COLUMN: This year’s LSU women’s basketball team wasn’t equipped to play at the top of the sport

This LSU squad ultimately lacked the pieces that carried the team to a national title last season.

LSU’s championship hopes came crashing down after it ran into the force that is Caitlin Clark.

Iowa got off to a hot start before LSU managed to sustain a run of its own. It was reminiscent of the early run LSU went on in last year’s game, overwhelming Iowa with active defense and physicality in the post.

But then, [autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag] left the game with an ankle. She would return, but she wasn’t the same player that dominated the first quarter. Iowa took control in the second half and closed it out.

Reese’s ankle certainly played a factor and if she’s healthy, maybe LSU is advancing to the Final Four. But that’s not the reason LSU lost that game.

LSU’s going home because this team wasn’t capable of winning a title. That’s not an indictment of any individual, from Reese to [autotag]Kim Mulkey[/autotag], but this team, as a whole, lacked something.

Last year’s team had all the right pieces. Think back to that 102-85 victory over Iowa in the national title. It wasn’t just Reese and [autotag]Flau’jae Johnson[/autotag]. The difference was [autotag]Jasmine Carson[/autotag] coming off the bench and hitting five threes. [autotag]Ladazhia Williams[/autotag] scored 20 points in the post. In the backcourt, [autotag]Alexis Morris[/autotag] scored 21 and [autotag]Kateri Poole[/autotag] went two for two from behind the arch.

But this year, when Reese went cold with the ankle, the supporting cast didn’t immediately answer the call. Johnson did eventually, with a strong second half, but it was too late. Iowa already seized momentum.

LSU had three chances this year to secure a win against one of the top teams in the sport. Two against South Carolina and again on Monday against Iowa. LSU was competitive but went 0-3 in those games. At some point, we just have to admit this team wasn’t equipped to play at the top of the sport this year.

Coming off the national title, LSU was favored to do it again. Returning Reese and Johnson along with the transfer additions of [autotag]Hailey Van Lith[/autotag] and [autotag]Aneesah Morrow[/autotag] led many to believe this team would be even better.

But as the year went on, cracks started to emerge. Poole was dismissed from the team while [autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] tore her ACL. Van Lith struggled to transition to a true point guard role. Mulkey expressed frustration as LSU struggled to defend, play in transition and protect the ball.

LSU was upset by Colorado, Auburn and Mississippi State. Three solid teams, but all well below LSU’s talent level.

I said this team lacked something, but it’s hard to say what that exact something is. If LSU had a point guard like Morris out there, is that enough to push LSU over the edge?

That wouldn’t solve the inconsistency we saw from this team or the inability to keep up with Iowa’s three-point shooting.

This team had no glaring weakness, but it had enough. And put together, it was enough to end LSU’s year. The Iowa loss is disappointing, but there’s a reason LSU was an underdog to begin with.

The immediate future is unclear. Reese and Van Lith both face WNBA decisions while Mulkey is sure to look in the transfer portal for some help at guard and improved depth.

Still, it’s hard to not trust Mulkey after her first three years in Baton Rouge. LSU will be back.

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LSU women’s basketball’s Sa’Myah Smith to miss the rest of the season

Sa’Myah Smith will miss the remainder of the season after suffering a torn ACL, MCL and meniscus in the Cayman Islands Classic.

LSU women’s basketball suffered a major loss this week as the team announced that forward [autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] will miss the remainder of the season after tearing her ACL, MCL and meniscus in her right knee.

The injury occurred in the first quarter of LSU’s opening win in the Cayman Islands Classic against Niagara. According to an LSU release, she will undergo surgery at a later date and will receive a medical redshirt for the 2023-24 season, preserving her year of eligibility.

Smith has appeared in seven games with six starts this season, averaging 11.7 points and 7.6 rebounds per game. She also ties for the team lead in blocks on the season with 11 total.

Smith’s loss in the frontcourt will be made more manageable by the return of [autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag], who is set to play against Virginia Tech on Thursday night after missing the last four games for undisclosed reasons.

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LSU women’s basketball rolls against Mississippi Valley State to second straight win

The Tigers put the beatdown on the Delta Devils on Sunday.

LSU continued to bounce back nicely from its season-opening loss, rolling against Mississippi Valley State to a 109-47 win at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center.

The Tigers had a nice game offensively, shooting above 50% from the field as a team. [autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] led the way offensively with 21 points, followed by [autotag]Mikaylah Williams[/autotag] with 20.

[autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag] and [autotag]Aneesah Morrow[/autotag] totaled 14 points with the former notching a double-double, and [autotag]Hailey Van Lith[/autotag] also scored in double figures with 11 points.

Despite some sloppiness offensively that resulted in 20 turnovers, the defense forced 27 from the Delta Devils, which shot just 17 of 70 for the game, and got 28 points from those opportunities.

The Tigers will be back in action on Tuesday afternoon when they host Kent State.

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Instant Analysis: LSU women’s basketball rolls against Queens in home opener

The Tigers bounced back nicely from a disappointing loss in the opener.

The No. 1 LSU women’s basketball team began the season in quite a disappointing fashion with a loss to Colorado, but it bounced back nicely in Thursday night’s home opener against Queens with a dominating 112-55 win.

The Tigers honored last year’s national championship team before the game, and it was the breakout star from that squad, [autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag], who led the way in this one. She scored a game-high 28 points and notched a double-double with 14 rebounds.

LSU shot 63.6% from the field as a whole, though it was just 4 of 13 from three-point range. The Tigers dominated on the interior, scoring 68 points in the paint.

[autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] (21 points), [autotag]Aneesah Morrow[/autotag] (16) and [autotag]Flau’Jae Johnson[/autotag] (13) also scored in double figures.

Queens managed to stick around early thanks to some three-point sharpshooting from star player Nicole Gwynn, who scored 26 points and shot 8 of 14 beyond the arc.

Aside from Gwynn’s contributions, it was a great game for LSU defensively. The Royals shot just 32.3%, and they turned the ball over 19 times. The Tigers also won the rebounding battle 36-13 as they pulled away to a 56-30 lead at the half and never looked back.

LSU will return to the court Sunday as it hosts Mississippi Valley State.

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LSU women’s basketball got a wake-up call in its opening loss to Colorado

Kim Mulkey’s group got a wake-up call with its loss to Colorado on Monday night.

The hype train for LSU women’s basketball grew all off-season long. The Tigers were preseason No. 1 and consensus national title favorites.

The additions of [autotag]Hailey Van Lith[/autotag], [autotag]Annesah Morrow[/autotag] and [autotag]Mikaylah Williams[/autotag] along with the return of [autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag] led this group to be dubbed as a “dream team.”

So when LSU opened the year against No. 20 Colorado on Monday night, the Tigers were supposed to pick back up right where they left off last year, rolling through opponents on the way to a national title.

Long story short, that’s not what happened. A Colorado team that returned its top five scorers from last year came out firing. LSU got outplayed from the first quarter on to the tune of a 14-point loss. At one point, Colorado led by as much as 22.

After the game, [autotag]Kim Mulkey[/autotag] said she can live with shots not falling. There’s always going to be nights like that, but she wanted to see more fight from her team. Lack of effort is something you don’t live with, Mulkey said.

When the next poll drops on Monday, LSU won’t be in that No. 1 spot. This is a wake-up call for an LSU team that was the darling of the sport all summer.

It’s a stark contrast from last year, when LSU raced out to a 23-0 start. The nonconference slate tests Mulkey’s group in ways last year’s didn’t. It began with Colorado and later this month, LSU will face Virginia and Virginia Tech.

These games aren’t meaningless, either. When the committee sits down to seed the tournament, they’re going to look at what a team did in the non-con.

The good news: LSU has time to figure it out. The Tigers don’t face a top 100 opponent until that Virginia game.

This was a team that didn’t hit its stride until March last year, and maybe, that’s all that matters. But there’s too much talent here for what happened on Monday night.

It’s not fair to say all that hype got to their head. If these players were derailed by hype and attention, it would have happened already.

But Mulkey wants to see more from her stars. After the loss, Mulkey went out of her way to acknowledge the efforts of [autotag]Mikaylah Williams[/autotag] and [autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag], but said she needed more than just them.

That wasn’t a direct shot at anyone, but it was a call to arms for the leaders of this team to live up to expectations.

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Instant Analysis: No. 1 LSU women’s basketball stunned by No. 20 Colorado in season opener

LSU entered the 2023-24 as the consensus favorite to repeat as national champions, but the preseason No. 1 Tigers were humbled by Colorado.

LSU entered the 2023-24 as the consensus favorite to repeat as national champions, but the preseason No. 1 Tigers were humbled by No. 20 Colorado.

The Buffaloes jumped on coach Kim Mulkey’s team early, taking a 38-32 lead to the locker room after LSU led following the first quarter. They only pulled away in the second half and ultimately won 92-78, shocking the defending champions in Las Vegas.

