Social media drama swirled around the LSU basketball team Thursday, with former Tigers and current WNBA players stirring the pot.
The kerfuffle started with posts by the mothers of Angel Reese and Flau’jae Johnson, each seemingly directed at the other. Reese’s mother Angel Webb Reese complained about text messages with grammatical errors on Instagram Stories, and then Johnson’s mother Kia Brooks called out mother and daughter in her own post.
“You definitely know about grammar errors when your daughter got a 2.0 or less GPA. … Stop being petty, fake and hateful, and take responsibility for you and your daughter’s actions,” Brooks wrote.
While neither Reese nor Johnson addressed the posts on their own social media platforms, former teammates Alexis Morris and Jasmine Carson jumped into the fray.
All four players won the national championship with LSU in April. Morris and Carson now are playing overseas, while Reese and Johnson are still with the Tigers, whose title defense got off to a rocky start.
“Switched up to gang up on me, now y’all fallin’ out,” wrote Morris, who got herself into hot water on social media earlier this year after calling out WNBA veterans.
In another post, she wrote: “Can we just all get (along)? Heck no that’s over with.”
Morris also stood up for LSU head coach Kim Mulkey, writing: “You can’t pay me to bash Kim!”
“Y’all better hope I don’t say nothing,” Carson wrote.
switched up to gang up on me. now yall fall-in out. don’t ever choose clout over loyalty free game. I showed real love not for marketing politics nothing. but the realist always prevail 🤞🏽🤷🏽♀️
— Alexis Morris (@AlexisMorrisWBB) November 16, 2023
can we just all get alone? heck no that’s over with.
— Alexis Morris (@AlexisMorrisWBB) November 16, 2023
You can’t pay me to bash Kim‼️‼️‼️
— Alexis Morris (@AlexisMorrisWBB) November 16, 2023
y’all better hope I don’t say nothing.. 😂🫠
— Jasmine Carson⛈ (@JazzC2_) November 16, 2023
WNBA players also got in on the action, with Las Vegas Aces guard Sydney Colson writing: “I wanna see LSU play LSU cuz what’s goin onnn??”
Washington Mystics center Shakira Austin tried to offer advice, writing: “Listen I’m ALL for speaking your truth, if everybody told their story we all know 75% of coaches would not have a job. But don’t let no quick attention cause any harm to your brand. The best thing is to focus on what’s next bc these folks still gonna get contract extensions…”
get the gloves https://t.co/XTVkKTvkuc
— Alexis Morris (@AlexisMorrisWBB) November 16, 2023
Listen I’m ALL for speaking your truth, if everybody told their story we all know 75% of coaches would not have a job. But don’t let no quick attention cause any harm to your brand. The best thing is to focus on what’s next bc these folks still gonna get contract extensions…🤷🏽♀️
— Shakira Austin✨ (@Theylove_kira) November 16, 2023
DALLAS — It was a celebration dripping in sequins.
The party started when Flau’jae Johnson ran over to the sidelines and sent a message to coach Kim Mulkey.
“You’re the GOAT!” she yelled. Then again: “You’re the GOAT!” And again. As her freshman guard shouted, Mulkey’s face wrinkled as she tried to fight back the tears pooling into her eyes.
The seconds ticked down, and Johnson couldn’t contain her excitement any longer. She ran over to Mulkey and lifted the coach off the ground, spinning her in a bear hug. Her purple uniform melded with Mulkey’s sequined, tiger-striped suit to create one blur of joy.
A season that started with criticism about a weak schedule ended in celebration on the ultimate stage. With their 102-85 win over superstar Caitlin Clark and Iowa on Sunday, the LSU Tigers were crowned national champions for the first time in program history.
Achieving that feat seemed unlikely at first, and unlikely still when the Tigers were blown out by South Carolina in the regular season, and when they lost to Tennessee in the SEC tournament.
Unlikely to outsiders, but predetermined to those within the program. Angel Reese has been talking about this since she transferred to LSU last spring. So has Kateri Poole, the friend who convinced Reese to make the campus visit when LSU wasn’t even on her radar.
“This is why I came to LSU,” Poole said after the game, with confetti swirling at her feet and her mother looking on with pure adoration in her eyes. An onlooker told Poole’s mom that she had confetti stuck in her hair; “I don’t care,” she replied with a grin.
In the background, Reese took photos with her brother, Julian. She took phones from spectators and recorded videos for them. And of course, she posed with her tiara, something that has become a staple for LSU celebrations this season.
Since the beginning of the season, the Tigers have pretended to crown Reese when she makes an exciting play or has a big game. At one point, they traded out the gesture for a real tiara. Reese, the queen of the tournament and the Final Four Most Outstanding Player, finished with 15 points, 10 rebounds and five assists. Alexis Morris finished with 21 points, 19 of which came in the second half, and LaDazhia Williams had 20.
None of them, however, was LSU’s leading scorer. That came from an unlikely source — but like the title itself, only unlikely to those outside the program. Inside the Tigers’ locker room, graduate transfer Jasmine Carson is a known scorer.
“Jasmine may be the second best pure shooter that I’ve ever coached in my career,” Mulkey said. “She can just light it up.”
Carson finished with 22 points, and the Tigers needed every single one of them.
JASMINE. CARSON.
