Source: Dayton guard Javon Bennett will work out for the Orlando Magic tomorrow, Friday, May 29.
An explosive scoring guard, Bennett has garnered intrigue from NBA teams with his playmaking ability, toughness, and knack for creating offense.
Javon Bennett has left it out all there for 3 years. He’s got the heart of a lion 🦁. Von got the loudest ovation on Senior Night at @UDArena. @DaytonMBB
1st game of his @daytonmbb career, Von's dad sat right next to me in the arena. I got to watch him experience UD's atmosphere and his son's first 3pt bucket as a Flyer. I wonder if his dad had any idea how important Von would be to this program.
🔴🔵 #LOWD
📸Erik Schelkun
Javon Bennett has started the season on a high note, delivering big scoring nights and steady leadership that set the tone for Dayton’s early success. Zoom out, and Bennett’s season-long production underscores just how steady he’s been. Through the opening stretch, he’s averaging 16.2 points per game, along with 3.4 assists and nearly two rebounds, while shouldering a larger share of Dayton’s offensive responsibility. He’s shooting just over 40 percent from the field, numbers that reflect the difficulty of his looks — contested jumpers, late-clock attempts, defensive attention — rather than inefficiency.
Those numbers have been built across a series of impactful outings. Bennett opened the season with 20 points against Canisius, setting an early tone as a primary scoring option. He followed that with 16 points against UMBC and 12 points at Cincinnati, showing consistent production even on the road and in tight matchups. Against Bethune-Cookman, he exploded for 25 points, one of his biggest scoring nights early in the season. Bennett then continued his strong stretch with 19 points at Marquette and 8 points versus NC Central, keeping the Flyers competitive and balanced.
A few weeks later at the Disney Invitational in Kissimmee, Florida, he delivered 13 points in a semifinal win over Georgetown, helping Dayton pull away in overtime with timely threes. In the tournament final against No. 9 BYU, Bennett exploded for 22 points and buried six three-pointers, pacing the Flyers in a tight loss to the nationally ranked Cougars. He then added 9 points against ETSU, 18 points versus Virginia, and 10 points against North Florida, setting the stage for another signature performance.
The stretch culminated with a 25-point night against Florida State, a game that blended aggression with poise, perfectly mirroring the best stretches of his season. These outings aren’t isolated flashes but part of a pattern: Bennett scores in bunches when Dayton needs separation, orchestrates when things get messy, and finds ways to stay involved even when opponents focus their game plans on him.
Those averages don’t jump off the page the way a single 30-point night might, but they tell a more revealing story. Bennett has been a constant. He scores without hijacking possessions, facilitates without disappearing, and rarely lets a cold stretch linger. On a roster built around balance, he’s emerged as one of the few players capable of tilting a game on command.
The Florida State performance fit neatly into that profile — not a departure from who he’s been, but an affirmation of it. Bennett isn’t chasing numbers. He’s accumulating impact. And as the season settles into its rhythm, Dayton knows exactly what it’s getting from him most nights: composure, pressure, and points that arrive right on time.
@JavonBennett9@DaytonMBB
If you’re a Dayton fan, you can also root for Wooster football and Javon Bennett’s brother. Been a while since I covered a game there, but great memories of some games between Wittenberg and the Scots.. https://t.co/9XV5iu04Z7