Las Vegas Review-Journal

Offseason goal: Bring end to UNLV’S NCAA tourney drought

- By Mike Grimala A version of this story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com.

After Wednesday’s season-ending loss at Seton Hall in the NIT quarterfin­als, the consensus among UNLV players, coaches and even fans was that 2023-24 was a successful campaign.

The team developed promising underclass­men, got better as the year went along and earned its first postseason berth in 11 years. An overall record of 21-13 was the best since 2012-13. All of that represente­d progress for the program. And yet, there was an undercurre­nt of what could have been.

This UNLV squad was surely talented enough to make the NCAA Tournament. Settling for the NIT was a nice consolatio­n, but as attention turns to the offseason, it is clear that a return to the big dance is the big goal for 2024-25.

Coach Kevin Kruger said the first task would be helping the outgoing seniors as they look to continue their basketball careers. Then the work begins, as UNLV finds itself one good offseason away from the NCAA Tournament.

“The seniors, they’re our first priority, making sure they’re in a good place profession­ally in terms of any way we can help them,” Kruger said. “Once we do that, we’ll meet with the rest of the guys and start pinpointin­g spring workouts and how we want to get better.”

Some of UNLV’S top priorities:

Roster reset

UNLV is losing five seniors to graduation: centers Kalib Boone and Karl Jones, wings Luis Rodriguez and Keylan Boone, and guard Justin Webster. The Boone twins and Rodriguez were full-time starters, and Webster started more than half the contests this year. That’s a lot of production heading out the door.

As of now, UNLV is set to welcome three newcomers in 202425. James Evans is a 6-foot-5 wing from California, Pape N’diaye is a 7-footer from Trinity Internatio­nal, and Jeremiah Cherry is a 6-foot-11 junior college big man. Evans and N’diaye are rated as 3-star prospects, while Cherry posted 12.6 points, 5.8 rebounds and 1.5 blocks per game at New Mexico JC.

Add them to the players set to return — freshmen D.J. Thomas and Brooklyn Hicks, redshirt freshman Jacob Bannarbie, juniors Rob Whaley, Jackie Johnson and Shane Nowell, and senior Jalen Hill, and that’s 10 of 13 roster spots accounted for. That leaves three openings, but that number is likely to increase in the coming weeks as current players look to test the transfer portal.

Doing some quick back-of-en

velope math, it seems likely Kruger will be bringing in at least three players from the portal, and realistica­lly more like four or five.

Keep D.J. Thomas

This really should be the top entry on this list, because UNLV’S biggest priority by far is retaining D.J. Thomas.

As a true freshman, Thomas led UNLV in scoring and assists while playing more minutes than anyone else. Despite the huge workload, Thomas never seemed to tire or go through the normal freshman ups and downs over the course of the season. He should enter 2024-25 as a favorite for Mountain West Player of the Year.

That’s if he stays at UNLV, of course.

There’s no smoke about Thomas leaving as of right now. In fact, he’s got reasons to stick around. His family obviously has deep ties to Las Vegas, as his father, Dedan Thomas, played at UNLV, and he has a lucrative NIL deal that paid him six figures this year.

After UNLV lost in the Mountain West tournament, Thomas responded to a question about his status by saying he’s coming back to UNLV. Beyond that, in recent weeks he and Kruger have both been dropping references to Thomas being at UNLV next year. That’s usually a good sign.

But with the current portal landscape, retaining a player is never a sure thing. For now, lean toward Thomas returning and leading UNLV in 2024-25.

Portal power

When Kruger and his staff dive into the transfer market, they will find a lot of talent waiting to be courted. The portal has been open for two weeks, and already hundreds of players have entered. UNLV has a strong track record as a landing spot for restless ballers in the portal.

In Kruger’s three years at the helm, the staff’s sweet spot has been finding underutili­zed players and post-hype prospects from power-conference programs, dropping them down a level, giving them expanded roles and watching them flourish against Mountain West competitio­n. That blueprint has consistent­ly produced short-term gems like Royce Hamm, Donovan Williams, E.J. Harkless, Luis Rodriguez and the Boone twins.

The advantage UNLV has this year — again, if Thomas returns — is that those incoming veterans will be supplement­ing the team’s best player, not replacing him. Instead of building an entire roster from zero, as Kruger has done three times, the staff will be looking to add pieces around Thomas, Whaley and Hill.

Kruger is good at the portal. He has added multiple double-digit scorers via transfer every year since taking the helm in 2021. Most of those transfers had never put up those kinds of numbers before; that’s attractive to the next crop of players looking for a better opportunit­y. UNLV also has a nice NIL fund, which is quickly becoming the driving factor in recruiting.

Expect Kruger and his staff to hit the portal hard and sign at least two starting-caliber transfers.

Style guide

What is UNLV’S offense going to look like next year? It’s hard to say at this point, but it could be quite different based on personnel.

Due to the skill sets of Kalib Boone and Rob Whaley, the Scarlet and Gray featured a heavy post-up offense in 202324. They spent most possession­s trying to work the ball inside for straight post-ups, and while Boone and Whaley were generally efficient on the low block, it’s not how most offenses are run these days.

It’s especially not how it’s done when you’ve got a point guard like Thomas running the show. An offense built around Thomas would likely feature a lot of ball screens and a lot of pickand-rolls, with the goal of getting Thomas downhill to either score, throw lobs or spray the ball out to 3-point shooters.

UNLV didn’t do much of that at all this season. Boone and Whaley were not utilized in pickand-roll actions, and neither provided a pick-and-pop option, either. All the entry passes and back-to-the-basket moves resulted in a slow pace (No. 292 in Kenpom’s adjusted tempo) and some close calls for UNLV’S 3-point streak, which stands at 1,227 consecutiv­e games. That style is limiting what Thomas can do with the ball in his hands.

The coaching staff will have to iron out this offseason what type of offense to run. Boone is graduating, while Whaley is returning; does Kruger want to add another back-to-the basket center to replace Boone and stick with the double-big, bully ball gameplan, or is he ready to hand the keys to Thomas and give him full control of the playbook?

If Kruger goes into the portal and targets big men capable of stretching the floor, it could signal a change in approach, and more control for Thomas in 2024-25.

 ?? STEVE MARCUS ?? UNLV coach Kevin Kruger calls out to his players Sunday during their game against Boston College in the second round of the NIT at the Thomas & Mack Center. The Rebels ended their season Wednesday in a road loss to Seton Hall in the tournament quarterfin­als. Now Kruger and his staff will turn their attention to offseason duties. “The seniors, they’re our first priority, making sure they’re in a good place profession­ally in terms of any way we can help them,” Kruger said. “Once we do that, we’ll meet with the rest of the guys and start pinpointin­g spring workouts and how we want to get better.”
STEVE MARCUS UNLV coach Kevin Kruger calls out to his players Sunday during their game against Boston College in the second round of the NIT at the Thomas & Mack Center. The Rebels ended their season Wednesday in a road loss to Seton Hall in the tournament quarterfin­als. Now Kruger and his staff will turn their attention to offseason duties. “The seniors, they’re our first priority, making sure they’re in a good place profession­ally in terms of any way we can help them,” Kruger said. “Once we do that, we’ll meet with the rest of the guys and start pinpointin­g spring workouts and how we want to get better.”

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