When Ben Johnson saw Pharrel Payne at the start of Gophers basketball summer workouts, his first impression was that he had never coached a more physically imposing freshman.
And that's before the 6-9, 235-pound Payne really had the chance to engulf himself in a college weight room. Once that happened, the strength numbers were off the charts.
"If you just look at him physically, he could play in a Big Ten game right now," Johnson said about the former Park Cottage Grove big man. "He's probably one of the top developed freshmen that I've been around."
Among the Big Ten's incoming freshmen, you won't see Payne ranked too high yet because he was not a consensus top-100 recruit. In the U's 2022 class, Park Center's Braeden Carrington also arrived with more hype as a Minnesota state champ and Mr. Basketball.
But Payne is the most ready-to-play freshman, physically, the program's had in years.
And Payne could become one of the Big Ten's most impactful freshmen. His role will expand immensely after another season-ending knee injury to Parker Fox earlier this month.
"He can go toe to toe with anybody," Johnson said. "Now it's just him day by day following the process and worrying out the little details and getting better. But the biggest thing is the physicality piece and the maturity. He's going to be ready. Now we got to do our job to get him fundamentally ready."
The Gophers not long ago were in a comparable situation with former Cretin-Derham Hall star Daniel Oturu, who started on an NCAA tournament team as a freshman in 2018-19.