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BYU basketball coach Kevin Young is rebuilding the team with a focus on Latter-day Saint players, including five-star recruit Bruce Branch III and four-star transfers Tyler Betsey and Collin Chandler. This approach aims to align with the program's cultural roots.
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Kentucky's Collin Chandler (5) celebrates during the first half in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament against Iowa State, Sunday, March 22, 2026, in St. Louis. | Jeff Roberson
Kevin Youngās rebuild of BYUās basketball roster continues to evolve, but one aspect of his philosophy for his future team is evident and simple: Heās tipping his hat to the programās roots.
While bringing in five-star recruit Bruce Branch III and four-star transfers Tyler Betsey (Syracuse) and Collin Chandler (Kentucky), Young has assembled a Latter-day Saint core to complement the roster.
BYU will tap into half a dozen players who were raised in the faithās culture via The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Those players (including Chandler) donāt need an orientation speech to the schoolās honor code because theyāve digested the popular āStrength of Youthā pamphlet most of their lives.
And they can play.
Some will play more minutes than others. Some will have key roles, others will simply add depth. But theyāve all played AAU ball on a national stage, most of them for the Utah Prospects, co-founded by Tim Davis.
The new Latter-day Saint players include five-star recruit Bruce Branch III and four-star transfers Tyler Betsey and Collin Chandler.
Kevin Young's philosophy emphasizes incorporating players raised in the Latter-day Saint culture to align with the program's roots.
The new recruits, being raised in the Latter-day Saint culture, are already familiar with BYU's honor code and do not require an orientation.
The Latter-day Saint core is expected to enhance team cohesion and cultural alignment, potentially improving team performance.
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The Utah Propects won the 17-under Adidas Summer Championship with current Cougar Brody Kozlowski in 2023.
In addition to returning senior Dawson Baker, BYUās team will be constructed with a cultural tweak.
Young will welcome former top-30 Kentucky transfer Chandler, four-star freshman guard/forwards Dean Rueckert and Brooks Bahr and former Utah and Clemson forward Jake Wahlin to campus. Heāll also add 6-foot-11 TCU transfer Adam Stewart.
This group will provide core leadership in and out of the locker room for the Cougars, who just finished a season laced with key injuries, questionable depth and shaky leadership.
The team was filled with young players, some stepping foot on campus and experiencing the BYU culture for the first time in their lives.
I asked Davis to break down the skillset of these six players from his experience dating back more than a decade of watching them play. He graciously agreed to lend his voice, breaking down this crew.
Collin Chandler, 6-foot-4, guard/forward, junior Kentucky transfer, former top-30 recruit out of Farmington, Utah, where he was named Deseret News Mr. Utah Basketball.
He signed with BYU over Utah, Arizona and Utah State before going on an church mission. He followed Mark Pope to Kentucky following his mission service.
Davis on Chandler: āI think with Collin, there is something that is going to be unlocked or unleashed. I think a lot of people see him like, āOh, a good shooter and that stuff.ā Iām not saying thatās not what Collin is, but I think people are going to be pleasantly surprised. When I coached him, even in high school, he was so dynamic with the ball in his hands, getting downhill and using the ball to create for others and himself.
āWhat he has the ability to do is get his hips so low and also be so fast as he drives the ball up in transition as well as halfcourt. Heās just very athletic. I think people will be surprised a little bit how dynamic heāll be with the ball in his hands off the bounce, more than you saw him as a freshman or sophomore.ā
Davis continued: āHeās a great shooter, but what he really is, is so dynamic getting to the hoop and finishing as well as getting to his mid-range spots and making his shot. Itās a very unique part that most kids in Utah do not have as part of their game. He has it.
āI just donāt think people know whatās coming with him really, in my opinion, especially if Kevin lets him sort of just roll a little bit. He looked like a spot-up shooter at Kentucky and thatās not just what his game is. It is part of what he is, but heās so dynamic with the ball in his hands.ā
Brooks Bahr, 6-4 combo guard, Keller, Texas, signed in the class of 2024 under Mark Pope, with finalists including USC, Utah, Wake Forest and Saint Maryās. He recently returned from missionary service.
