
BATON ROUGE — LSU women’s head basketball coach Kim Mulkey’s press conferences are as predictable as the plots of Elvis movies.
Watch any Elvis flick, and a fight or a song is guaranteed to break out every five minutes.
For the media looking for a story hook or soundbite, they know Mulkey is going to deliver an unfiltered gem that’s either going to educate you or make you laugh or think or all three simultaneously.
In Tuesday’s presser previewing the No. 12 Tigers’ Thursday SEC game at Vanderbilt, Mulkey asked if her team’s identity changes as the season progresses.
“Your identity evolves on the floor,” Mulkey said. “People can perceive it to be one way and it really isn’t that way. The way they perceive it may have to do something with the way we play, and how we score.
“I don’t know how our identity has changed. We are talented at all positions; we can score at all positions. We don’t have the one scorer we feed the ball to all the time. Our identity is who are you going to guard and not guard.”
LSU (19-4 overall, 6-3) certainly hasn’t lost any of its offense despite leading the universe in missed 2-foot shots.
The Tigers’ four losses can mostly be traced to asleep-at-the-wheel defense when no help is provided after an opponent beats one of LSU’s perimeter defenders to the basket. Because of LSU’s lack of depth – just two deep off the bench – perhaps there has been a reluctance to play help defense for fear of fouling.
The way LSU snapped its two-game losing streak last Sunday, scoring a school record for most points in an SEC game with a 106-66 demolition of Florida, should be the Tigers’ victory blueprint for the remainder of the season.
Ideally, LSU wants a Final Four shot to defend its national championship. At this moment with basically no depth, that goal might seem out of reach.
But as Mulkey said recently to the media, “After we lost at South Carolina (88-64) last year, how many of y’all thought we were going to win a national championship?”
If anyone cares to remember, LSU won the national title because its relentless defense kept the Tigers afloat in their first five NCAA tournament wins when they shot just 39.5 percent from the field including 19.7 percent from 3-point range.
The basketball Gods smiled on LSU in its 102-85 romp over Iowa in the championship game as had its best shooting game of the tourney (54.3 percent from the field). Included were 11 of 17 3-pointers, three fewer than the Tigers made in their first five tourney matchups.
Last year’s team identity revolved around forward Angel Reese and now-graduated point guard Alexis Morris. Reese and Morris carried the bulk of offense and the rest of the Tigers’ eight-player rotation filled in the gaps.
LSU avoided serious injuries all season, there was no off-the-court drama. The Tigers seemed to be on the fringe of the spotlight for most of the year, motivated by the non-believers who thought LSU’s weak non-conference schedule padded its win total.
This year as defending national champs and a preseason No. 1, the Tigers talked about how everyone would be gunning to take them down.
Even after Colorado whacked LSU 92-78 in the season opener in Las Vegas, the Tigers didn’t get a true, consistent taste of being Team Bullseye until they got into SEC play and played in packed arenas in every road game.
It wasn’t until the 77-73 loss at Mississippi State two games ago that LSU finally got the wake-up call that anything less than an exceptional, concentrated effort in every phase of the game would lead to more defeats.
These Tigers didn’t find their identity, but rather their identity found them.
Losing reserve center Sa’mayah Smith for the season in November with a knee injury and Mulkey tossing returning guard Kateri Poole shortly after Reese’s four-game absence (from an apparent, but unconfirmed Mulkey suspension) reduced what had been a rotation of nine players.
It has forced returning reserve point guard Last Tear-Poa to step up her game and reserve freshman center Aalyah Del Rosario to accelerate her growth.
Poa is emerging as a key component moving forward. Louisville transfer Hailey Van Lith has had her struggles transitioning from shooting guard for the ’Ville to LSU’s starting point guard, a position where she fights the good fight as a playmaker but often loses her identity as a scorer.
In the win over Florida, Van Lith scored 13 of her team-co-leading 21 points when she shifted to shooting guard as Poa took over point guard duties.
“We wanted Poa to get in the game a little bit more,” Van Lith said. “We can continue to build on that. It’ll make us really dangerous because we can play fast and it’s hard to guard us in transition.”
When Reese re-joined the team after her absence, she finally realized she could play even harder this season because she’s surrounded by talented teammates. LSU’s starting five, which all average scoring in double figures, and Rosario have combined to score 20 or more points 34 times.
The timely and physical efficiency of DePaul transfer forward Aneesah Morrow, the athletic spark of returning sophomore guard Flau’jae Johnson, and the enormous talent of likely SEC Freshman of the Year Mikaylah Williams all cannot be understated.
The Tigers understand now they need to fight for the full 40 minutes. If they don’t believe that, they must remember what happened in the 76-70 loss to No. 1 South Carolina on Jan. 25.
“We gave up 3’s at the end of each quarter (in the first half),” Johnson said. “We lost by six.”
And if the Tigers want to maintain their relevancy as a featured team on ESPN telecasts and highlights, they must first subscribe to ESPM.
Every Single Possession Matters.
Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com














