Texas Longhorns Land Marcus Spears Jr.
in Major Recruiting Boost Texas men's basketball, amidst a turbulent era with multiple coaching changes and conference struggles, secures a significant recruiting victory as forward Marcus Spears Jr.
reclassifies to the Class of 2026 and commits to the Longhorns.
The 17-year-old son of former LSU football star Marcus Spears chose Texas over several top programs, bringing energy and championship aspirations.
This signing is particularly impactful as Spears will have to wait two years before NBA draft eligibility, potentially shaping the team's future through the 2027 season.
The move raises questions about whether Texas is reclaiming its status as a national powerhouse under the current coaching regime.
On a hypothetical list of mens college basketball programs navigating a weird 2020s, Texas would have to be near the top.
Highlights? The Longhorns have had plenty, namely a run to the Elite Eight in 2023 as well a surprise 2026 trip to the Sweet 16 that punctuated a 15-loss season.
Texas also grabbed a No.
3 national seed in 2021 and finished in the AP Top 10.
However: the Longhorns have churned through four coaches in six years, the `21 team bowed out in embarrassing fashion to Abilene Christian, and sledding in the SEC so far has been tough.
Texas needed a morale boost.
On Thursday, it got one, as forward Marcus Spears Jr.
reclassified to the Class of `26 and announced hed play for the Longhorns this season.The son of ex-LSU football All-American and ESPN NFL analyst Marcus Spears picked the Longhorns over Arizona, Kentucky and the Tigers.
Paul Biancardi and Jeff Borzello of ESPN .The Texas fans can expect a worker with a lot of energy.
I will be trying to bring Texas a national championship." The signing is a massive one for the Longhorns, not least because Spears Jr.
will have to wait two years before entering the NBA draft because of his young age.
Texas could realistically have just landed its power forward for the 2027The two-part question that follows: are the Longhorns indeed becoming a big thing again? And if so, how can Spears facilitate that?Under Rick Barnestheir coach from 1999 to 2015the Longhorns were routinely NCAA tournament players and a destination for top recruits like forward Kevin Durant.
That reputation atrophied a little bit once Texas canned Barnes: coach Shaka Smart never quite put all the pieces together, and neither of his successors stuck around long enough to establish a firm recruiting foothold.
, appears to be coaxing that reputation back to life.On the heels of his teams Sweet 16 run, Miller has signed the No.
4 class in the countryJoining Spears next seasonnot counting transferswill be five-star forward Austin Goosby, four-star guard Bo Ogden, and four-star guard Joe Sterling.
Of that quartet, only Sterling didnt play high school ball in Texas; Goosby and Spears were teammates on Dynamic Prep in the Dallas area.Few teams will be more set at any one position in 2027 than Texas at power forward, thanks to Spears and David Punch The Longhorns were busy in the transfer portal in the spring, and chief among their acquisitions was a true power forward in Punch.
Punch stepped up his game in a big way in `26, averaging 14.1 points and 6.8 rebounds per game for an NCAA tournament TCU team.Punch starting and Spears backing him up seems like a healthy way to ease a 17-year-old into the hot fire of SEC competition.
Texas is losing its obvious best player from a year agoswingman Dailyn Swain, the 15th pick of Junes NBA draft by the Bullsbut returns promising Lithuanian center Matas Vokietaitis.Vokietaitis, who made the competition jump from Florida Atlantic to the Longhorns seamlessly, has the size to make life difficult for opponents regardless of whether hes paired with Punch or Spears Jr.
Patrick Andres is a staff writer on the Breaking and Trending News team at Sports Illustrated.
He joined SI in December 2022, having worked for The Blade, Athlon Sports, Fear the Sword and Diamond Digest.Andres has covered everything from zero-attendance Big Ten basketball to a seven-overtime college football game.
He is a graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism with a double major in history .
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