Will Wade's Roster Approach and Why It's Working

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After being rehired this spring, Will Wade starts a new era of LSU men's basketball.
Starting from the absolute bottom. With an empty roster just a couple of weeks ago, Wade has already added some talent.
But not in the traditional way.
The Approach

Wade recently addressed the thin roster, explaining that the promised growth would be coming from overseas. He is highlighting the talent from international players, saying that those "kids have more experience."
So far, it's working. Márcio Santos, the talented forward from Brazil, recently joined LSU's roster. Wade was right about the experience. The 24-year-old is coming to Baton Rouge from the Euroleague, with some NBA draft and summer league history.
But as promised, Wade isn't going to stop with Santos. The 6'8 power forward will be joined soon by more overseas talent, as Wade hinted that he and his recruiting staff are looking for a few more guys.
The international route that Wade is taking is not only filling out a roster to form a new team, but is taking the program to another level that could dominate.
Why It's Working

International players add a lot of depth to a program. Not only are they taller, stronger and arrive at the NCAA with more talent, but they have already been reshaping programs.
In the recent Final Four, international talent helped Illinois, Michigan, and Arizona make a deep postseason run. With Michigan taking the national championship title home, Illinois was named the tallest team in the country, and Arizona the tallest in the Big 12.
Clearly, the foreign athletes are putting teams above average and helping them play deep into March, which is the only evidence needed for Wade to bring some to Baton Rouge.
For LSU, top-tier talent that isn't coming out of high school or transferring from another Division I university doesn't just fill out a roster, but grows it.
After news broke that Santos was gonna be the newest Tiger, Wade landed Kansas State transfer Abdi Bashir Jr. In his time with the Wildcats, the guard saw 10+ points in 14 out of 18 appearances before having a season-ending foot injury.
Bashir could have been eyeing the Tigers for a while and Santos added a bonus. Or he could have had no influence.
But moving forward, a team full of talent from the international market could influence more top-tier athletes to join the redirection that LSU basketball is headed.
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Brooke Benedict is a sophomore at LSU, majoring in journalism. She is originally from Boulder, Colorado, and enjoys skiing, hiking, and Pilates. She's always enjoyed watching sports and the way sports bring people together. She has spent one semester as a sports columnist for the LSU student newspaper, and is am excited to continue her LSU sports reporting career with On SI.
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