This stat proves Tulane transfer Sion James is a perfect fit in Duke’s guard room

Sion James joins Tyrese Proctor and Caleb Foster in Duke’s backcourt for 2024-25, but he offers an offensive dimension neither can match.

Former Tulane guard Sion James announced his commitment to the Duke Blue Devils on Friday, adding another excellent starting option for head coach Jon Scheyer.

However, while James can play the same position as Caleb Foster and Tyrese Proctor, his advanced stats show he also plays an entirely different game.

According to CBB Analytics, half of James’ shot attempts last season came around the rim. The former Green Wave star shot 51.4% from the floor in 2023-24, but his efficiency jumped to 62% as he closed in on the basket. When you consider his 6-foot-6, 220-pound frame, it makes sense that James builds his game around his athletic prowess.

Contrast that with Foster and Proctor, who both stand 6-foot-5 and below 200 pounds. Foster attempted 69 3-pointers last year, more than 40% of his shots. Proctor tossed up 165 triples, more than half of his respective attempts.

James upped his 3-point production in each of his four years with Tulane, attempting 113 last year and connecting at a 38.1% clip. However, that still represented less than 40% of his overall shotmaking.

Only time will tell how much Foster, Proctor, and James all stand on the court together next season. However, trading 2023-24 star Jared McCain for James means teams have to entirely adjust to Duke’s guard play. James’ interior creation and finishing ability can open up looks for his sharpshooting teammates, a combination Scheyer surely targeted on purpose.

Duke Blue Devils now have a top-20 transfer portal class after landing Tulane’s Sion James

After his third transfer on Friday, head coach Jon Scheyer now boasts a top-20 transfer class on top of his historic 2024 recruiting group.

After the Friday commitment of Tulane guard Sion James, the Duke Blue Devils now have 247Sports’ 18th-best transfer class in the country.

James, who averaged 14.0 points and shot 51.4% from the floor as a junior last season, became the third transfer commitment of the offseason for head coach Jon Scheyer. Purdue’s Mason Gillis, who was named the Big Ten Sixth Man of the Year last season, and Syracuse’s Maliq Brown both committed back in April.

The Blue Devils are one of three teams in the top 20 of 247Sports’ rankings with three commitments or fewer. The Kansas Jayhawks (sixth) also only have three players in the transfer class right now, and the Baylor Bears (17th) have former Duke captain Jeremy Roach as one of two transfers.

Duke’s average rating of 93.50 between its trio of new stars is the 10th-highest of any school.

The Blue Devils are also the highest-ranked ACC team in the transfer rankings. NC State, who is one spot behind Duke in 19th, is the only other school in the conference inside the top 20.

Scheyer gets to pair this top-20 transfer class with the top-ranked recruiting class in the country next season, featuring No. 1 overall recruit Cooper Flagg and five other top-50 prospects.

Newest Blue Devil transfer Sion James shares social media post about Duke commitment

Sion James shared a photo of himself in Duke gear after he announced his commitment on Friday.

Sion James, the newest Duke Blue Devil, seemed excited to play in Durham after his Friday commitment.

James, a former member of the Tulane Green Wave, shared a social media post on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, shortly after the report from On3’s Joe Tipton.

“Duke Nation, what’s good???” James captioned the picture of him in a Blue Devils uniform.

As a junior last season, James averaged a career-high 14.0 points and shot 51.4% from the floor. He pulled down 5.4 rebounds, also a personal best, and he averaged 3.0 assists and 1.6 steals across his four years with the Green Wave.

James became the third member of Duke’s transfer class after former Purdue Boilermaker Mason Gillis and former Syracuse Orange Maliq Brown, who both committed in April. As a pure guard, James will share the backcourt with returning starters Caleb Foster and Tyrese Proctor.

If Blue Devils fans want an additional offensive dimension with their guards, James also shot 38.1% from 3-point range in 2023-24.

After losing seven players to the transfer portal and two players to the NBA this offseason, Duke now has 11 players on scholarship for the 2024-25 season.

Duke Blue Devils, Jon Scheyer add Tulane Green Wave transfer guard Sion James

Duke adds Tulane transfer Sion James.

The Duke Blue Devils landed their third transfer of the offseason when Tulane transfer Sion James announced his commitment on Friday. On3’s Joe Tipton first reported the decision.

James declared for the NBA Draft while retaining his eligibility earlier this spring. After a pre-draft workout in Memphis last week, James officially visited Duke, and the rest is history.

