Syracuse basketball head coach Adrian Autry chooses his words carefully when addressing media. Typically measured in public speech, Autry is mindful of his words, considerate of their impact and the feelings of those he’s speaking about.
So it felt significant when he expressed public frustration following Syracuse’s 88-83 defeat to Wake Forest. Autry’s emotions were controlled, but he spoke firmly in the post-game presser and aired grievances about his team.
Autry didn’t mince words when talking about
Syracuse’s defense. He called the collective toughness of his team into question.
“It’s been a struggle all year for us. In college you gotta be tough,” Autry said. “You gotta do tough things, you gotta make tough plays. You gotta have resistance, you gotta be able to defend. We just don’t do that. We’ve been inconsistent all year and that’s reflected in our record.”
Syracuse dropped to 15-14 overall and 6-10 in the ACC after Saturday’s loss. Wake Forest’s offensive numbers were staggering. The Syracuse defense gave up 58% shooting to the Demon Deacons, including 56% from three.
“That’s been a challenge all year to get people to care about that end of the floor and not only the offensive end of the floor,” Autry said. “Until that mindset changes our results are going to be mixed.
“But you gotta be tough. And you gotta be able to play both ends of the floor in college basketball. We’re just not doing that consistently.”
Syracuse began the 2025-26 season with defense as the focal point. Defense was the centerpiece with which the team based its identity. Stops were to be this team’s calling card, tracking kills and pumping up the energy from the bench (aka the juicing station) we’re meant to reinforce that intention. Somewhere between the win over Tennessee and the start of ACC play the team’s defensive intensity started to wane.
Wake Forest out-rebounded Syracuse 30-18 and had ten offensive rebounds for 16 second-chance points. The Orange led for over 28 minutes on Saturday but Wake Forest took the lead with just over ten minutes to play. Syracuse wilted from there, unable to muster the competitive juice to keep playing through the emotional highs and lows of the game.
The ensuing press conference was the most earnest we’ve seen of Autry since the Virginia Tech game at home. Dissatisfied with his team’s fight, Autry sounded like a coach exasperated.
“Towards the end when they made their run the result was we couldn’t get a stop. We couldn’t get a rebound when we did get a stop,” Autry continued. “Not diving on the floor. Ball getting knocked out of our hands. And then on offense we got pushed around. We’re coming off screens, we just give up because we get bumped. You gotta be tough to play college basketball.”
Autry was asked if it was disappointing.
“Very disappointing,” he said. “We’ve been patient, worked on it. Given all the information, we’ve showed it. You give up ten offensive rebounds to Wake Forest.
“It comes down to, ‘Do you want to do it?’ And we’re just not doing it.”
Something between the coaching staff and the players the message isn’t getting through. We’ve seen multiple instances this season where the team hasn’t executed on what the staff is asking of its players. Whether that fault falls more on the communication from the coaching staff or the willingness and inability of the players is hard to know. While its ultimately his responsibility as the head coach, Autry sounded like a coach who was out of answers.
“This is a choice that every player has to make,” Autry said. “The time and the effort that we spend — and coaching and showing and pushing and challenging — trying to get them to understand what it takes to win basketball games and we just keep coming up short. I guess that’s on me.”
Frustration has taken hold of this Syracuse team and lingered for weeks. It can sometimes be a helpful emotion, highlighting the gap between a desired outcome against a current reality, signaling the necessary work that’s still left to do. Other times it can be a hindrance, a meta-emotion that snowballs into more frustration until an acknowledgement of a limitation is recognized.
“I’m going to take my accountability for sure and I’ve got to do a better job to get them to understand,” Autry said. “The toughness part is just, you gotta have it. You gotta have it.”
This Syracuse team has taken its lumps and from the outside looking in, it begs the question of just how much the piling up of loses has affected the team psyche in a pressure-packed season. The stakes were high for this year and Syracuse has ultimately fallen short of the benchmark set by both Autry and the athletic director. These guys are human, and the season has been anything but easy.
For Autry, he’s shielded his team from the pressure and fallen on the sword more often than not this season. After losses, Autry has taken public accountability and hasn’t blamed his players or anyone other than himself with the exception of the Virginia Tech loss and Saturday’s loss at Wake Forest.
“I don’t know how many times I keep coming up here and saying the same thing,” Autry said. “Today’s the first day that I’m just going to say what it is.”
All anyone wants to talk about in Syracuse is who the team’s next head coach is going to be. For Autry to be hurt about that would be understandable. Whether his frustration from Saturday is stemming from a fear of loss, an unmet desire for respect or whether he feels powerless to change the outcome would, at best, be a guess.
It’s just interesting that he finally let his team feel a little heat.













