BATON ROUGE, La. — When Aneesah Morrow, LSU’s prolific forward, is around her family, she’ll sometimes be teased about her prodigious appetite.

“She can probably outeat my sons,” Morrow’s mother, Nafeesah, said with a laugh this week as she also recalled telling LSU’s basketball staff, “you won’t have a problem with this kid, I promise you — unless you don’t feed her.”

It’s a fitting metaphor for the hunger with which Morrow — a “walking double-double,” as Tigers coach Kim Mulkey calls her — approaches basketball.

Although the 6-foot-1 Morrow doesn’t possess the typical size of a dominant post player, she enters her final NCAA Tournament having led the nation with 13.6 rebounds per game and 27 double-doubles.

Her career numbers also are notable.

She’s one of two players in NCAA history (along with former Oklahoma player Courtney Paris) with more than 100 career double-doubles. Her 1,665 career rebounds rank No. 4 in NCAA Division I history.

Just eight Division I players have ever amassed 2,500 career points and 1,500 career rebounds. Morrow is one of them.

“There’s nobody that outworks ’Neese. She’s a great leader, a great person,” LSU guard Mikaylah Williams said. “She’s got a really good head on her shoulders. And it’s about everything but her. She’s willing to put all of our needs before her. She’s willing to do whatever the team needs.”

Williams also describes Morrow as a person “you go to when you want somebody to tell you the truth and you want somebody to push you.”

Morrow said that if she were more focused on her impending professional career in the WNBA, she might have been better served playing on the wing — also known as the “three” spot on the court — instead of in the paint.

But with rebounding extraordinaire Angel Reese having left LSU for the WNBA last spring, Morrow noted, “my team doesn’t need me to play the three right now.”

“I need to be as fierce and dominant on the boards as I possibly can be,” Morrow added. “We need that post presence.”

LSU guard Aneesah Morrow shoots over South Carolina center Kamilla Cardoso during the first half during the SEC Tournament on March 10, 2024, in Greenville, S.C. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)
LSU guard Aneesah Morrow shoots over South Carolina center Kamilla Cardoso during the first half during the SEC Tournament on March 10, 2024, in Greenville, S.C. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

LSU has gotten that from Morrow — and scoring to boot. She has averaged 18.5 points a game (along with 2.6 steals and 0.6 blocks). She’s been named one of 10 semifinalists for Naismith Player of the Year and second-team AP All-America.

One area where Morrow arguably has not realized her potential is in the Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) arena. While she welcomes endorsements and has social media accounts, she isn’t “really into getting all those followers or doing all that content.”

“I just don’t want my life to revolve around social media,” Morrow said. “I want to be able to get off my phone.”

Morrow “doesn’t need the social media platforms to let everybody know she’s a really good basketball player,” Williams says. “That’s just her keeping her priorities straight. She plays basketball first and whatever comes after that comes.”

Morrow might not be the most visible women’s basketball player during March Madness, which for LSU (28-5) begins Saturday night against San Diego State (25-9).

Other players — such as LSU guard Flau’Jae Johnson — will appear in national television advertising campaigns more frequently than Morrow will.

“Do I get the attention I deserve? I don’t really care if I do or not because the numbers don’t lie,” Morrow said. “It’s not based on opinions. It’s not based on any outside noise. It’s based on what I’ve done.”

Morrow credits much of her success to her parents. They met at Nebraska, where her mother, who then went by the name Nafeesah Brown, played basketball. Her father, Ed, played football for the Cornhuskers.

Nafeesah, who also is 6-1, averaged 20.2 points and 10.1 rebounds during her senior year of 1993-94. The Chicago native has since been inducted into Nebraska’s athletic Hall of Fame and went on to a career as a high school coach and athletic director.

Morrow said her mother pushed her to “cross-train” by playing multiple sports — namely volleyball, which helped her time jumps to high-point the ball at the net, whether blocking or uncorking vicious spikes.

Her parents also cultivated her work ethic.

“When you’re younger, you kind of get mad at your parents for waking you up at six in the morning to go run on the track … or be on the sidewalk in front of the porch, dribbling,” Morrow recalled. “But it was a way of keeping us active, staying away from our phones. I feel like that’s something that really helped.”



Source link

By admin

Malcare WordPress Security