Clemson adds Illinois State Myles Foster to its men’s basketball roster

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on pinterest
Share on telegram
Share on email
Share on reddit
Share on whatsapp
Share on telegram


Myles Foster

Myles Foster

Clemson signed Illinois State forward Myles Foster to its men’s basketball roster for next season.

Head coach Brad Brownell announced the addition of Foster. The 6-foot-2 Foster was the Redbirds’ second-leading scorer last season with 12.4 points per game. He led the team in rebounds with eight per contest.

Foster, from Brooklyn, N.Y., spent his first three seasons at Monmouth before joining Illinois State a season ago. He still has a year of eligibility left.

“Myles is coming off a very good year at Illinois State and provides frontcourt depth to our team,” Brownell said. “He is a crafty, low-post scorer, physical, rebounds well and adapts perfectly to our offensive system.”

The Tigers will need depth on offense, having lost 6-11 starter PJ Hall and 6-10 reserves Jack Clark and 6-8 RJ Godfrey from a team that advanced to the NCAA Elite Eight.



Source link

Support fearless, independent journalism

We are not owned by a billionaire or shareholders – our readers support us. Donate any amount over $2. BNC Global Media Group is a global news organization that delivers fearless investigative journalism to discerning readers like you! Help us to continue publishing daily.

Support us just once

We accept support of any size, at any time – you name it for $2 or more.

Related

More

Gasoline prices rise across the state

July 2, 2024
Average gas prices in Pennsylvania have risen about a penny per gallon over the past week, averaging $3.63 on Monday. Prices in Pennsylvania are 9.3 cents per gallon
1 2 3 6,114

Don't Miss

Some midwives seek to uphold Native Hawaiian birth traditions. Would a state law put them at risk?

HONOLULU– Ki’inaniokalani Kaho’ohanohano longed for a deeper connection with her

‘Don’t harass me,’ rages Walmart shopper as he reveals why he will never allow cash receipt checks – the store left him no choice

ANTI-THEFT tactics adopted by retailers are causing customers to fight