stacking accomplishments.
The headline honor was the Team Academic Excellence Award, which Purdue earned after posting a 3.10 GPA for the 2025-26 academic year. The Boilermakers cleared a 3.0 in both semesters, and the release noted that six returning players for the 2026-27 season are carrying an average above 3.0. To qualify for the award, teams have to maintain at least a 3.0 GPA.
Three Purdue players also picked up individual recognition. Fletcher Loyer, Sam King and Jace Rayl were named to the NABC Honors Court after each finished with at least a 3.34 cumulative GPA.
Loyer studied Organizational Leadership, King is majoring in Finance and Rayl is working toward a Kinesiology degree. King and Rayl are back with the Boilermakers for the 2026-27 season, while Loyer is currently in NBA Summer League with the Los Angeles Clippers.
The academic awards come on the heels of a strong year on the floor. Purdue finished the 2025-26 season at 30-9, reaching 30 wins for the third time under Matt Painter. The Boilermakers also captured the Big Ten Tournament for the third time in program history and advanced to the Elite Eight for the second time in three years.
Painter has made it clear that education remains a central part of what Purdue sells. In 2024, he told the Inside College Basketball podcast, "Education has been a big piece for us," Painter told the Inside College Basketball podcast in 2024. "So, if education is not in the flow, then we're probably not your school."
That message still matters in recruiting, and Purdue has leaned into it. Earlier this summer, the Boilermakers landed four-star center Isaiah Hill, the highest-ranked recruit in program history. Hill said education was part of what drew him to Purdue.
"I [committed] to Purdue because, No. 1, it's a big-man school. It's a good big-man school," Hill said.
"It's a good school for academics and education. They've got a good coaching staff as well."
For Purdue, the classroom continues to be part of the pitch and part of the payoff.
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Purdues second fall camp under Barry Odom comes with the usual August optimism, but the Boilermakers are still trying to sort out a few of the details that can shape a season long before the first snap. After a 2-10 finish in 2025, the staff has tried to upgrade the offense by adding transfer help at receiver and reinforcing the offensive line, giving the roster more depth as Odom continues building around his system.
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