LSU’s Kim Mulkey explains ‘no-brainer’ process behind hiring Seimone Augustus as assisant

Kim Mulkey said it took “seconds” for associate head coach Bob Starkey to suggest hiring Seimone Augustus.

The Tigers made a splash in women’s basketball last week as they added legendary former player and 2024 Basketball Hall of Fame inductee [autotag]Seimone Augustus[/autotag] to the staff.

Augustus is one of four LSU basketball players, men’s or women’s, to be honored with a statue outside the Pete Maravich Assembly Center. She brings coaching experience to the table after two seasons as a WNBA assistant following a phenomenal playing career.

[autotag]Kim Mulkey[/autotag] said that when former assistant coach [autotag]Johnny Derrick[/autotag] — who coached with Mulkey for 24 years dating back to her time at Baylor — retired following the season, Augustus was the first name she and associate head coach [autotag]Bob Starkey[/autotag] considered.

“When (Derrick) came at the end of the season and said that he was definitely gonna retire I had a staff meeting with all my staff, and because I am not in the trenches like they are in recruiting and seeing who the up and coming coaches are, I asked each of them to give me suggestions,” Mulkey said, per On3. “And I think it took maybe seconds for Bob (Starkey) to speak up and he says we need Simone. And I asked him if he would reach out to her to see if there was an interest first before I called her.”

Mulkey later said that the decision was a “no-brainer,” especially with the expected changes allowing more assistants to coach on the floor.

“It’s a no-brainer,” she said. “It was just a matter of changing responsibilities because Johnny’s responsibilities were totally different than what Seimone’s will be. We would not be doing this if Seimone could not be on the floor sharing her knowledge and her experiences not just in college, but in the league, in the WNBA.

“And so with the rules changing in our sport where we can now soon probably have six (coaches) on the floor and in August voting again where we can have the rest of the staff doing the limited roles on the floor, it was just great timing. And so I think that’s what we spent a lot of time talking about is your role will not be what Johnny’s role was, here’s what I’d like you to do and I think that was really really important to her.”

Derrick’s official title with the program was “assistant athletic director for women’s basketball operations,” so Augustus will be taking on a different, more coaching-centric role.

In what will be a year of great change for the program, LSU will hope Augustus’ championship pedigree will help ease the transition.

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Kim Mulkey discourages court-storming if Tigers beat No. 1 South Carolina at PMAC on Thursday night

Kim Mulkey urged her players and the fans to not make Thursday’s game into something bigger than it is.

We’re set for a monumental women’s college basketball matchup in Baton Rouge on Thursday night.

No. 9 LSU is hosting No. 1 South Carolina in a top-10 SEC showdown between two of last year’s Final Four participants. The Gamecocks enter this one undefeated on the year, and the Tigers are looking for their first win against them in 12 years.

While a victory would certainly be huge for the program, coach [autotag]Kim Mulkey[/autotag] said she encouraged the team to act as the defending national champions should, which includes not storming the court in the event of a win.

“And we’re not gonna go run on the floor if we beat them,” Mulkey said on her radio show this week, per On3. “You’re the defending national champions, act like you’ve been there. And I want everybody to scream and holler, but I don’t want people running out on the floor like we just won another national championship.”

While beating South Carolina would be significant for the Tigers, it’s nothing new for Mulkey, who beat the team multiple times in her last stop at Baylor.

“I shared that with the team, I asked them in the locker room, ‘Raise your hand if you’ve ever beaten South Carolina in your career,’” Mulkey said. “None of them raised their hand except for me and [autotag]Bob Starkey[/autotag]. I said, ‘Beating South Carolina is not that big a deal to me. I beat them twice in one year to win a national championship. But for this program and for you and for the LSU fanbase, you need to understand it is a big deal because you want to do something that hasn’t been done in a long, long while.’ But, don’t allow it to be bigger than it really is.”

As far as her message for fans, Mulkey asked them to keep things in perspective, regardless of result.

“This is a very exciting game Thursday, but keep perspective,” Mulkey said. “There are bigger games down the road for both South Carolina and LSU. Don’t make it so big that you’re devastated if your team doesn’t win. But if your team wins, celebrate it, and then move on the next day.”

The Tigers will host South Carolina with ESPN’s College GameDay in attendance on Thursday night at 7 p.m. CT. GameDay will begin an hour earlier at 6.

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Auburn women’s basketball assistant coach Bob Starkey is headed to LSU

Johnnie Harris has an open spot to fill on her coaching staff.

Auburn women’s basketball assistant coach Bob Starkey has left Auburn and is heading to LSU.

Starkey spent just one season at Auburn before returning to LSU, where he spent 13 seasons (1998-2011) with the women’s program and seven with the men’s (1990-1996).

“It was the most difficult decision of my professional career to leave Auburn,” he said on Twitter Tuesday. “I greatly believe in the vision of @CoachJ_AU and will cherish forever working with her and her staff.”

Auburn went 10-18 and 2-14 in SEC play in year one under Johnnie Harris. Auburn upset No. 4 Tennessee 71-61 for the first SEC win of the season.

It was the first SEC win for Auburn since 2000 and their first win over a top 5 team since 1997.

“I leave knowing Auburn women’s basketball is in great hands with coach (Johnnie) Harris, a talented staff and committed administration,” Starkey wrote in a statement Tuesday. “The truth is there is only one job I would have ever considered and that was the opportunity afforded to Sherie and I to go ‘home.’ ” – via Montgomery Advertiser

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