Cade Phillips Embraces The SEC Standard Texas A&M Must Meet

Cade Phillips illuminates the draw of SEC basketball as he commits to thriving in its high-stakes environment and anticipates a pivotal role at Texas A&M.

Texas A&M forward Cade Phillips didn’t need much convincing about where he wanted to play. For him, the SEC has always been the destination, and now he’s getting his shot to make that choice count in Aggieland.

“I knew I always wanted to be in the SEC,” Phillips said. “The SEC usually always had the best athletes. A lot of draft picks, especially coming from Kentucky in those days.”

Phillips, a 6-foot-9 native of Jacksonville, Alabama, is coming off a season in which injury limited his time on the floor. This year, though, he’s stepping into a bigger role with head coach Bucky McMillan’s program, a team built on pace and pressure.

“It’s a culture that plays hard and plays the right way,” Phillips said. “I think in as modern of a style in basketball as we play, it's few and far between what we play. To have a coach to coach as hard as he does, that’s what goes into winning, and that’s what I wanted to be a part of.”

Phillips also pointed to how much the league has changed since he was growing up. He said he followed the conference closely and saw it as a place where top talent and NBA-caliber players kept coming through.

“Growing up - SEC basketball was mediocre,” Phillips said. “I knew I always wanted to be in the SEC.

The SEC usually always had the best athletes. A lot of draft picks, especially coming from Kentucky in those days.

He said his connection with SEC associate commissioner Garth Glissman, who oversees men’s basketball, has given him an even closer look at how far the league has come.

“Being in the SEC footprint, seeing it become what it’s become, I luckily have a really good relationship with Garth Glissman, the associate commissioner of the SEC who’s over men’s basketball, and to see the numbers and how that far above and beyond the SEC is going in men’s basketball alone is honestly incredible for me,” Phillips said. “To be a part of that both in the offices and on the court, it's something really cool to see.”

For Phillips, the message is simple: the SEC isn’t fading anytime soon.

“I don't think the SEC is going anywhere,” Phillips stated. “The saying is true. It really does just mean more, and I think that is something we know as a team that when we get to the SEC this season, it’s going to be a dog fight every night.”

Texas A&M’s schedule will make sure of that. The Aggies will face Texas, LSU and Vanderbilt twice each, with one home game and one road game against those mirror opponents.

Their home slate also includes Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Georgia, Oklahoma and Tennessee. On the road, they’ll travel to Florida, Kentucky, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Missouri and South Carolina.

It’s a demanding conference schedule, and Phillips sounds ready for exactly that.

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