Todd Golden announced Florida’s plan to redshirt 7-foot-9 freshman Olivier Rioux this season, explaining the big man’s lack of playing time.
Just before [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] sent the walk-ons and reserves in to finish off Monday’s win over Grambling State, he took a moment to speak with 7-foot-9-inch freshman [autotag]Olivier Rioux[/autotag].
Despite cheers from the Rowdy Reptiles, Rioux hasn’t seen the floor this season, and it may stay that way for a while as Florida looks to preserve a year of eligibility for the Canadian phenom.
“We’re talking about redshirting him for this year,” Golden said on Thursday. “I should have made that clear because, honestly, it’s put him in a tough situation. He’s sitting over there than at the end of games and everybody’s yelling at him and trying to get him out there. They just hadn’t understood that that was our potential plan for him.”
While the plan is subject to change, it’s a decision that Florida and Rioux have made with council from his family and former coaches. The goal is to set Rioux up for success at the college level, which means developing him for another year.
Rioux can still play in four games this season and redshirt, but the Grambling State win was not the right moment to bring him in. That’s what Golden spoke to him about in the game’s closing moments.
“I was just explaining to him ‘Hey, the reason why I’m not putting you in right now is what we’ve talked about a little bit,'” he said. “And this wasn’t a choice that I made for him. This is something that people out of our program have talked with him … So, I just went up to him, and I was like, ‘Hey, I’m not trying to be disrespectful to you. I’m just not trying to burn you here. Put you in for 30 seconds.'”
Rioux, who Golden describes as a “pleaser,” has not pushed back at all on the plan. It’s a group decision, and Golden believes it’s one that Rioux is comfortable with.
Florida already has good depth in the frontcourt, with Sam Alexis and Thomas Haugh coming off the bench behind Preseason All-SEC forward Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu. Adding another big man to the mix would mean one of the five players losing minutes, which doesn’t benefit any of them.
The World’s Tallest Teenager is bound to take the court at some point this season, but the Rowdies and the rest of Gator Nation shouldn’t hold their breath given this new information.
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Gators commit Olivier Rioux is set to make the jump to college basketball, and the 7-footer recently received his official height.
Florida Gators commit Olivier Rioux is set to make the jump to college basketball next season, and the 7-footer recently received his official height from the program.
Rioux, born in Canada, was rated a three-star prospect by three major recruiting outlets after playing at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida. He committed to head coach Todd Golden in November 2023 over Florida Atlantic and Stetson.
The 18-year-old earned the distinction of world’s tallest teenager by Guinness World Records in 2021, measuring 7 feet, 5 inches at the age of 15. He has continued to grow and was listed by the Gators this week at 7 feet, 9 inches on the team website.
Florida’s incoming freshman, Olivier Rioux, is listed as 7-FOOT-9 😳
He’s the tallest player in college basketball history and holds a Guiness World Record as the tallest teenager ever 😨 pic.twitter.com/nupUnLy8eI
Rioux quickly grew to be 5 feet, 2 inches in fifth grade, and crossed the 7-foot mark before beginning seventh grade. He was 7 feet, 5 inches upon arriving at the IMG Academy and will begin his collegiate career just shy of 8 feet tall.
He has represented Canada at the junior level several times, most recently in the 2024 FIBA U18 AmeriCup. He averaged 4.5 points and 4.5 rebounds on 52.9% shooting from the field in six appearances as Canada won the bronze medal.
Rioux is viewed as a raw player who will need time to develop his overall skill set and ability. The move to college should help prepare him for the next step in his development and maturation.
Florida basketball appears to be in the middle of the pack among its SEC peers when it comes to hoops in 2024-25.
The expansion of the Southeastern Conference has dominated the news for football but the additions of the Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners also have implications for other sports, like basketball. The league proved a powerhouse on the parquet last season and appears poised for another strong run this winter.
The Athletic’s Kyle Tucker took a look at the 16-member conference now that the dust has ostensibly settled from the big change, ranking each program based on several factors, including biggest player losses and additions, returning rotation players, top-100 freshmen added and top-100 transfers added.
In Tucker’s assessment, the Florida Gators ranked seventh — behind the sixth-ranked Kentucky Wildcats and ahead of the eighth-ranked Arkansas Razorbacks.
