San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

AZTECS TO FACE EX-RECRUIT

Washington guard Johnson committed to SDSU in 2021

- BY MARK ZEIGLER

Three thoughts on San Diego State’s 79-54 win against Saint Mary’s on Friday night in the opening round of the Continenta­l Tire Main Event at T-mobile Arena, ahead of tonight’s final against Washington:

1. Familiar face

Washington sophomore guard Koren Johnson saw the Huskies’ 2023-24 schedule and immediatel­y noticed

Continenta­l Tire Main Event title game Today:

7 p.m., T-mobile Arena, Las Vegas Aztecs by 51 ESPN2, 760-AM

Line: On the air:

⁄2 one of the other teams in the Continenta­l Tire Main Event: San Diego State.

Johnson initially committed to SDSU in October 2021, the highest rated of a three-man recruiting class that also included Miles Byrd and Elijah Saunders.

“1,000 percent committed,” he posted on social media. “Go Aztecs.”

Two days before the national letter of intent signing window opened in November, he decommitte­d and ultimately returned home to Seattle to attend Washington. Recruiting flips are common in football. They’re not in basketball; once a guy verbally commits, he almost never reneges. Johnson did.

Now, as fate would have it, he faces the Aztecs.

“When I saw they were in the tournament with us, I was hoping we’d both win,” Johnson said after the Huskies beat Xavier 74-71 in Friday’s late game to set up today’s showdown. “It’s just going to be a personal game. We’re going to have fun. … It’s all love, all love. I’m going to say ‘what’s up’ to the coaching staff and be cool. I’m not beefing with them or anything.”

Johnson blames homesickne­ss for his decommitme­nt, starting when he left for Wasatch Academy in rural Utah for his senior year to, in part, escape detrimenta­l influences in Seattle. There also, several sources have said, were monetary enticement­s with name, image and license payments in their infancy.

“My great grandmothe­r, she got sick, so I wanted to

Guard Koren Johnson, here Friday against Xavier, averages 10.5 points off the bench for Washington.

be home off the strength of that,” Johnson said. “I wanted to be around my family and everybody. My mom was (angry). She wanted me to fight through adversity, just get through it, but I kind of wanted to take the easy way out and I came back home. I was homesick.”

The Huskies have gone 17-15 and 16-16 in his two seasons and failed to make the NCAA Tournament. The Aztecs did twice, and last season he watched them play for the national championsh­ip.

“I was kind of — what’s the word? — I wouldn’t say salty,” said Johnson, who averages 10.5 points in 23.5 minutes off the bench for the Huskies. “I’m happy for them, they did what they did, and I could have been part of that. But I’m happy where I’m at, so there are no regrets or anything.”

That applies to both sides.

“We love Koren as a player,” SDSU coach Brian Dutcher said. “We wouldn’t have recruited him and taken a commit from him if we didn’t. But I also understood his hometown school is Washington. I think the fact that he went to a prep school (in Utah) made him miss home more.

“So I understood his decision to change his mind. Better to happen before he came to us than realize a year into it that he’d rather be home.”

There’s also this: Had Johnson come, the Aztecs likely would not have pursued a guard in the transfer portal the following spring.

Who did they get? A 5-10 guard from Seattle University named Darrion Trammell … who was MVP of the NCAA South Regional and put the Aztecs into the Final Four with a winning free throw with 1.2 seconds left against Creighton.

2. Go Gaels

Here’s how college basketball works: You try like heck to beat a team, then you wish them the best and genuinely mean it.

“I’m a Long Beach fan, a Saint Mary’s fan, anybody we play, I want them to have great years — BYU, Fullerton,

everybody,” Dutcher said. “That only helps our metrics.”

Long Beach State obliged, beating Depaul in Chicago last weekend, losing at Viejas Arena on Tuesday, then flying back to the Midwest and winning 94-86 at Michigan on Friday.

Saint Mary’s? Same deal. If Friday’s win indeed was a résumé-builder, the Gaels have to have the kind of season everyone expected.

Right now, they’re not. They blew a 16-point lead at home against Weber State last weekend and lost 61-57. Then, a second-half meltdown Friday and their most lopsided nonconfere­nce loss since, well, the Aztecs also beat them by 25 in 2021.

The combinatio­n of Long Beach State’s epic road win and SDSU’S convincing performanc­e against the WCC preseason favorite (ahead of Gonzaga) shot the Aztecs from 31 to 15 in the Kenpom.com metric, well inside NCAA at-large berth territory. But if the Gaels — who have already plummeted from 38th to 64th — continue to slide, they’ll yank down SDSU’S numbers with them.

And their schedule isn’t exactly conducive to a team suddenly in search of its identity. They play six more top-100 teams before starting WCC play, starting today with No. 43 Xavier.

“We have a lot of room to get better and we need to start getting better,” Gaels coach Randy Bennett said. “That’s what I told our guys. Everything has to improve: our leadership, our competitiv­eness — which is the scary one — our toughness, our ability to defend, our ability to make a basket, shoot a 3, make a free throw.

“I mean, we’re starting from scratch. We haven’t been there in a long time, but that is exactly where we’re

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