The Field House. College Sports coverage from The Denver Post’s Kyle Fredrickson.

The fallout from Larry Eustachy’s expected departure as Colorado State head men’s basketball coach is beginning to take shape.

Jordan Brangers — a 6-foot-2, 200-pound guard from South Plains College (Texas) — signed a financial aid agreement with CSU in November to join the Rams next season. He previously earned first-team NJCAA All-American honors with a single-season school record 151 made 3-pointers on 46.2 percent shooting. Eustachy called Brangers “the best JUCO guard in the country” in a November news release.

But soon after The Denver Post reported Eustachy is set to be fired following the completion of a “climate assessment” of the program, Brangers went on Twitter to announce his decommitment from CSU.

I wanna thank @CSUMensBball for recruiting me and giving me the opportunity to play there, but after further discussion with my family and looking into things I’ve decided to re open my recruitment. Thank you for the respect and support with my decision. — Jordan Brangers (@brangers25) February 8, 2018

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Financial aid agreements are non-binding documents, unlike National Letters of Intent, which means Brangers can sign at another program without penalty. Requests for comment from CSU and South Plains College were not immediately returned. The Rams were not available for interviews on Thursday, but that didn’t stop several CSU players from reacting to Eustachy’s expected dismissal on Twitter.

It's no loyalty in this game no more, everyone tryina save there own ass smh #FREECoachE💯 — Prentiss Nixon1️⃣1️⃣ (@AyeYooPrentiss_) February 8, 2018

CSU (10-16, 3-10 Mountain West) returns to action at 2 p.m. Saturday in Moby Arena against San Jose State.