Assessing Florida’s roster ahead of 2024-25
“Six of the top nine players, including All-SEC guard (Walter) Clayton, are back from a 24-win team that reached the SEC championship game and made the NCAA Tournament in [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag]’s second season,” Tucker begins.
“They have a ton of returning size and production in the paint — and added more in Chattanooga transfer [autotag]Sam Alexis[/autotag] (9.1 rebounds per game) and 7-foot-9, 290-pound freshman [autotag]Olivier Rioux[/autotag], the world’s tallest teenager,” he continues. “Martin, an All-CUSA and All-AAC guard who was a key piece of FAU’s Final Four run in 2023, has made 242 career 3-pointers and should replenish a lot of what the Gators lost from their backcourt.”
Tucker is feeling bullish on Golden’s personal stock coming into the season as well.
“We think the 38-year-old Golden is a rising star in coaching — he won 24 games in year two at San Francisco and 24 games in year two at Florida — but he’s yet to win an NCAA Tournament game. That’s the next big hurdle, and this is a roster good enough to do it.”
Gators 2024-25 season opener
Florida will face the South Florida Bulls on Nov. 4 at the VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville. The only officially announced game on Florida’s schedule is the Dec. 4 matchup with Virginia, which is part of the SEC-ACC Challenge.
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The Florida Gators men’s basketball team is adding another big man to its roster, Viktor Mikic, who hails from Serbia.
Florida’s frontcourt got some added depth on Friday when it added 6-foot-11 center [autotag]Viktor Mikic[/autotag] to the team, according to a report from 247Sports.
The Serbian prospect played one year of high school ball in America at Chattanooga (Tennessee) Hamilton Heights.
He averaged 14.3 points and 10.2 rebounds per game, earning him offers from Bowling Green Chattanooga, Hawaii and Rutgers. Before moving to America, Mikic played in the Serbian Junior League, where he also averaged a double-double.
Mikic joins returning sophomores [autotag]Alex Condon[/autotag] and [autotag]Thomas Haugh[/autotag] in Florida’s frontcourt, along with incoming transfer center [autotag]Reuben Chinyelu[/autotag] (Washington State) and forward [autotag]Sam Alexis[/autotag] (Chattanooga). There’s also 7-foot-9 freshman [autotag]Olivier Rioux[/autotag] to compete with.
This marks the third straight season that [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] brought in an international player, which worked for him in San Francisco. Forward [autotag]Aleks Szymczyk[/autotag] transferred from the program after suffering an injury his sophomore year and guard [autotag]Kajus Kublickas[/autotag] is still with the team.
Condon is the main success story. He came over from Australia ahead of last year and earned an SEC All-Freshman Team nod.
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The 7-foot-9 Florida Gators commit is turning heads and and off the court — in more ways than one.
Olivier Rioux, best known as the Montrealer giant on the IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.) basketball team, is more than a basketball player — he takes pleasure in the arts, raving about abstract aquarelle. He is interested in biology and astronomy, saying he absolutely believes aliens are real, for “if we’re the only beings alive, it’s scarier.”
It’s fitting because Rioux is among the new wave of basketball players who have never been seen before.
Standing at 7-foot-9 inches and 290 pounds—an updated spurt since last year, when he was closer to 7-foot-7—the University of Florida basketball commit stands taller than Chet Holmgren, taller than Bol Bol, taller than Victor Wembanyama — all who are changing how the basketball world sees players who are that tall.
“(Wembanyama) is growing basketball for us, for the tall guys,” Rioux said. “I’ve seen him train and know some of his training and know some of the work he does. I like it. He owns it.”
Listed at 7-foot-4, Wembanyama undergoes training that has helped to alleviate bodily stress that often plagues players of this stature. His mobility is outstanding, and he looks fluid on the court the way few players of his size do.
“He can do the splits. I don’t know if you understand how big that is, for a big man, but doing the splits for us is very hard,” Rioux said.
The high school senior ices his body, does blood flow drills that essentially require him to lay with his back on the ground and legs up against the wall, and does some yoga.
