At 6-foot-9, Freeman fits exactly what today’s game demands from a forward. He is not a traditional back-to-the-basket big, and he is not just a wing playing up. He lives in that hybrid space, the kind of player who can bend defenses.
At Syracuse, Freeman averaged 16.5 points and 7.2 rebounds, showing he can produce at a high level when healthy. But it is how he gets those numbers that stands out.
He is a fluid athlete who can:
- Finish above the rim in traffic
- Attack slower defenders off the dribble
- Step out and hit perimeter shots
That versatility matters in Big East Conference play, where matchups are physical and often decided by which frontcourt can stretch the floor without sacrificing toughness.
The upside is real and it is NBA level
Freeman is not just productive. He is a projection play with legitimate pro tools.

Former five-star recruits do not hit the portal often with this combination of size, coordination, and scoring instincts. When he is right, Freeman looks like a future NBA forward who can:
- Score at all three levels
- Run in transition like a wing
- Create mismatches against smaller defenders
This is exactly why Rick Pitino pushed late and aggressively. He is betting on development, not just production.
And historically, that is where Pitino thrives. He takes raw, high-upside players and forces them into consistency through structure and accountability.
The risk is availability and consistency
There is no way around it. Freeman comes with real concerns.
In two seasons, he has played just 37 total games. A recurring lower-body injury, including a surgically repaired toe, has limited his ability to stay on the floor. That is not a small detail. It is the defining variable in this move.
Even when available, Freeman has been more flashes than full-season dominance. The defensive end, in particular, remains a work in progress.
That creates a clear boom-or-bust profile:
- Best case: All-Big East forward and NBA riser
- Worst case: Talented but unavailable piece who never stabilizes
Why the fit at St. John’s actually makes sense
This is not just about talent. It is about environment.
Freeman is walking into a system under Pitino that will demand:
- Defensive accountability
- Physical conditioning
- Consistent effort possession to possession
That structure could be exactly what unlocks him.
St. John’s also has a clear path for him. With frontcourt departures, Freeman will not be eased in. He will be expected to start and produce immediately. That kind of responsibility can accelerate development if he embraces it.
What this means for St. John’s ceiling
This move changes the conversation. Before Freeman, St. John’s looked like a solid roster reload. With him, there is a pathway to something more.
If he stays healthy and takes a step defensively, the Red Storm suddenly have:
- A go-to scoring forward
- A matchup problem in the frontcourt
- A player who can swing high-level games
In a conference as deep as the Big East, those are the pieces that separate NCAA tournament teams from legitimate threats.
Freeman is not a safe addition. He is a swing.
But those are the bets that can reshape a season. For St. John’s, that is exactly the point.
