LSU loses starting guard Adam Miller to the transfer portal

Miller is the sixth LSU player to exit via the portal since the end of the season.

LSU is going back to the drawing board after a disastrous first season under coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag], and that means another offseason filled with roster turnover.

The latest transfer portal casualty was [autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag], a redshirt sophomore guard from Peoria, Illinois. Miller started all 33 games for the Tigers in 2022-3, averaging 11.5 points, 2.3 rebounds and 1.7 assists. Miller struggled with his shooting percentage as he shot just 34% from the field and 32% from three, but he was still one of the team’s more reliable scorers.

Originally a transfer from Illinois, Miller missed the entire 2021-22 season with a torn ACL. He entered the portal after [autotag]Will Wade[/autotag] was fired, though McMahon convinced him to stay. Like [autotag]Justice Williams[/autotag], who also exited the portal last offseason, Miller seems to be moving on for good this time.

Miller becomes the sixth LSU player to enter the portal since the end of the 2022-23 season, though the addition of a pair of talented backcourt scorers in Jalen Cook and Jordan Wright should help ease the loss.

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LSU guard Justice Williams re-enters transfer portal

Williams made seven starts this year but averaged just 15.7 minutes..

In what was seen as one of coach Matt McMahon’s biggest recruiting wins last offseason, he convinced freshman guard [autotag]Justice Williams[/autotag] to exit the transfer portal and return to LSU following the firing of coach [autotag]Will Wade[/autotag].

But after seeing a relatively small role on the court in 2022-23, Williams has entered the transfer portal once again. He becomes the fourth LSU player to announce his intention to transfer, joining [autotag]Justice Hill,[/autotag] [autotag]Kendal Coleman[/autotag] and [autotag]Corneilous Williams[/autotag].

Williams appeared in just 23 games as a sophomore this season, making seven starts and averaging 3.3 points, 1.4 rebounds and 1.5 assists. He missed five games early in the season due to injury and averaged just 15.7 minutes.

A former four-star recruit and top-60 prospect in the 2021 recruiting class, Williams is sure to see some interest in the portal.

Changes this offseason were expected after a frustrating Year 1 for McMahon, and it seems like it will be another year full of turnover for this program.

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Matt McMahon is rebuilding LSU basketball at lightning speed

McMahon has turned the program around in a very short amount of time.

Two months ago, LSU basketball was in shambles. Every scholarship player had entered the transfer portal, and the rebuild ahead looked as messy as any in recent memory.

There was speculation that some big names wouldn’t even accept the job because of the position the program was in. Not only had every player left, but NCAA sanctions were looming (and they still are).

LSU is a big-time athletics program, but in basketball, it’s far from a blue blood. The program doesn’t recruit itself like Duke or Kentucky does.

When [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] took the job, he was staring down the impossible. Nobody expected much out of him for his first year or two on the job — hence the seven-year contract given to him providing security and breathing room.

The roster McMahon was going to be working with during his first season was supposed to be a collection of mid-major transfers, three-star recruits, and maybe a couple of guys that followed him from Murray State. Whatever that expectation was, McMahon has far exceeded it.

McMahon was able to bring three of his players from Murray State in [autotag]Justice Hill[/autotag], [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag], and [autotag]Trae Hannibal[/autotag].

That trio makes up three of the top four scorers from a Murray State team that went 31-3. Williams led the team in scoring with 18 points/game on his way to winning conference player of the year.

Hill averaged 13.4 points and 5.1 assists per contest as a sophomore and Hannibal proved to be a solid piece as well with 9.2 points and 5.1 rebounds on average.

Murray State didn’t face top competition, but a 31-3 record is a 31-3 record no matter the schedule, and McMahon brought the core with him.

Then there are the guys McMahon has gotten out of high school, which might be his most impressive feat considering how late in the game it is for the 2022 recruiting class. So far, the Tigers have added forwards [autotag]Tyrell Ward[/autotag] and [autotag]Jalen Reed[/autotag].

Ward is a four-star on average, but On3 has him slated as a five-star. Regardless, he’s a top recruit and there were a lot of people who didn’t think LSU would be landing players of Ward’s caliber again for a few years.

Reed was another big get, ranking as one of the 10 best power forwards in his class.

All of this was cemented last week when [autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag] announced he’d be returning to LSU. Miller transferred from Illinois prior to last season but tore his ACL before the year even started. When Miller went down, LSU’s offense took a large hit that was evident throughout the year.

If he was healthy last season, it’s likely that LSU doesn’t go home in the first round. That team was one scorer away from being dangerous. With Miller back in the fold, the talented freshman, and the guys from Murray State, McMahon is now working with a competent roster.

Along with Miller, McMahon also managed to get [autotag]Mwani Wilkinson[/autotag] and [autotag]Justice Williams[/autotag] back from the portal, two players who are likely to contribute next season. Wilkinson, despite having a limited role, was a starter last year.

McMahon has proven he can get the most out of his team, and if he gets the most out of this one, is it crazy to see LSU as an eight or nine seed? Of course, they’d have to avoid a postseason ban, but crazier things have happened in this sport.