Rioux spent two days last year with former Chicago Bulls center and longtime team radio color commentator Bill Wennington. The 7-footer who spent 15 years playing professional basketball, 13 in the NBA, gave Rioux advice about the game and health while the two played ping pong, faced off in chess, and tested the French knowledge of Wennington, another Canadian.
Following in the footsteps of guys like Wennington has long been Rioux’s ambition. He started playing basketball seriously at the age of 8, by which point he was already standing 6-foot-1. By the sixth grade, he was 6-foot-11, and then, over the summer before seventh grade, he crossed the 7-foot mark. For that, he has made his basketball career working in the post under the guidance of Pascal Jobin, who has coached at Cégep Édouard Montpetit and McGill University.
Rioux’s offensive game features a lot of dribble-handoffs and setting screens. He said he knows how to pass the ball well and has good timing when deciding when to shoot, but he’s still gaining comfort shooting from further out. He knows that being tall isn’t enough in the NBA; successful careers for players of this stature have been centered around height, strength, mobility, and versatility.
While Dirk Nowitzki ushered in the era of big men who could shoot, he also was a precursor of general managers scouting for bigs who could create offense away from the paint. Giannis Antetokounmpo, at 6-foot-11, led the Milwaukee Bucks to a championship because he can be a primary ballhandler and create for himself and his teammates. Nikola Jokic has melded the roles of center and point guard better than any other player in history and rode that skill to a title.
Bol is still in the league in large part because his guard-like abilities are so tantalizing for an athlete who stands 7-foot-3. The Oklahoma City Thunder traded up to draft 7-foot Aleksej Pokusevki because he was someone who moved fluidly, dribbled and passed well, and could shoot. Wembanyama can dominate at the rim, but he’s also mobile, can create off the dribble, and is comfortable running plays at the top of the arc beyond setting a screen.
Even when it comes to blocking shots, which Rioux is predictably adept at, he vouches for the importance of being mobile.
“It’s more mobility and length that helps you,” he said. “It’s both.”
In the U-16 FIBA games, he averaged 8.3 points and 10.3 rebounds in 18.8 minutes per game. This summer, at the age of 17, he played for the Canadian U-19 team. He saw limited playing time—three minutes of action in three of the five games he played—but recorded a total of seven rebounds in those three matchups. In the final game, 12 minutes against Japan, he recorded 10 points and five rebounds.
At IMG, he is working on his game while splitting time between the IMG Varsity Blue roster and the program’s national team. Rioux was with the national team during the City of Palms Classic over the weekend before Christmas, getting three minutes of action against Richmond Heights. He’ll keep growing — maybe literally, as his stated height of 7-foot-7.5 in the interview with USA TODAY High School Sports was taller than the various heights listed around different outlets — before heading to Florida, where he committed in early November.
(Note: Since the original publication, Rioux has grown, having now been listed at the aforementioned 7-foot-9.)
Rioux was attracted to the environment of the campus and people at the university. He’s unsure what he plans to study — with an interest in physics, biology, and art, who’s to say?
“It’s a good environment and people are very nice. I felt like I would fit in that program and the people are very mature,” Rioux said. “I felt like I could get taught a lot of stuff.”
Florida’s incoming walk-on center will be the tallest player to ever compete in college basketball this fall with his new reported height.
There has been some recent hype on social media surrounding Florida basketball’s towering 2024 commit: three-star center [autotag]Olivier Rioux[/autotag] out of IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida.
The clamor surrounding the incoming freshman is focused on his updated height on the Gators’ profile page, in which Rioux is now listed at 7 feet 9 inches. If that measurement is correct, it would make the native of Montreal, Quebec, the tallest person to have ever played college basketball.
As of last November, his height was listed at 7 feet 6 inches, representing a three-inch growth spurt over the past six months. It also increased Rioux’s own Guinness World Record as the world’s tallest teenager
Canadian Gators commit Olivier Rioux's height has officially been listed on the team's website.
Not much is expected from the young center in his first year, as he is generally viewed as a developmental project by the program coming in as a preferred walk-on. However, Rioux appears to be confident in head coach [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag]’s skills and is willing to be patient while he works his way up the bench.