The newest Blue Devil is listed as a 6-foot-6, 220-pound guard who appeared in 31 games for the Green Wave during the 2023-24 season, leading the team in minutes at nearly 37 per game. He was highly productive, with averages of 14.0 points, 5.4 rebounds, and 2.7 assists per contest while shooting 51% from the field. He was proficient from deep, too, shooting 38% with an effective field goal percentage of 59 percent, good for the 84th percentile in college basketball last year.

James’ value to Duke is his physicality and slashing ability. One area Duke has lacked in the last couple of seasons was a guard consistently getting downhill to the lane and finishing regularly. James has the size and strength, coupled with an excellent first step, to be a menace to opposing defenses as he attacks the lane. Half of his shot attempts last year were at the rim, where he shot 62%.

He also played point guard for the Green Wave, highlighted by his 13% assist rate. He routinely initiated offenses for Tulane and could create shots for others even when out of sets.

[autotag]Jon Scheyer[/autotag]’s second season at Duke improved in many areas from year one. However, it was not without turbulence. That’s part of the growth process for a young coach—especially one without any head coaching experience before he took over the job from the legendary Mike Krzyzewski.

After an appearance in the Elite Eight that saw them lose to NC State, it was back to the drawing board for Scheyer and his staff as they look to bring Duke its sixth national championship and first since 2015.

Seven players from the 2023-24 team entered the transfer portal. The type of mass exodus that would have any program scrambling. Tyrese Proctor and Caleb Foster announced their intentions to return. Duke has six freshmen inbound, led by high school basketball’s best player, Cooper Flagg. The Blue Devils already added Purdue transfer Mason Gillis and Syracuse big man Maliq Brown from the portal.

Duke now has three guards who aren’t freshmen. They can rely on one to bring the ball up. It also gives Duke another wrinkle of versatility, as James can seamlessly guard positions 1-3. Hence, it allows Scheyer to run a full three-guard lineup like this past year or have one of Proctor, Foster, or James come off the bench as a big-time stabilizing force for Duke’s second unit.

This addition also allows Duke not to rely on freshmen Darren Harris, Kon Knueppel, and Isaiah Evans nearly as much and will enable them to ease into the college game.

Duke’s impact transfer portal pursuits are wrapped up. Any other transfers are likely for deep bench depth and are unlikely to be counted on as meaningful contributors nightly.

Three 247Sports experts forecast Duke to land Tulane transfer Sion James

The Blue Devils sound like a favorite to land Sion James, who averaged 14.0 points and 5.4 rebounds for the Tulane Green Wave last season.

The Blue Devils are heavy favorites to land Tulane transfer Sion James, according to three 247Sports predictions.

The Devils Den’s Adam Rowe, John Watson, and Chad Lykins all submitted Crystal Ball predictions that James would sign with Duke on Sunday. The three forecasts came within hours of each other, with all three submitted before noon.

James, a 6-foot-6 Georgia native, spent four seasons with the Green Wave and played 114 games. He averaged a career-high 14.0 points last season after shooting 51.4 % from the floor, and he pulled down a personal-best 5.4 rebounds per game.

The former Tulane guard also averaged 3.0 assists (with a career-high 3.6 in 2021-21), and 1.6 steals (with a career-high 2.0 in 2022-23) across his four years of collegiate basketball.

Should head coach Jon Scheyer lure James from the portal, he’d be the third transfer commitment of the offseason. Duke already signed former Purdue guard Mason Gillis and former Syracuse forward Maliq Brown.

Former LSU receiver Khai Prean commits to Tulane

Khai Prean is staying in the state of Louisiana.

Former Tigers wide receiver [autotag]Khai Prean[/autotag] won’t be leaving the state of Louisiana, after all.

On Monday, Prean announced his commitment to Tulane as a transfer. The former four-star receiver entered the transfer portal last Wednesday following one season at LSU in which he redshirted and didn’t make any appearances.

Listed as an athlete coming out of Saint James, Louisiana, in the 2023 class, Prean was a top-500 recruit. However, even with the departures of [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Brian Thomas Jr.[/autotag], he remained buried on the receiver depth chart entering 2024.

LSU still has quite a bit of depth at the position between projected starters [autotag]Kyren Lacy[/autotag], [autotag]Zavion Thomas[/autotag] and [autotag]CJ Daniels[/autotag], depth players [autotag]Aaron Anderson[/autotag] and [autotag]Chris Hilton Jr.[/autotag], as well as young players who could be poised for a breakout like [autotag]Shelton Sampson Jr.[/autotag] and [autotag]Kyle Parker[/autotag].

Prean will join a Tulane team coming off another double-digit win season, but the 2024 campaign will be the first under new coach Jon Sumrall after Willie Fritz left to take the Houston job.