— ESPN (@espn) April 2, 2023
That's the tweet. pic.twitter.com/tMQvdEPd74
The first half was laden with whistles, and Reese spent significant time on the bench in early foul trouble. Morris also picked up two quick fouls and went into halftime with just two points. Mulkey went to her bench, and suddenly it was Carson’s moment, one the Tigers knew was coming.
Emily Ward, a senior walk-on, noticed that Carson was hot in warm-ups.
“I went up to her and I was like, ‘OK Jas, you’re going to have a big game,’” Ward said. “None of us were shocked that she was doing that. She hits them all the time in practice.”
Carson scored 21 of her 22 points in the first half, going a perfect 7-for-7 from the field and 5-for-5 from the 3-point line during the stretch. Everyone on the LSU bench celebrated. And in a concert hall in Atlanta, so did Carson’s high school coach.
Phyllis Arthur’s boyfriend surprised her with tickets to a jazz concert a few days ago, not realizing the national championship game was the same day. But she wasn’t going to miss Carson’s biggest game at LSU, so as they waited for the opening act to go on, Arthur watched the Tigers on her phone.
Every time Carson hit a shot, Arthur jumped out of her seat.
Arthur has coached girls basketball at McEachern High School for 17 years. There, she coached Carson and coached against Flau’jae Johnson, so Arthur was thrilled for both players on Sunday.
Thrilled, but not surprised.
“That’s the Jasmine I know,” she said on a phone call during intermission of the concert. “I love her shot. And when she’s on, she’s on. And she was on tonight. Thank god.”
Carson is one of several LSU transfer portal success stories. She started her career at Georgia Tech before transferring to West Virginia for two seasons and closing out her fifth year with the Tigers, averaging 8.4 points per game this season.
Carson started throughout the regular season, but when the NCAA Tournament began, Mulkey opted to bring her off the bench in favor of having bigger bodies on the court.
Still, Carson stayed ready.
So ready that she didn’t need her usual pregame routine. Morris and Carson typically get up extra shots together in warm-ups, but today, when Morris asked her if she wanted to, Carson said no.
“I’m good,” she said.
And she was. She was really, really good. She was 22 points good. She was five made 3-pointers good. She was national champion good.
After the game, when Mulkey shuffled through the confetti barefoot, and Reese climbed a ladder to cut her piece of the net, and Johnson danced with her championship hat on her head, and Arthur cheered among a crowd of jazz fans, they all had Carson to thank.
“I didn’t have nothing to lose,” Carson said. “This was my last game of my college career, and I ended it the right way.”
She ended it as a national champion.
Eden Laase is a Staff Writer at Just Women’s Sports. Follow her on Twitter @eden_laase.
LSU is bringing home the first national championship in program history after defeating Caitlin Clark and No. 2 Iowa 102-85 in Dallas on Sunday.
LSU head coach Kim Mulkey left Baylor in 2021 to lead her hometown team to a national championship, and she did it in just her second year despite tempering expectations throughout the season. Mulkey, a Louisiana native, got emotional as the clock ticked down on LSU’s inevitable victory, in tears as she celebrated with her team. The 60-year-old coach now has four career national titles.
“This team is just amazing. We built each other up from the summertime, and I’m just so happy,” LSU star Angel Reese told ESPN’s Holly Rowe as her team celebrated.
“Nobody thought we were gonna be here. Nobody.”
Reese had 15 points and 10 rebounds in front of 19,482 fans at American Airlines Arena, including many in purple and gold. With her 34th double-double of the season, Reese set the NCAA record for the most in a single season. She was also named the Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four, in just her first season with LSU after transferring from Maryland.
A Record Breaking End pic.twitter.com/8I8u1VU4ih
— LSU Women's Basketball (@LSUwbkb) April 2, 2023
LSU guard Alexis Morris came alive late in the game, scoring 19 of her 21 points in the second half and contributing nine assists.
Iowa cut into LSU’s lead by going on a 15-2 run in the first five minutes of the third quarter, but foul trouble haunted them early and derailed their chances of a comeback. Monika Czinano fouled out with over six minutes to go in the game, and Iowa had no answer from there.
Clark paced the Hawkeyes with 30 points and eight assists. The National Player of the Year passed Sheryl Swoopes for the most points in a single NCAA Tournament when she reached 180 points on a 3-pointer near the start of the second half.
LSU’s bench players stepped up big in the first half, scoring 29 points compared to Iowa’s two bench points.
Jasmine Carson, who came into the game averaging 2.2 points in the NCAA Tournament, led the Tigers in the first half with 21 points on 7-for-7 shooting from the field and 5-for-5 from 3. Carson’s hot hand lasted all the way until the end of the half, when she banked in a 3-pointer at the buzzer to give LSU a 59-42 halftime lead.
The graduated transfer finished the game with 22 points and three rebounds.
OH MY GOODNESS @JazzC2_ WITH THE BUZZER BEATER
— LSU Women's Basketball (@LSUwbkb) April 2, 2023
📺 ABC pic.twitter.com/WAXZejsAqU
Both teams’ offenses were firing from the opening buzzer. Clark got off to a scorching start, scoring 14 points on 4-for-7 from 3-point range in the first quarter, but it was LSU who took a 27-22 lead into the second frame.
The referees were active early, calling 12 fouls in the first quarter and 21 total in the first half. The highly-anticipated post battle between LSU’s Reese and Iowa’s Czinano was quickly defined by the officiating, with each big getting called for two fouls in the first quarter. Clark also took a seat on the bench at the end of the first half after picking up three fouls.