It wasn’t a banner night offensively for the Tigers, which shot just 43.9% from the field. True freshman highly touted recruit [autotag]Mikaylah Williams[/autotag] was the star, leading the team with 17 points. [autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] (16 points), [autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag] (15), and [autotag]Hailey Van Lith[/autotag] (14) scored in double figures with Reese recording a 12-rebound double-double.

It was a quiet night for [autotag]Aneesah Morrow[/autotag] (six points) and [autotag]Flau’Jae Johnson[/autotag] (3).

LSU won the turnover battle 21-19 and the rebounding battle 39-37, but it allowed Colorado to shoot north of 50% and gave up big games to Frida Formann (27 points) and Aaronette Vonleh (24).

Whether it was the expectations getting the better of this team or the expectations themselves being misplaced, it’s clear LSU has a lot to work on if it wants to get back to the mountaintop this spring.

That starts with the home opener on Thursday night against Charlotte.

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What Kim Mulkey said after LSU women’s basketball’s exhibition win over East Texas Baptist

Here’s what Kim Mulkey said after LSU’s exhibition win over East Texas Baptist.

LSU women’s basketball took another step towards a new year last night with a 99-26 exhibition win over East Texas Baptist.

The Tigers did what you’d expect, dismantling an ETBU squad that can’t match LSU’s talent level.

For several highly-touted newcomers, it was the first time they got to showcase their skills in an LSU uniform. Among those were Louisville transfer [autotag]Hailey Van Lith[/autotag] and top-ranked freshman [autotag]Mikaylah Williams[/autotag].

The [autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] hype continued to build with the forward posting a double-double. [autotag]Flau’jae Johnson[/autotag] led LSU with 18 points as she was one of six Tigers to score in the double-digits.

LSU will be back in action with one final exhibition on Nov. 1. Until then, here’s what [autotag]Kim Mulkey[/autotag] had to say after LSU’s win.

LSU women’s basketball routs East Texas Baptist in exhibition to kick off 2023-24 season

The Tigers kicked off their title defense with a 99-26 win over Division III East Texas Baptist.

Preseason No. 1 LSU women’s basketball began its national title defense on Thursday night with the first of two exhibition games, and East Texas Baptist was no match.

LSU easily dispatched its Division III opponent, winning 99-26 in a game that spotlighted practically the entire roster.

The starting lineup featured all newcomers with transfers [autotag]Hailey Van Lith[/autotag] and [autotag]Aneesah Morrow[/autotag] as well as true freshmen [autotag]Mikaylah Williams[/autotag], [autotag]Janae Kent[/autotag] and [autotag]Aalyah Del Rosario[/autotag].

All made their share of plays, with Williams, Kent and Morrow totaling 10 points. The former two also neared double-doubles with nine and eight rebounds, respectively. Van Lith nearly scored in double figures in her LSU debut, as well, finishing with nine points.

Despite coming off the bench, it was the returning players that would star in this one.

[autotag]Flau’Jae Johnson[/autotag] led the team with 18 points, while [autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag] scored 17 while adding seven rebounds. [autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] registered the team’s only double-double with 16 points and 12 rebounds.

LSU’s defense smothered ETBU, forcing 39 turnovers that resulted in 32 points for the Tigers. They also won the rebounding battle 51-34.

While the dominating win was a nice way to kick things off, a Division III opponent is far from a real test for a team that enters the year as the favorite to repeat as national champions.

LSU will kick off its regular season against a ranked Colorado team on Nov. 6, but in the meantime, it will have one more exhibition against Loyola (New Orleans) next Thursday night.

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Update after LSU’s Sa’Myah Smith collapsed at White House visit

Smith gave the country quite the scare on Friday, but she seems to be OK.

[autotag]Sa’Myah Smith[/autotag] gave the country quite the scare on Friday, as she collapsed while taking LSU’s honorary White House visit following its national championship win in April.

The star freshman forward stated that she felt overheated and nauseous before her vision went black. Her teammates caught her fall and helped her down, but she woke up feeling groggy and tired. She spoke with WBRZ sports director Michael Cauble following the incident, and she appears to be in good spirits. She was tended to by White House medical staff.

Smith was integral to the 2023 championship lineup off the bench and earned SEC All-Freshman honors. Averaging 4.6 points and 4 rebounds a game, she will look to find a way into the starting rotation next season.

Her 38 blocks show tremendous promise to become an elite defender in the SEC.

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