Beard builds transfer-heavy lineup for debut at No. 5 Texas

Updated Oct. 22, 2021 3:10 a.m. ET
Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — When Chris Beard left Texas Tech for Texas, one of the coach's first moves was to plunge into the transfer portal and leave the door wide open.

Soon, players were pouring into Austin.

with a roster loaded with transfers who collectively bring more than 750 games and nearly 8,000 points and 3,000 rebounds to their new program.

This was no rebuilding year with a new coach. This was a guy going out and grabbing an arsenal to try to take the Big 12 title right away. Add those transfers to the four veteran players who return, including Andrew Jones, an elite scorer, and Big 12 coaches picked Texas among the league favorites.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I think we'll be one of, if not the most, experienced teams in college basketball,” Beard said. “That was by design this first year. We think we can be more than relevant early ... I'm talking about putting together a team this first year that can be part of the fight.”

Transferring in were Tre Mitchell (Massachusetts) , Dylan Disu (Vanderbilt) and Christian Bishop (Creighton), small forward Timmy Allen (Utah) and guards Marcus Carr (Minnesota), Devin Askew (Kentucky) and Avery Benson (Texas Tech) . The seven combined to score 89 points a game last season.

The Big 12 coaches selected Carr at the leagues preseason newcomer of the year. He ranked third in the Big Ten in scoring last season with 19.4 points per game to go with 4.9 assists.

Beard said he had “about four screens” constantly watching the transfer portal and he and his assistant pounced when players went in. Texas helped recruit itself, Beard said.

"“That’s why I took the job,” Beard said. “The brand is real. There was some confidence coming in that we could put a (talented) team together.”

Beard led Texas Tech for five seasons, leading the Red Raiders to the Elite Eight in 2018 and the NCAA Tournament championship game in 2019, when he was named The Associated Press Coach of the Year. He jumped at the chance to coach at his alma mater when Shaka Smart left the Longhorns for Marquette after six seasons and no NCAA Tournament wins in Austin.

Beard also had a word of caution for his new players hearing how good they look in burnt orange.

“It’s rat poison," said said, “until we get out there and back it up."

FRESHMAN

Tyson initially signed with Beard at Texas Tech in December 2020 but never played there and followed him to Austin. Tyson was a consensus top 40 recruit nationally out of John Paul II high school in Plano, Texas.

LEFTOVER LONGHORNS

Beard also inherited some quality players. Jones averaged 14.6 points last season. Guard Courtney Ramey has 74 career starts and has topped the 20-point mark six times. Guards Jase Febres and Brock Cunningham bring shooting touch and defense.

“If these guys would have been in the portal, if these guys would have been high school players, we would have recruited them,” Beard said.

LONG CAREER

Jones is in his sixth year and has played in 102 career games with 64 starts. He missed most of the 2017-2018 and 2018-2019 seasons after being diagnosed with leukemia. He completed his final treatment in September 2019.

GLUE GUY

Cunningham has been the defensive disrupter over the last two season. Seldom a scorer, Cunningham has made his mark the last two seasons with pure hustle for rebounds and loose balls, and annoying opponents with sticky defense. He always seems to be around when Texas needs a play.

BREEZY SCHEDULE

Texas has plenty of time to build chemistry among all the newcomers. Texas opens Nov. 9 against Houston Baptist. After a trip to face last season's national runner-up and preseason No. 1 Gonzaga on Nov. 13, Texas has only two more major conference matchups against Seton Hall and Stanford before the Jan. 1 start of Big 12 play at home against West Virginia.

share