Rice basketball traded blows early, but ran out of steam in the second half, falling on the road to Wichita State by a final score of 87-65.
Points were volleyed back and forth as Rice Basketball traded buckets with Wichita State in the early goings of their matchup on Saturday night. The first two field goals made, from each side, came from three, a harbinger of the fast-paced, high-scoring game which was about to unfold.
There were 10 ties and five lead changes through the first half. Travis Evee was productive, registering 11 points before the break. Max Fiedler tallied his 1,112th career rebound — the most in program history — as both sides shot better than 50 percent from the field and scored at will.
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The second half was a different story. Wichita State opened the period on a 17-6 run, quickly turning a back-and-forth affair into a rout. “It went from three to 12 before we could blink,” head coach Scott Pera said of that pivotal second half run. “We needed someone to hit one.” That crucial basket didn’t come until the deficit had grown too large.
Rice would never get back within single digits from that point onward. Keanu Dawes, who had a team-high 12 points in the first half was held scoreless in the second half. As a team the Owls shot just 35 percent from the floor, unable to keep up with the Shockers’ torrid pace.
Final Box | Wichita State 87 – Rice 65
FINAL | Wichita State 87, Rice 65 pic.twitter.com/KIkvH0mjkf
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Key takeaway | Where’d the three go?
Rice basketball has built its offensive game plan around the three-point shot ever since Pera arrived on campus. They’ve generally had success doing things that way, at least when it has come to generating points on the offensive side. Against Wichita State, Rice made just six threes.
Travis Evee has been the go-to guy from deep for a while now. He was 3-of-8. But outside of his attempts, no other Rice players were a threat from long range. In fact, nobody else attempted more than three triples in the game.
A Rice offense without an effective threat from three is perplexing and perhaps it’s not surprising the team couldn’t keep pace with a productive offensive team on a night where the long ball was that fleeting.
The Owls don’t have time to lick their wounds and dwell on the failure, though. They have two games left to bust out of a tie with Wichita State in the conference standings and clinch a bye in the conference tournament.
“We’re going to battle and we’re going to prepare to win them both. It takes a team to stay together, through adversity, and not fracture,” Pera vowed after the game. “We’re going to keep working.”