San Antonio Express-News

League starts over after loss of top scorers

- By Steve Megargee

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — There will be plenty of new faces with an opportunit­y to make an impact in the Southeaste­rn Conference now that the upperclass­men who dominated the league last year have departed.

Auburn coach Bruce Pearl is confident the league will remain strong, even after losing 12 of its top 13 scorers from last season.

“We had a terrific, terrific group of kids in this league a year ago,” Pearl said Wednesday during the SEC media day event. “While I’m not sure the individual­s list is as strong as it was, the coaching continues to get stronger and I don’t think it will have any effect on the quality of teams. This is a really, really balanced league.”

The SEC certainly will have a different look.

Twelve of its players were selected in the NBA draft, second only to the Atlantic Coast Conference’s 13. No other league had more than six players drafted.

Those departed players had a major role in the SEC’s recent resurgence. The SEC had seven NCAA Tournament invitation­s last season and eight in 2018, a huge step forward for a league that never got more than five bids in any year from 200917.

“I can remember when we’d get two to three in and I said our goal was to get eight or nine in and everybody laughed at me,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “Some of you that have been here a long time, you laughed at me. Now all of a sudden we’re looking at trying to get eight or nine teams in every year.”

Now it’s up to some new players to continue that momentum.

Even the SEC’s preseason player of the year is a newcomer of sorts, albeit one with plenty of experience elsewhere. Virginia Tech graduate transfer Kerry Blackshear Jr. selected Florida over a host of other SEC programs including Kentucky, Tennessee and Arkansas.

Blackshear averaged 11.2 points and 6 rebounds while playing in the ACC last season. The 6foot10 forward sees similariti­es between the SEC and ACC.

“I think the two conference­s mirror each other a lot in terms of talent,” Blackshear said. “It’s going to be potentiall­y one, two, maybe even three top10 teams at one time in the AP poll. I think they compare in a lot of ways.”

Upperclass­men formed the foundation of the SEC’s success last year.

Auburn earned its first Final Four berth thanks largely to a backcourt featuring senior Bryce Brown and junior Jared Harper. Tennessee earned the No. 1 ranking for nearly a month and reached the Sweet 16 with junior Grant Williams earning firstteam AllAmerica honors while senior Admiral Schofield and junior Jordan Bone delivered allconfere­nce performanc­es.

Even Kentucky had Stanford graduate transfer Reid Travis complement­ing its usual collection of talented freshmen.

None of those players are still in the SEC. The only first or secondteam Associated Press allSEC selection from last year returning this season is Mississipp­i guard Breein Tyree, who ranked third in the league in scoring. LSU’s Skylar Mays earned secondteam allconfere­nce honors from the league’s coaches last year.

The league’s freshmen will have to immediatel­y deliver. The SEC signed eight of the nation’s top 24 prospects in the most recent high school class according to composite rankings of recruiting sites compiled by 247Sports.

Anthony Edwards, ranked second in the 247Sports Composite, should spark a Georgia program that went 1121 and finished ahead of only Vanderbilt in the SEC last season. Georgia coach Tom Crean says Edwards “can be not only an outstandin­g offensive player but he can be an elite defensive player without question.”

“He doesn’t even really have an idea of how fast he is, how good he can be,” Crean said.

Kentucky, the preseason SEC favorite for a ninth consecutiv­e year, signed three top25 recruits: Tyrese Maxey (10th), Kahlil Whitney (11th) and Keion Brooks (24th). Other top25 prospects to join SEC schools include Florida’s Scottie Lewis (7th) and Tre Mann (21st), LSU forward Trendon Watford (18th) and Tennessee guard JosiahJord­an James (22nd).

“There will be a lot of good new faces,” Mississipp­i State coach Ben Howland said. “Look at the recruiting in our league. It’s really, really going strong, not just for Kentucky but for everybody.”

Howland notes that the SEC also has a quality group of sophomores. That group includes preseason firstteam allSEC picks Reggie Perry of Mississipp­i State and Ashton Hagans of Kentucky plus secondteam selections Kira Lewis Jr. of Alabama, Isaiah Joe of Arkansas, Andrew Nembhard of Florida and EJ Montgomery of Kentucky.

Coaches believe the league has grown to such an extent that it won’t have to rebuild every time it suffers a major talent drain.

“This league is getting to the point where it’s reloading every year,” Howland said.

 ?? Butch Dill / Associated Press ?? Kentucky's Ashton Hagans, a preseason AllSEC firstteam selection, speaks during the Southeaste­rn Conference college basketball media day on Wednesday in Birmingham, Ala.
Butch Dill / Associated Press Kentucky's Ashton Hagans, a preseason AllSEC firstteam selection, speaks during the Southeaste­rn Conference college basketball media day on Wednesday in Birmingham, Ala.
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