Kaden Powers Could Be Holding The Key To Rutgers' Backcourt Ceiling

With improved strength and confidence, Kaden Powers is poised to be a key asset for Rutgers' upcoming basketball season.

Rutgers has already banked one of its cleaner offseason wins by getting Kaden Powers back in the fold, and that decision could matter a lot once the games start counting. The true freshman put up 6.1 points and 1.8 rebounds per game last season, numbers that barely hint at how quickly he worked his way into Steve Pikiell’s plans.

Powers’ first stretch was uneven in the box score and revealing everywhere else. He logged only 24 minutes across four of Rutgers’ first five games and didn’t play at all in the win over UNLV.

But as the early lineups stopped working, Pikiell started adjusting, and Powers’ role grew with it. Over the next five games, he was up to 15 minutes a night, then earned a spot in the starting five for 15 straight games.

That run eventually ended, and the reason was familiar for a first-year player grinding through a Big Ten season: the freshman wall. Rutgers spent the offseason trying to make sure Powers is better equipped for that kind of load this time around.

"He's much bigger," Pikiell said of Powers last week. "He's 200 pounds so he put on some weight."

Rutgers added outside help this offseason, bringing in Darrin Smith Jr. from Central Connecticut State and Rashad Jones from Coastal Carolina. Even so, Powers reportedly looked like the more natural Big Ten starter in practice last week.

"He started 15 games for us. You can kind of tell," Pikiell said of Powers.

That’s the encouraging part for Rutgers. Powers already showed he can survive starter’s minutes, and now the physical growth seems to match the opportunity.

His length gave him a defensive base last season, but the added strength should help him hold up better over the course of a long conference schedule. If that translates, Rutgers gets more than just a returning guard - it gets a player who can help on both ends and maybe give the perimeter a needed boost.

There’s also a different feel to him now. Pikiell pointed to the confidence Powers is carrying into the summer.

"He's having a good summer, acting like a veteran, which is nice," Pikiell said. "Retention is a huge part of it."

Whether he starts or comes off the bench, Powers looks positioned to be one of Rutgers’ more important pieces. In a Big Ten that demands depth and toughness, having a returning guard with starter experience, added strength and room to grow is exactly the kind of internal win that can shape a season.

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