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Purdue PG Braden Smith sets NCAA all-time assists record

By Thomson Reuters Mar 20, 2026 | 7:13 PM

ST. LOUIS — Purdue All-American point guard Braden Smith broke the all-time NCAA assists record Friday with a bounce pass to Trey Kaufman-Renn with 12:11 left in the first half ​of his 146th career game.

Smith tied former Duke point guard ‌Bobby Hurley with his 1,076th assist, delivering a two-handed pass to a wide-open Oscar Cluff that gave Purdue an 11-4 lead.

Cluff couldn’t get a handle on the potential record-breaker at the 15:30 mark on a feed from Smith. He missed another ‌chance ​on a traditional postup and Fletcher Loyer ⁠fired a 3 in transition ⁠on a feed from Smith but drew only the back iron seven minutes into the first half. A pick-and-roll with Kaufman-Renn failed the possession prior to the record-setting connection.

Hurley had 1,076 assists for ​the Blue Devils and is one of five players in NCAA history with at least 1,000 assists.

Smith just set a record for ⁠assists in the Big Ten tournament ⁠with 46 last week.

Smith, who scored the first basket ​of the game for Purdue on Friday, takes passing seriously.

An hour before ​tip-off at Enterprise Center, Smith was near midcourt working on ‌passing — one-handed, jump passes, a hook pass or two — with both hands, maneuvering his body and changing the trajectory on the ball from lob to laser.

He said he worked to hone his skills by watching ⁠YouTube videos of NBA players and then put a unique spin on a few when necessary.

Smith, the 2025 Big Ten Player of the Year, played ⁠basketball in Westfield, about ‌50 miles from Purdue’s campus, and was named ⁠Mr. Basketball in Indiana in 2022. Purdue head coach ​Matt ‌Painter made Smith a starter during his first ​season and he ⁠has never looked back, helping the Boilermakers reach the Final Four in 2024.

Smith has evolved as a scorer and has nine double-doubles this season. He entered the NCAA Tournament as Purdue’s top scorer (14.0 points per game) and he was second in the nation in assists (9.1 per game).

–Jeff Reynolds, ​Field Level Media