Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsTuesday, July 7, 2026

Oregon’s Chris Boucher tore his ACL and it’s not fair after what he’s been through

The Ducks’ big man has torn his ACL and that’s devastating after everything he’s been through.

NCAA Basketball: Colorado at Oregon
NCAA Basketball: Colorado at Oregon
Scott Olmos-USA TODAY Sports
Ricky O'Donnell
Ricky O'Donnell has covered basketball at all levels for more than a decade at SB Nation. He’s currently the Associate Director of Programming.

Chris Boucher was never supposed to be here. “Here” counts for a lot of things in this case: playing big-time college basketball, starring for an Oregon team with legitimate Final Four aspirations, blossoming into the type of three-point shooting, shot-blocking center every coach dreams about.

Boucher’s college basketball journey ended Saturday night when it was announced his season is over with a torn ACL. It’s devastating news for the Ducks on the brink of the NCAA tournament. It’s crushing for Boucher. It also robs March Madness of one of its most inspiring individual storylines.

Boucher’s story has been told and retold many times at this point. If you haven’t heard it, read Luke Winn’s preseason profile at SI. It’s worth your time and paints a complete picture of just how unlikely Boucher’s journey really was.

Boucher was a high school dropout in Montreal. He was working behind the grill at a restaurant. He had never played organized basketball in his life. He was broke and life wasn’t presenting him with any easy ways out.

Then, something totally unexpected happened: Boucher finally caught a break. From Winn:

On May 31, 2012, some regulars from the Montreal-Nord pickup-game scene had an open roster spot for their entry in the annual Hang Time tournament at Centre Sportif de la Petite Bourgogne, and invited Boucher to join. He accepted, and although his team was blown out the next day by Montreal’s most established AAU program, the Adidas-sponsored Brookwood Elite, he showed off his relentless motor in that game, scoring 44 points, mostly by running in transition and fighting for put-backs. Rwigema happened to be in the crowd, and he asked one of his QC United players, “Who is this kid?”

That was Boucher’s springboard. He ended up at a prep school, transferred to New Mexico Junior College, transferred again to another junior college in Wyoming and eventually caught an assistant’s eye at Oregon.

Boucher had two great seasons for Oregon. This year he averaged 11.8 points and 2.5 blocks per game. He shot threes (35 percent from deep), challenged shots and gave Dana Altman another plus athlete in the front court.

Boucher’s college career might be over, but he’ll come back from this and make money playing ball somewhere, maybe in the NBA, maybe not. Either way, his story is a reminder of why we love March Madness: players from all over the world, from every type of background imaginable, all doing something that has the whole world watching.

Men's College Basketball
Dusty May’s stunning NBA departure leaves Michigan facing its biggest test yetDusty May’s stunning NBA departure leaves Michigan facing its biggest test yet
Men's College Basketball

How will Michigan recover from losing Dusty May?

By Mike Rutherford
Men's College Basketball
Dallas Mavericks instant grade for Dusty May’s stunning hire as team’s next head coachDallas Mavericks instant grade for Dusty May’s stunning hire as team’s next head coach
Men's College Basketball

Let’s grade the Mavs’ decision to hire Dusty May away from Michigan.

By Ricky O'Donnell
NBA
Caleb Wilson is chasing greatness in the NBA Draft, and he’s ready to save your franchiseCaleb Wilson is chasing greatness in the NBA Draft, and he’s ready to save your franchise
NBA

Inside the making of Caleb Wilson, the NBA Draft’s ultimate upside swing

By Ricky O'Donnell
Men's College Basketball
College basketball top-25 rankings for men’s 2026-27 season updated after NBA Draft withdrawalsCollege basketball top-25 rankings for men’s 2026-27 season updated after NBA Draft withdrawals
Men's College Basketball

Here’s our updated men’s college basketball top-25 for next season.

By Mike Rutherford
Men's College Basketball
St. John’s massive NIL payment revealed after Tounde Yessoufou chooses transfer portal over NBA DraftSt. John’s massive NIL payment revealed after Tounde Yessoufou chooses transfer portal over NBA Draft
Men's College Basketball

The money in men’s college basketball is stunning right now.

By Ricky O'Donnell