LSU basketball lands big man transfer Hunter Dean from George Washington

Dean started 26 of 30 games for the Colonials in 2022-23, averaging 8.7 points and 6.1 rebounds while shooting 64.1% from the floor.

LSU men’s basketball coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] continues to rebuild his roster through the transfer portal after registering a losing season in a frustrating first campaign in Baton Rouge.

On Monday, the Tigers landed a commitment from George Washington transfer forward [autotag]Hunter Dean[/autotag]. A native of Mandeville, Louisiana, who will now return to his home state, Dean was a two-year starter with the Colonials.

He began his career at Southern Mississippi before transferring to GWU in 2020-21. He played in 11 games in his first season in Washington, D.C., and he started 18 of the final 19 games in 2021-22.

As a senior this past season, Dean started 26 of 30 games, averaging 8.7 points and 6.1 rebounds, both of which were career highs. He also shot an impressive 64.1% from the field and has a career shooting average north of 50%.

Landing the 6-foot-10 graduate transfer is a nice consolation after LSU missed out on Syracuse guard [autotag]Joe Girard[/autotag], who committed to Clemson over McMahon’s squad on Sunday.

Between Dean and Nevada 7-footer Will Baker, the Tigers have done a good job of restocking a frontcourt that saw [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag] exhaust his eligibility and promising true freshman [autotag]Shawn Phillips[/autotag] enter the transfer portal.

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Former LSU forward Shawn Phillips to join Adam Miller at Arizona State

Phillips played in 20 games with no starts as a true freshman in 2022-23.

[autotag]Shawn Phillips[/autotag] and [autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag] are set to be teammates once again in 2023-24, albeit in the desert instead of the bayou.

Phillips, a 2022 signee who entered the transfer portal following his true freshman season, announced his commitment to Arizona State on Tuesday. Miller also committed to the Sun Devils earlier this offseason.

It was a bit of a surprising decision when Phillips entered the portal. Though the 7-foot Dayton, Ohio, native made no starts this season, he appeared in 20 games and seemed to be coming on toward the end.

He averaged just 1.4 points and 2.1 rebounds, but he recorded a double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds in LSU’s SEC tournament win over Georgia.

Phillips was one of seven players who opted to enter the transfer portal following a frustrating first season under [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] in which the team finished with a losing record overall and went just 2-16 in SEC play.

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Arizona State men’s basketball picks up commitment from Shawn Phillips

The Arizona State Sun Devils have landed a former four-star prospect out of the transfer portal.

Bobby Hurley and the Arizona State men’s basketball program have landed LSU forward transfer Shawn Phillips. Joe Tipton of On3 was the first to report the decision. 

Phillips, a 7-foot-0, 245-pound forward out of Dayton, Ohio left LSU after just spending one year with the Tigers. In that lone season, Phillips played in 20 games, averaging 1.4 points, 2.2 points, and 0.2 assists per game while averaging 7.4 minutes a night.

Phillips was a four-star prospect in the 2022 recruiting cycle ranked as high as 54th by Rivals as well as being ranked as the 10th-best center in the cycle by the longtime recruiting site. Phillips originally committed and signed with North Carolina State before eventually requesting a release from his letter of intent and signing with LSU.

While he is a native of Ohio, Phillips played his high school basketball at Dream City Christian in Glendale, Arizona – which is just about a 35-minute drive to Arizona State which is located in Phoenix.

Phillips will join an Arizona State program that was a No. 11 seed in this year’s NCAA Tournament, beating No. 11 Nevada in the First Four 98-73 before narrowly losing in the Round of 64 to No. 6 TCU 72-70. Overall, the Sun Devils went 23-13 in the regular season including 11-9 in Pac-12 play, where they finished fifth.

He’ll join a front court for the Sun Devils that currently consists of rising junior Jamiya Neal. Neal, originally entered the transfer portal this offseason before deciding to return to the Sun Devils. The door also remains open for Warren Washington to return to the program. The 7-foot-0 Washington entered the NBA Draft this offseason but is maintaining his eligibility along the way.

LSU loses freshman forward Shawn Phillips to transfer portal

The Tigers have now seen five players from last year’s team depart via the portal.

LSU men’s basketball continues to take some tough losses to the transfer portal following a frustrating first season under coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag].

True freshman forward [autotag]Shawn Phillips[/autotag] — a 7-foot former four-star prospect from Dayton, Ohio — became the latest LSU player to put his name in the portal on Thursday.

