Former LSU guard Cam Hayes’ transfer destination revealed

The North Carolina native is returning to his home state.

Former LSU basketball guard [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] is returning to his home state of North Carolina.

The Greensboro native announced his commitment to East Carolina on Tuesday. He will have one remaining year of eligibility with the Pirates.

A 6-foot-2 player who started his career at NC State, Hayes transferred to LSU after two seasons and was one of the biggest transfer commitments for new coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] last offseason. He appeared in 31 games for the Tigers this season, making 18 starts.

Statistically, it was the most productive of his career as he averaged 8.1 points and shot 40% from the floor, both the best marks he’s had in college.

However, he decided to follow many of his teammates into the portal following a disappointing Year 1 under McMahon. He’s one of seven players to enter the transfer portal since the conclusion of the season.

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LSU guard Cam Hayes enters transfer portal

Hayes becomes the seventh LSU player to enter the portal since the end of the season.

The turnover within the LSU basketball program continued on Friday.

Shortly after the Tigers landed a commitment from Nevada center transfer [autotag]Will Baker[/autotag], guard [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] became the seventh player to enter the portal since the end of coach Matt McMahon’s first season.

A transfer addition last offseason from NC State, Hayes appeared in 31 games and made 18 starts. He averaged 8.1 points and 2.3 assists, but he shot just 40% from the field.

It was the best season of Hayes’ college career statistically, but he struggled with inconsistency. Still, he finished in double figures scoring in 12 games during his lone season in Baton Rouge.

McMahon had to undergo a heavy rebuild when he took this job last offseason, and now it seems he’ll have to do so once again as he prepares to enter his second season at the helm. Luckily, the Tigers have already picked up a pair of wing transfers in [autotag]Jordan Wright[/autotag] from Vanderbilt and [autotag]Jalen Cook[/autotag] from Tulane, who returns to LSU after signing with the Tigers out of high school.

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PHOTOS: Rough season for LSU ends in SEC Tournament 2nd round vs. Vanderbilt

The Tigers couldn’t pull off a second tournament seed upset on Thursday night.

The Tigers didn’t quite have it in them to pull off a second-straight seed upset (and their second win over Vanderbilt of the season) on Thursday night. Facing the Commodores at the SEC Tournament in Nashville with a spot in the quarterfinals on the line, LSU’s season came to an end in the second round with a 77-68 loss.

It ends a rough campaign for first-year coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag], whose team finished the year 14-19 and just a 2-16 record in SEC regular season play. However, it did win a game in the SEC Tournament against Georgia.

LSU shot just 33.3% from the field in the loss on Thursday night, and the biggest bright spot offensively was [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag], who had a 26-point, 11-rebound double-double. [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] also scored 16.

Here were the photos from the loss, which ended the Tigers’ slim chances at an NCAA Tournament auto-bid.

LSU’s season ends in Nashville with SEC Tournament loss to Vanderbilt

The Tigers’ season came to a close with a second-round exit in the SEC Tournament against the Commodores.

Matt McMahon’s inaugural campaign in Baton Rouge came to a close in Nashville on Thursday night. Facing Vanderbilt in Round 2 of the SEC Tournament, the Tigers dropped one 77-68.

LSU entered the tournament as the No. 14 seed after winning just two conference games in the regular season. The second of those wins came against Vanderbilt, but the Commodores got their revenge.

LSU began the tournament with a win over Georgia — a positive sign for a program that had little to hold onto through the winter. But the momentum was not carried into the second round.

[autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag], a bright spot for LSU all year who earned all-SEC honors, had another strong performance with a double-double and a team-high 26 points.

Williams will likely be gone after one year in Baton Rouge and replacing his production will be one of many tasks on McMahon’s mind entering the offseason.

LSU’s [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] had a solid night, adding 16 points. Vanderbilt had three players reach double-digits with Tyrin Lawrence’s 22 leading the pack.

LSU exceeded expectations in nonconference play and even generated some hope after beating Arkansas to kick off SEC play, but the optimism dissipated after a rough conference slate.

Last offseason brought plenty of change in Baton Rouge and this one could look similar. McMahon will bring back more players than he did last year but hitting the portal will be critical to LSU’s rebuild.

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Matt McMahon, players still see signs of progress as LSU basketball suffers 10th-straight loss

The Tigers showed some improvement on Saturday, especially on offense, but it wasn’t enough to pull off what would have been a massive upset.

What begin as a promising Year 1 for coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] with a 12-1 start has very quickly gone south.