McMahon took over a program in dire straits and has already laid a foundation. If this track continues, it’s not hard to see a scenario where he keeps LSU basketball relevant at a time when it looked like that relevancy was fading.

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Guard Adam Miller withdraws from transfer portal, will return to LSU

Miller arrived in Baton Rouge last offseason with high expectations, but a torn ACL sidelined him for the entire season.

Coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] is cooking with gas in Baton Rouge, now.

On Friday, the Tigers got some colossal news when it was announced that guard [autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag], who entered the transfer portal following the conclusion of the 2021-22 season, would withdraw from the portal and return to LSU.

Miller said on April 29 that he had narrowed his choices down to transferring to TCU or remaining with the Tigers, and he has now made his choice. He becomes the third player to withdraw from the portal since McMahon was hired, joining guard [autotag]Justice Williams[/autotag] and forward [autotag]Mwani Wilkinson[/autotag].

The news that Miller would be returning to the team was first reported by college hoops insider Jon Rothstein.

Miller later confirmed that decision himself via his Twitter account.

He transferred into the program from Illinois last offseason with high expectations. A former four-star recruit and consensus top-50 prospect from Chicago, Miller started all 31 games he appeared in as a true freshman for the Fighting Illini, averaging 8.3 points per game while shooting a very solid 34% from three-point range.

He was expected to be a major part of LSU’s offense this season, but a torn ACL before it began held him off the court, and he took a redshirt year.

With Miller back in the fold, the Tigers shore up their backcourt quite a bit, and he will have a good chance of earning a starting spot for the team this fall.

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Mwani Wilkinson and Justice Williams cement LSU legacies by deciding to stay

Wilkinson and Williams were the ones that stuck around when they had every reason to leave.

There are 101 ways to become a legend in college sports.

It’s one of the many things that make collegiate sports so fun to follow. There’s a passion there that is unrivaled in American sports and because of that, little things become big things. Moments and decisions that may seem trivial can begin to carry more meaning.

If you were writing a screenplay about LSU men’s basketball’s last couple of months, you’d probably have new coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] walk in and look at an empty locker room, hands on hips, wondering where all his players went. It’s dramatic and probably didn’t actually play out that way, but you get the point.

It looked like everyone was gone, every scholarship player that LSU had on its roster was in the transfer portal. With [autotag]Will Wade[/autotag] on the move, so were they. The situation was so dire that it’s hard to draw any parallels.

Continuing the story, about 20 or so pages into that script, you’d have a moment where a couple of players decide to stick around. They’d march into McMahon’s office and say, “Coach, I’m not going anywhere.”

Again, that’s probably not how this happened, but [autotag]Mwani Wilkinson[/autotag] and [autotag]Justice Williams[/autotag] deciding to return from the transfer portal and stick around LSU gives you that feeling. These are the guys that stayed when it was easy to leave.

The guys that left don’t deserve any criticism. With the incoming sanctions and the coach that brought them to Baton Rouge gone, it makes sense to explore other places. Nobody gets to play college sports forever, and players have to make the most of it. With that said, Wilkinson and Williams deserve all the praise in the world for sticking around.

It’s the type of move that automatically puts a player in the fan-favorite category. Even if the play on the court isn’t great, when Wilkinson and Williams do eventually move on from LSU, this is the thing that will be remembered.

I don’t know what exactly made them come back. Maybe it was McMahon or maybe they looked around and saw prime playing time at an SEC school. Either way, they are back.

Both now have a chance to make this their team. With the current state of the roster, the opportunity is there. They have a chance to anchor LSU through these next couple of years and especially in 2022. There won’t be much pressure, they just have to go out there and play.

I don’t know how good they will end up being, but the potential is there. Williams could have been in high school last year but started an SEC basketball game. Wilkinson got plenty of minutes on a talented team, playing with an energy that was hard to match.

These are legit players and should be a pivotal part in this program going forward.

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LSU basketball lands commitment from 4-star guard

LSU basketball gets another win on the recruiting trail.

LSU basketball gained an important commitment this week.

2022 four-star shooting guard Justice Williams announced his commitment to LSU on Thursday after officially visiting the school June 11-13.

Williams is ranked as the No. 3 shooting guard and No. 32 overall prospect in the nation, according to 247Sports.

Kala Starling, Williams’ father, was impressed with head coach Will Wade and the staff of the team that his son will be joining soon.

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“I feel they were really knowledgeable people, they know the game. They were talking about his game, some of the things he needs to work on,” Starling said in an interview with Billy Embody of 247Sports. “Regular folks. No type of pressure or anything like that. Just regular kind of people. It wasn’t high pressure or nothing like that. It was a great visit, we enjoyed it.”

The 6-foot-3 guard becomes the second commitment in the Tigers’ 2022 recruiting class, joining four-star wing Devin Ree.

Williams chose LSU over the likes of a host of programs including Auburn, Michigan, Purdue, Maryland and UConn.

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