Phillips appeared in 20 games in his lone season in Baton Rouge, and though he didn’t make any starts, he saw increased playing time down the stretch. His lone double-figure scoring game came against Georgia in the SEC tournament, when he totaled 13 points.

On the year, Phillips averaged 1.4 points and 2.1 rebounds.

Phillips’ loss doesn’t look like a huge one on its face, but he was a promising young prospect who showed signs of progress down the stretch and could have competed for a starting spot next season with [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag] moving on.

Now, LSU has to replace yet another key player heading into what will be a pivotal second season for McMahon. LSU has lost five players to the portal, including two from its 2022 high school signing class.

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LSU basketball freshman Corneilous Williams enters transfer portal after taking redshirt year

Williams missed the entire 2022-23 season as he was rehabbing a shoulder injury.

LSU has seen some expected veteran departures to the transfer portal since its terrible 2022-23 season came to a merciful end, but it can now add a promising young player to the list of outgoing talent.

Freshman forward [autotag]Corneilous Williams[/autotag] entered the transfer portal, joining veteran guard [autotag]Justice Hill[/autotag] and center [autotag]Kendal Coleman[/autotag]. Williams spent the year rehabbing a shoulder injury, and the former three-star prospect from Meridian, Mississippi, didn’t appear in a game as he took a redshirt.

“After much thought and consideration, I have decided to enter the NCAA transfer portal and further my athletic career and education elsewhere,” Williams announced in a Twitter post. “I want to thank all my coaches, teammates, and fans that helped me along the way. I will forever be grateful for the opportunity I was given and the bonds and friendships I’ve made at LSU.”

The 6-foot-9, 210-pound player’s departure, along with Coleman’s, leaves LSU fairly thin in the frontcourt as things currently stand. This will almost certainly be addressed in the portal, but keeping and developing a pair of freshmen big men who impressed last season at times in [autotag]Jalen Reed[/autotag] and [autotag]Shawn Phillips[/autotag] will be key.

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LSU loses center Kendal Coleman to the transfer portal

Coleman averaged just eight minutes this season after transferring in from Northwestern State.

After a frustrating first season for the Tigers under coach [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag], it was expected to be an offseason of change. That has been the case so far as LSU lost starting point guard [autotag]Justice Hill[/autotag] to the transfer portal, and he’s been joined by a depth player in the frontcourt.

Center [autotag]Kendal Coleman[/autotag] will be heading elsewhere after one season in Baton Rouge. A transfer addition last offseason from Northwestern State, Coleman averaged a double-double in 2021-22 but couldn’t carry that success to the SEC.

He averaged just eight minutes per game this season with just 2.3 points and 2.1 rebounds, and he’ll hope he can get a bigger opportunity elsewhere. His departure puts a lot of impetus on the development of younger players in the frontcourt like [autotag]Jalen Reed[/autotag] and [autotag]Shawn Phillips[/autotag].

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What to make of Matt McMahon’s tough first year at LSU

Matt McMahon’s first year at LSU is done. Where do the Tigers go from here?

The NCAA Tournament is set to begin soon, and LSU won’t be in it.

That’s different from these last few years. With [autotag]Will Wade[/autotag], aside from the COVID year, LSU fans got used to watching basketball in March.

The Tigers have made the last three NCAA Tournaments.

LSU never made a special run at a Final Four, though there was a Sweet 16 appearance. But after several years of struggles, the tournament appearances were enough to satisfy LSU fans in an ever improving SEC.

There was even an SEC title throw in there too.

Stars from those teams have now found success in the NBA, whether it be [autotag]Naz Reid[/autotag] or [autotag]Cam Thomas[/autotag].

LSU finished dead last in the SEC this year. Wade was let go a year ago after LSU received a notice of allegations and in the wake of it, LSU basketball has tripped, stumbled and fallen.

Several players from Wade’s team transferred out. At one point, LSU was without any scholarship player on the roster. LSU hired [autotag]Matt McMahon[/autotag] from Murray State and he recouped some of the losses. Most notably, he convinced guard [autotag]Adam Miller[/autotag] to return.

McMahon brought a number of his players from a good Murray State team too, along with a couple of blue-chip recruits.

Things didn’t look that bad anymore. The team wasn’t overflowing with talent but it had experienced players who had won at a high level. LSU started 5-0 and moved to 12-1. LSU finished off December with a win over No. 9 ranked Arkansas.