Contact/Follow us @LSUTigersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Louisiana State news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Tyler to continue the conversation on Twitter: @TylerNettuno

LSU expected to hire former Tulane offensive coordinator Slade Nagle as tight ends coach

Slade Nagle served as the offensive coordinator for Tulane this past season and was the interim coach for the Green Wave’s bowl game.

LSU has seemingly completed its on-field staff ahead of the 2024 season.

On Tuesday, the Tigers promoted interim co-offensive coordinators [autotag]Joe Sloan[/autotag] and [autotag]Cortez Hantkon[/autotag] to the roles full-time, and on Wednesday, LSU found the final piece of the puzzle as it is reportedly hiring former Tulane offensive coordinator [autotag]Slade Nagle[/autotag] as the tight ends coach.

It’s a major pickup for Brian Kelly’s staff as Nagle was even considered a candidate for the offensive coordinator position. Instead, he’ll join the staff as a position coach after orchestrating one of the Group of Five’s best offenses last season.

The news of Nagle’s hiring was first reported by 247Sports’ Matt Zenitz.

Nagle is a Baton Rouge native who had been on staff at Tulane since 2016 in various capacities. He took over as the offensive play-caller this season and served as the interim head coach in the team’s 41-20 Military Bowl loss to Virginia Tech after Willie Fritz left for the Houston job.

Nagle has also previously been on staff at LSU, serving as a special teams analyst under [autotag]Les Miles[/autotag] during the 2009 season.

Contact/Follow us @LSUTigersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Louisiana State news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Tyler to continue the conversation on Twitter: @TylerNettuno

SKOL Search: Tulane QB Michael Pratt and South Carolina QB Spencer Rattler

Are Michael Pratt and Spencer Rattler worthwhile prospects for the Minnesota Vikings?

Welcome to SKOL Search!

This series will be your guide to the 2024 draft class. From scouting reports to mock drafts and exploring different scenarios, we will be covering the NFL draft and the future of the Minnesota Vikings from all angles.

On today’s show, we are looking at two quarterbacks that will be playing at the Reese’s Senior Bowl in Tulane’s Michael Pratt and South Carolina’s Spencer Rattler.

These are two very different quarterback profiles but they each have talent that will translate to the National Football League.

  • Is Pratt’s arm talent enough for him to be a long-term starter in the NFL?
  • Will Rattler’s arm talent alone make him an appealing prospect?
  • How does Pratt attack the field as a runner and passer?
  • How concerned should we be about Rattler’s issues with processing and decision-making?

Join us throughout the offseason leading up to the NFL draft in April as we break down prospects with the smartest minds in the industry on the Vikings 1st & SKOL YouTube channel.

Vikings 2024 NFL draft scouting report: Tulane QB Michael Pratt

Tulane QB Michael Pratt jumped onto the scene in 2022 leading them to a New Year’s Six bowl. How are is he as a 2024 NFL Draft prospect?

Welcome to SKOL Search!

This series will be your guide to the 2024 draft class. From scouting reports to mock drafts and exploring different scenarios, we will be covering the NFL draft and the future of the Minnesota Vikings from all angles.

The focus of the draft class in this space will be on the Vikings’ major needs at quarterback, running back, defensive line and edge rusher. We will also focus on wide receiver since it’s a loaded class and an increased chance to get a Stefon Diggs-type steal in the later rounds.

The Vikings are slated to have 9 picks going into the NFL draft and they need to make the most out of them.

Ty Thompson’s roster is adding some highly-rated players at Tulane

Former Oregon Ducks quarterback Ty Thompson is seeing some nice additions via the transfer portal at Tulane.

The Tulane Green Wave has been seeing some great success over the past several years, and the fan base has been growing quickly.

An influx of fans came from the Pacific Northwest this offseason when former Oregon Ducks’ quarterback Ty Thompson announced his transfer to Tulane, giving a fan favorite a chance to show what he can do at long last.

It’s become pretty apparent that Tulane is doing a lot of work to build the roster around Thompson, making some major additions via the transfer portal. On Monday, the Green Wave got commitments from former USC WR Mario Williams, as well as former Alabama WR Shazz Preston.

Williams has 9 touchdowns over the last two seasons with USC. Preston was a 4-star recruit in the class of 2022, rated as the No. 56 player in the nation.

Tulane had a solid 2023 season, going 11-3 and 8-1 in the AAC. Assuming that Thompson — a former high-end 4-star recruit — can play to his expected ceiling, the Green Wave could be a very fun team to watch in the future.

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