91³Ō¹Ļ Raginā Cajuns new head menās basketball coach certainly understands why critics doubt how realistic his dreams are for the program. After all, the Raginā Cajuns havenāt won an NCAA Tournament game since 1992.
The all-time high for average attendance in the Cajundome was 6,885 in the facilityās inaugural season of 1985-86. That figure hasnāt eclipsed 5,000 since the 2022-23 season.
Nevertheless, White isnāt buying those perceived limitations. He isnāt even entertaining them. āYes, 13,000 is whatās going to be in that arena ā absolutely,ā White insisted. āWeāve got the talent to do it. Those guys are going to play extremely hard. I can feel the excitement.ā
The 12,800-seat Cajundome ironically hasnāt been full since White and his St. Augustine Purple Knights defeated South Lafourche to win the Class 5A state championship in 1999.
So, as a player, heās seen it with his own eyes. Now, as head coach, replicating that environment is on the first page of his playbook.
As for Whiteās aspirations to build his team into a national brand ā well, heās done that, too.
When he joined head coach Kelvin Sampson and Houstonās program in 2017, the Cougars were in a mid-major conference just three seasons removed from a 13-19, 4-14 campaign. This past season, Houston narrowly lost to Florida in the national championship game as a member of the Big 12. āItās been done before,ā White said. āWe did some special things in what most people call a mid-major conference. Itās not about the name of the school. Itās about the people who are at the school that makes the difference.
āIāve been a part of it. Iāve been a part of building something special. Iām big on āWhy not?ā The only opinions that really matter to me are my coaching staff and the players that are in that room. As long as those guys believe, I believe it can happen, because itās been done before.ā
It certainly hasnāt taken White long to take the critical first steps in building his dream program in Lafayette.
With only three players returning from last yearās team, White already had three new players in the fold on the day he was announced as the Raginā Cajunsā new coach in March. Within weeks, he had a full roster, including eight veterans from the transfer portal and four high school signees.
In Whiteās mind, his success in recruiting is simple.
āIām very transparent,ā he said. āI do not lie when it comes to recruiting. I think thatās how you get in to try to retain some of these guys. These guys want to be told the truth.ā
The Cajuns added eight players from the transfer portal. That list includes 6-9 New Orleans native Todd Jones from Portland; 6-8 forward Dariyus Woodson from North Dakota; 6-2 guard Karris Bilal from Vanderbilt; 6-3 guard Jamyron Keller from Oklahoma State; 6-3 shooter DeāVion Lavergne from Purdue-Fort Wayne; 6-5 wing Dorian Finister from Sam Houston; 6-8 forward Sean Elkinton from 91³Ō¹Ļ Tech; and 6-5 guard Jaxon Olvera of Pepperdine.
Two high school players also signed with the Cajuns. That group is led by 6-7 wing Joshua Lewis from Tampa, Florida. Lewis is believed to be the highest-rated player signed in the programās history, as well as 6-1 guard Michael Collins from Pearland, Texas.
Before all the additions were even finalized, Whiteās father told everyone who would listen his son could recruit. āThe relationships he has with players is very strong,ā Clarence White III said. āHe can reshape a person and develop them to be a great basketball player and a better person and thatās a blessing.ā
As a veteran coming back closer to family from North Dakota, Woodsonās choice was easy. āTalking to coach (Quannas) White a lot, I loved his vision and my parents loved him and my grandma,ā Woodson said. āHe seemed like a very genuine person who I wanted to be around.ā
As a veteran transfer coming off a turbulent season in Ruston, Elkinton was comforted by Whiteās words. āWhat drew me to the Cajuns was more or less knowing how Coach Q is a big character guy,ā Elkinton said. āHe surrounds himself with a staff that is considered his close family. Theyāre really here to help us as players and theyāre very genuine. Theyāll be here by our side. Theyāll be hard on us, but at the same time, theyāll always be our biggest supporters.ā
In Whiteās mind, thatās a promise he intends for his coaching staff to keep.
āThose kids are our lives and thatās the truth,ā said White, who feels he can demand that because how close he is to his staff that includes his younger brother Josh and former coach and mentor Scott Raines.
āThose guys who are around me are loyal,ā White said. āI think thatās very important. Iām not very big on being disingenuous. What you see with me is what you get, Iām for real. Iāve been knowing all of those guys on my staff.ā
(Veteran sports journalist Kevin Foote, a UL Lafayette graduate, covers 91³Ō¹Ļ Raginā Cajuns Athletics for The Acadiana Advocate.)