Davis on Bahr: āIāve known Brooks since he was in the fifth grade. He played for an AAU team called Texas Impact since he lived in Texas. How it works with AAU is you canāt play for anybody unless theyāre in the state you are in, or a neighboring state.
āHeās really a point guard to me. I would say he plays like Dallin Hall, but is probably a better scoring version of Hall, if that makes sense. He has a very strong body. Heās a great decision maker, but heās a lefty so he can create some advantages because itās a bit hard at times to guard lefties if you arenāt familiar with them.
āIād say if you asked me to describe him, heās a more scoring mentality version of Dallin Hall, which is a compliment for sure. Heās just tough and really resilient. He has a great basketball body, especially for the Big 12. Heās sort of built for that league in my opinion. He played such a high level of basketball in Texas, and because of that, heās prepared himself for the Big 12. A freshman is a freshman, but I think heāll be a lot more ready than people probably anticipate or realize.ā
Dean Rueckert, 6-8 forward, Timpview High, class of 2026 will be an incoming freshman, signing with BYU over Washington, Clemson, Stanford and Utah. He is a top-75 recruit out of Provo.
Davis on Rueckert: āIāve known Dean since he was a seventh grader and he played for us. Iād describe him as a relentless worker, probably almost too much, which is a good thing. He works so hard at basketball and his passion for it is something most top-50 players in the country do not have a great desire to do to get batter. Thatās one of his greatest strengths. Heās always asking, āHow can I get better?ā
āI think Dean took a huge jump from his sophomore year to the summer of his junior year. BYU had offered him when he was a sophomore and Kevin got the job. They liked him and wanted him to work on some things. He made a decision to work on those things and Kevin loved that he wanted to change and adapt and grow himself. They saw a huge change in a year. It was like, āWe are all-in with Dean.ā Thatās why he got done earlier than most kids in regards to recruiting because thatās where he wanted to go.
āHeās a big-time shot maker. Everybody sees him as a shooter, but I think heās really become a very versatile defender who can guard a lot of positions at his size and mobility and heās also become a lot better rebounder. You look at his stats from his junior year to his senior year and I think its close to double. Heās what I describe as making game-changing plays.
āHe made a decision to impact winning without scoring, which is really important when you are a freshman. As you can imagine, itās really important to be like, āHey, what can you do without the ball in your hands?ā when you are a freshman.
āDean is really a good athlete like Richie Saunders. Dean has a lot of pop in him. Not all kids have that. He can really get up quickly off the ground. Heās a little bigger than Richie, who might have been a little quicker at the same age. Dean is more of a small forward who can play the guard positions because of his versatility.ā
Jake Wahlin, 6-10, senior from Tiimpview High by way of Utah and Clemson, is the brother-in-law of Davis and served a mission to Lithuania after signing with BYU out of high school. He enrolled at Utah when he returned from his mission and transferred to Clemson after a coaching change at Utah.
Davis on Wahlin: āJakeās journey has been a bit more unique because he was sort of raised to be a football kid. He moved from Texas to Utah in the eighth grade, where all of his buddies were and played basketball. So, he started transitioning into basketball and thatās why his basketball has been a steep trajectory ā heās gotten better quickly as heās grown. He grew about a foot from eighth grade to when he came off his mission.
āOne of his advantages, I think, is heās just really a 6-11 versatile, whatever-you-want-to-play. I think BYU will play him at the four, just because of how they play offensively. But he really can guard every position, really, one through four. And then, depending on the five, he can guard the five.
āI think his versatility defensively and offensively is really what makes him unique. And thatās the way he impacts winning in a lot of ways. Heās a good shot maker, a catch-and-shoot guy, who is also a straight-line driver. Heās really like a cutter, slasher, mover. Thatās how Iād describe him.ā
BYU head coach Kevin Young talks with his players as they and coaches huddle during a practice the day before a first-round college basketball game against Texas in the NCAA Tournament held at the Moda Center in Portland, Oregon, on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. | Isaac Hale, Deseret News