Saturday’s 79-69 loss at home against No. 4 Alabama constituted the team’s 10th-straight loss as the Tigers fall to 12-11 overall on the year and just 1-9 in SEC play. Any postseason hopes have long since dissipated, and all this team can do now is try to turn things around and end the year with some semblance of momentum.

Still, there are some reasons to be optimistic. LSU has looked better — albeit, still not great — in recent outings, and the Alabama loss was one of the better performances in recent memory as the Tigers had a very real chance to upset a top-five team.

“Thought we saw some improvement from our team, Alabama just has so much firepower and they can really score it at a high level,” McMahon said in a release. “If you go back to, I think the last seven minutes of the game, both teams really struggled to score there. We got stops but were not able to convert those into points. That said, credit to Alabama for the win.”

McMahon said the offensive rebounding and limiting turnovers specifically played a major role in giving LSU a chance to win.

“We gave up three points off turnovers today and that’s the reason we had an opportunity to be in the game,” he said. “The offensive rebounds, it’s great, it’s an effort stat and it’s great that we got 13 of them, but we don’t convert them into enough points. We just don’t have much efficiency on those offensive rebounds.”

[autotag]Derek Fountain[/autotag], who had a career game with a team-high 26 points and seven rebounds, said the losing streak provided some motivation for the team in this game.

“Tired of losing,” he said. “Alabama is (ranked) top 4, that is great, we knew that coming in. We’ve been losing lately, so all we have been trying to do is get better at competing. Alabama is a big team, so we just wanted to make sure that we were all locked in coming into the game. That is all it really was.”

The Tigers’ ability to draw fouls helped them quite a bit, as well. They had 31 attempts from the charity stripe, of which they made 24. Fountain accounted for 12 of those.

“We just always want to be aggressive, that is what we have been talking about in practice,” guard [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] said. “I think it helped us because we shot 31 free throws tonight. So, that is good, we just still have to fix the little things to win games.”

A hard-fought effort is little consolation for a team whose losing streak has now hit double-digits, but there’s reason to think this team could be improving as it looks to snap the skid on the road against Mississippi State on Wednesday night.

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LSU basketball’s upset bid against No. 4 Alabama falls short

The Tigers battled, but the losing streak has now reached double digits.

The Tigers fared a lot better in the rematch against No. 4 Alabama than they did the first time around, a game they lost by 40 on the road in January. But one of the best performances since the calendar turned to 2023 wasn’t enough as LSU lost at home 79-69.

With the loss, the Tigers’ losing streak has now reached double digits while the Crimson Tide remains perfect in SEC play.

LSU (12-11, 1-9 SEC) managed to keep things tight in the first half despite shooting just 27.8% from the field, largely thanks to efficient free-throw shooting and a few timely threes.

The Tigers shot 13 of 14 from behind the charity stripe with eight of those being made by [autotag]Derek Fountain[/autotag], who had 18 points in the first half and also shot 4 of 7 from the field with two makes from beyond the arc. Alabama (20-3, 10-0 SEC) shot above 50%, which made it difficult for LSU to flip the momentum, but it stayed in range.

At one point, the Tigers trailed by just three with under four minutes to play in the first half, but the Crimson Tide ultimately pulled away to a 44-37 lead at the break.

LSU continued to fight in the second half and kept the game close. Alabama’s offense dropped off considerably as it didn’t hit a shot in the final 7:20, but seven second-half three-pointers aided it. The Tigers, meanwhile, hit just one of their final 10 shots and missed six shots from the line.

Fountain finished with a season-high 26 points while [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] scored 15, but the team as a whole shot just 30.6% for the game.

It’s a disappointing loss for LSU, which is still searching for a way to reverse its misfortunes in Year 1 under [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag]. Next up is a more winnable game against Mississippi State, but it’s in Starkville, and it’s never easy to win on the road in the SEC.

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No. 4 Alabama hangs 100 in blowout win as LSU basketball drops 4th straight

The Tigers suffered one of their worst losses in recent memory on Saturday afternoon.

The Tigers were never competitive against one of the hottest teams in college basketball as they lost in ugly fashion to No. 4 Alabama in front of a sold-out crowd at Coleman Coliseum on Saturday afternoon. The Crimson Tide led 59-22 at the half before ultimately winning the game 106-66.

The 40-point margin was LSU’s biggest in a loss this season, by far, and it was Alabama’s biggest win in a conference game in program history. With the loss — the Tigers’ fourth straight — coach Matt McMahon’s team falls to 12-5 (1-4 SEC) on the season.

[autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag] and [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] each scored 10 points, but LSU struggled offensively as a whole, shooting just 29.5% from the field. It also had no answer defensively for Alabama’s true freshman phenom Brandon Miller, who scored 31 points while hitting 7 of 11 threes.