“I like (Golden) and think he could make me grow a lot and help me (improve),” he told Gators Online. “He likes the fact I can see the floor and have good inside and outside (game) — and defensively.”
Last year, he helped Canada earn the bronze medal at the U18 FIBA AmeriCup, averaging 4.5 points and 4.5 rebounds a game.
Recruiting Summary
Rioux is ranked No. 305 overall and No. 53 at his position nationally according to the 247Sports composite while the On3 industry ranking has him at Nos. 278 and 36, respectively.
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Florida basketball landed a commitment from the World’s Largest Teenager, three-star IMG Academy center Olivier Rioux.
Florida basketball’s latest commitment comes from a player that makes Colin Castleton look tiny.
The Gators landed 7-foot-6-inch Canadian center [autotag]Olivier Rioux[/autotag] on Wednesday, the first day of the early signing period. Rioux plays high school ball at IMG Academy in Florida and plans to reclassify so he can join the team next season, according to Swamp247.
He’ll follow in the footsteps of Purdue 7-foot-4-inch center Zach Edey, who also attended IMG before joining a Power Five program. Out of high school, Edey was a three-star recruit, ranked 75th among centers in his class. He won the National Player of the Year Award in 2023 and is back with the Boilermakers for another year.
If Rioux can become half the player Edey is, he’ll be a massive feather in the cap of Todd Golden (and Florida’s recruiting staff).
With his height, Rioux should excel at blocking shots. It’s getting him to move up and down the court effectively at the college pace that will be tricky. Still, they say you can’t teach size, and Rioux literally holds the world record for the largest teenager.
Rioux is a three-star talent ranked No. 147 overall in the country, according to On3. The other three main recruiting services have him listed as unranked.
He joins four-star guard Isaiah Brown in Florida’s 2024 recruiting class.
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After making the Guinness Book of World Records in 2021, Olivier Rioux has once again taken the internet’s notice with some highlight footage from Brookwood Elite, a Canadian AAU team. At 17 years old, Rioux is 7-foot-6, according to his Instagram …
After making the Guinness Book of World Records in 2021, Olivier Rioux has once again taken the internet’s notice with some highlight footage from Brookwood Elite, a Canadian AAU team.
At 17 years old, Rioux is 7-foot-6, according to his Instagram page (and 231 cm on his FIBA page, to be exact, which is closer to 7-foot-6.5). He is listed at 300 pounds on 247Sports, an encouraging number, given as many prospects of his massive size are very thin — Bol Bol, for instance, was about 180 pounds in the summer of 2016, when he was 16 years old, according to DraftExpress.
Rioux grew up in Canada and has been at IMG Academy since July 2021. The game looks easy at his size, as highlight reels show him being a menace at the rim on both sides of the ball, grabbing offensive rebounds and swatting away shot attempts.
7-foot-6 Olivier Rioux is going off this summer! He holds the Guinness World Record for tallest teenager 😱 pic.twitter.com/k21JYdldPA
He played for the Canadas U19 team this summer. Rioux was at the end of the bench, appearing in 31 total minutes over five games, but in those limited minutes, he averaged 3.2 points and 3.4 rebounds, including 1.4 offensive rebounds per game. Rioux made seven of the eight shots he attempted.
Take a look at actual game footage instead of only highlight footage. You can start with about 4:45 left in the game to see him play a somewhat uninterrupted stretch. Team Canada switched to a 2-3 zone when Rioux entered, so he was camped in the paint on defense the whole time; while on offense, he did some pick-and-roll action and worked to get position down low.
It appears Rioux has received relatively minimal recruiting action, as On3 sites offers from only Stetson and Florida Atlantic. With two years left of high school basketball, collegiate programs will likely look to see if his offensive skills go beyond height and see how he defends on the perimeter and adjusts to offensive schemes.
On3 lists him as a 3-star prospect, while 247Sports, ESPN and Rivals all do not have him ranked.
While collegiate teams might not be paying a ton of attention yet, Rioux has garnered attention from the pros. He made a congratulations Instagram post to Jamal Murray after the NBA Finals, reminding the Denver Nuggets point guard about that time several years ago when Murray asked for a picture from Rioux, who at that point was a 12-year-old standing 6-foot-10.