Washington State may have found its most explosive scoring threat for next season in Lazerek Houston.
The guard arrives from Central Missouri with a stat line that jumps off the page: 20.8 points, 5.1 assists and 4.1 rebounds per game. He shot 46.2 percent from the field and 36.8 percent from 3-point range, and he scored in double figures in all but one game he played - that lone outing came when he logged only nine minutes.
Houston also showed he could take over games. He topped 30 points six times, including a run of three straight games, and finished with five double-doubles.
Three of those came in points and assists, while the other two were points and rebounds. He got to the free-throw line often, attempting 165 and making 124 for a 75.2 percent clip.
“Another guard that we're really high on,” David Riley says of Houston. “He's someone that we really dove into the analytics of these guys and what translates and what doesn't.
He's someone that I think is going to have a ton of success moving from the D2 to the D1 level. He's a crazy-talented guard.
His change of pace is wild and he was just a freshman last year. He won MVP of the conference, won Freshman of the Year, was up there in All-American stuff.
“He's on a winning team. Just love his mindset and his attitude.
He's a guy that has pro potential. We'll get him a little stronger and get him playing in this system, I think that can really help him.”
At 6-foot-0 and 155 pounds, Houston doesn’t bring much size, but he does bring production. The Lincoln, Neb., native was first-team all-state at Lincoln Northeast High School in 2024-25, where he averaged 25.6 points, 5.3 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 2.3 steals per game. He finished his high school career with 1,238 points.
His breakout season at Central Missouri was enough to make him one of the most decorated players at the D-II level. Houston was the MIAA Player and Freshman of the Year, ranked 19th among all D-II players in scoring and first among freshmen. He also ranked 28th in assists per game and fourth among freshmen in that category.
The fit at Washington State comes down to whether his speed and craft translate cleanly against higher-level defenders. Houston looks like the kind of guard who can beat people off the dribble and create downhill, but the real test will be finishing inside against better length and physicality.
That’s where the comparison to recent Washington State point guards starts to matter. Myles Rice and Nate Calmese helped power the offense by getting into the lane and either scoring or kicking out. Adria Rodriguez struggled when the shot wasn’t there, and Isaiah Watts didn’t have the same drive-and-kick ability.
If Houston can do both, he has a clear path to becoming the Cougars’ No. 1 scoring option this season.
In Other News...
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For the Cougars, the most important part is that the new structure is no longer just a concept on paper. The leagues next phase is set to begin in the 2026-2027 academic year, and the reshaped conference now has enough members to keep its FBS status and preserve the kind of postseason access that matters across the board. The remaining question is how all of those pieces will fit once competition actually starts. [Read more 🡒]
WSU Future Is At Center Of A Fight Cougs Know Too Well
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For Cougars fans, the argument is familiar because the consequences have already shown up in Pullman. Baumgartner has pointed to the way the current model squeezes schools like WSU, and he has also been pushing for geographically sensible leagues instead of the sprawling national setups that have become common. His preferred fix would look more like the NFLs collective media rights approach, with football money helping support the rest of the athletic department, but getting there means navigating the same power dynamics that have made reform in college sports so difficult. [Read more 🡒]