It was a disappointing performance from the Tigers, but they can’t afford to dwell on it as the road doesn’t let up. They draw ranked opponents in Auburn and Tennessee at home in their next two before hitting the road for a rematch against the ranked Arkansas team they beat in their SEC opener.

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LSU basketball loses to Texas A&M, falls to 1-2 in conference play

LSU dropped its second game in a row after losing to Texas A&M on Saturday night.

LSU dropped its second straight on Saturday night.

Facing Texas A&M in College Station, it was LSU’s second road game this week. The Aggies jumped out to a lead in the first half and LSU failed to conjure up any response in a 69-56 loss.

LSU, especially on the offensive end, looked like a group that hasn’t played together for long. That makes sense, because, well, they haven’t played together for long.

LSU’s half-court offense looked out of sorts. Bad ball movement led to bad shots and there was no great individual performance to bail the Tigers out. The Aggies played this game with comfort. LSU never threatened a real run at the lead and outside a small deficit in the early minutes, A&M went wire to wire.

The A&M defense deserves a lot of credit. Buzz Williams’ squad played with an intense physicality and LSU wasn’t ready for it. LSU was decent from three-point range and made 13 free throws, but LSU struggled around the rim.

[autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag] was LSU’s leading scorer, totaling 16 on the night. [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag] and [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] also scored in the double-digits. For the Aggies, it was Julius Marble and Dexter Dennis. Both scored 17 points and Marble grabbed eight rebounds.

The road isn’t getting any easier for LSU.

The Tigers will host Florida at home this week, but that’s followed by seven straight games against teams in the KenPom top 40. LSU’s current stretch could take a toll on a team that doesn’t have a ton of depth.

McMahon is still figuring stuff out with his roster and a string of this league’s top opponents could have a way of getting LSU adjusted.

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LSU basketball falls short in upset bid against Kentucky on the road

The Tigers came up just short at the buzzer on the road against the Wildcats.

The Tigers came very close to earning back-to-back monumental wins, but they came up just short of becoming the first team to knock off Kentucky in Lexington in nearly two years as the Wildcats prevailed 74-71 at Rupp Arena.

LSU falls to 12-2 (1-1 SEC) in Matt McMahon’s debut season with the loss.

The first half of this one seemed to be setting up for an exciting finish. Both teams shot above 50% in the first half as Kentucky took a slim 42-38 lead to the locker room. However, coach John Calipari’s team took control to start the second, stretching out a 60-50 lead with 10:42 to play.

But as LSU has been wont to do all year, UK couldn’t pull away. The Tigers cut into that lead, chopping it down to one point at several times in the final minutes. Kentucky seemed to put it away with a bucket to go up four with 29 seconds to play, but a fortuitous foul on a three point shot gave [autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] a big opportunity at the line.

He took advantage, hitting all three shots, and after fouling Kentucky and sending Jacob Toppin to the line, the Tigers had the ball down three with three seconds left. However, a poor play that resulted in [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag] taking the game-tying three-point shot was doomed from the start as Kentucky escaped with a win.

Despite the miss on a tough shot at the end, it was still a good game from Williams, who finished with a team-high 23 points. [autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag] (15 points), [autotag]Trae Hannibal[/autotag] (12) and Hayes (11) all scored in double figures, as well.

However, LSU ultimately couldn’t do enough defensively. It was dominated by Oscar Tshiebwe, one of the best players in college basketball, who scored 19 points with 16 rebounds. Toppin, meanwhile, led the team with 21 points.

It was a disappointing result that could have been momentous for this program in McMahon’s first year, but the Tigers won’t have much time to reflect on it as they have another tricky road game at Texas A&M on Saturday night.

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PHOTOS: LSU moves to 10-1 on the year with win over Winthrop

The Tigers survived another close call after trailing at the half against the Eagles.

LSU had yet another close call against Winthrop on Saturday night, trailing by one point at the break and leading by just four with under two minutes to play. But in a shootout in which both teams shot above 50% from the field, coach Matt McMahon’s team moved to 10-1 to begin his tenure in Baton Rouge with an 89-81 win.

[autotag]Cam Hayes[/autotag] led the way offensively for the Tigers after exiting late in the last game with what McMahon described as a cramp, scoring 25 points. [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag] (18 points) and [autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag] (14 points) also scored in double figures.

LSU turned the ball over 10 times, but it also forced 12 turnovers of its own and netted 21 points off those mistakes.

The Tigers will return to the court Wednesday night when they host East Tennessee State in the final tuneup before conference play begins against Arkansas. Here were the best photos from Saturday night’s win.