Following the Arkansas win, fans celebrated McMahon’s quick turnaround. The group had gelled fast, and LSU was going to compete for a spot in the NCAA Tournament.

In the next game, the Tigers put up a fight on the road at Kentucky. Not a win, but more evidence the program was trending up and worthy of conference-wide attention.

Then it started to crumble. LSU lost by seven on the road to a Texas A&M team that turned out to be pretty good. Still not the end of the world. Then LSU lost again, to a Florida team that frankly, wasn’t that good.

LSU then lost again and again and again. A team that was 12-1 was 12-15 and any hope for postseason play had long disappeared.

You could chalk that 12-1 start up to mostly weak opponents. But Arkansas is No. 19 in KenPom, and the Tigers beat a Wake Forest team that won 19 games.

LSU’s lone loss in that stretch was by two points to a Kansas State team that’s 23-9. It really doesn’t make sense. But that’s how Year 1s are sometimes. This was a team with a new coach at a new place that’s never played together before.

This season is now in the rearview mirror. I don’t want to get caught up on diagnosing every issue.

Where does LSU go from here?

There’s sure to be plenty of turnover again. [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag], LSU’s best player, will be gone. He was responsible for so much of LSU’s production this year.

Replacing him in a normal situation will be tough. Replacing him in a rebuild, even tougher.

McMahon was hired as a developmental guy. [autotag]Scott Woodward[/autotag] didn’t turn to the proven Power Five winner like he did with football and baseball. With McMahon, Woodward’s playing the long game and the contract McMahon received reflects that.

McMahon signed three four-stars last cycle: [autotag]Tyrell Ward[/autotag], [autotag]Jalen Reed[/autotag] and [autotag]Shawn Phillips[/autotag]. That’s LSU’s future core. It’s pivotal that McMahon holds on to them.

If they leave, that’s when I’d start questioning if McMahon is right for this rebuild.

The pieces for improvement are here. You just have to believe McMahon is a guy capable of developing at LSU like he did at Murray State.

You don’t need elite recruiting classes to win in college basketball. Teams have made runs strictly on developing players.

McMahon added a slew of transfers last year and getting their veteran presence back would be nice, but LSU needs to mine talent in the portal, especially at the guard position.

LSU has a couple of top 200 recruits on their way in. [autotag]Corey Chest[/autotag] and [autotag]Mike Williams[/autotag]. Based on how McMahon treated the freshmen this year, don’t expect a ton from them next year.

It’s too early to make big declarations on what the roster could look like. This is still a program in flux, and in this era, anything can happen.

This offseason, even more so than last, is critically important for McMahon and staff. Last year was excusable. Finishing last in the SEC again next year won’t be.

This is the new SEC. It doesn’t matter if you’re a football school. Athletic departments with money are expected to be relevant in basketball.

Fans want to see this program competing for conference titles once again.

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LSU keeps season alive with win over Georgia in SEC Tournament opener

LSU survived a dogfight against UGA and advances to play Vanderbilt on Thursday night.

The LSU men’s basketball team will live to play at least one more day.

The No. 14-seeded Tigers won their opener at the SEC Tournament on Wednesday night, beating the No. 11-seeded Georgia Bulldogs 72-67 despite squandering a 12-point halftime lead.

The win gives LSU (14-18, 3-16 SEC) its third victory against an SEC team this season, and now the Tigers will take on the Vanderbilt Commodores — who they beat just a few weeks ago — in the second round on Thursday.

Neither team was particularly efficient offensively in the first half. LSU outshot Georgia 40.5% to 37.5%, but the main difference in the opening frame proved to be turnovers.

UGA had eight giveaways to the Tigers’ one, and that resulted in nine points going the other way. It allowed LSU to stretch its lead to 42-30 as it took a comfortable advantage to the locker room.

However, the Tigers had a very inefficient second half offensively. They shot 31% from the field, while Georgia was much better and shot 42.3%. The Bulldogs stormed back and ultimately managed to take the lead with just over four minutes to play.

But LSU didn’t waver, and thanks to a couple of timely shots down the stretch from [autotag]KJ Williams[/autotag] and [autotag]Shawn Phillips[/autotag], who recorded 18 and 13 points, respectively, allowed the Tigers to hang on. Phillips finished with a double-double, as did Trae [autotag]Hannibal[/autotag] with 14 points and 11 rebounds.

LSU will hope to keep its slim hopes at an auto-bid in the NCAA Tournament alive against the Commodores on Thursday night.

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