A historic defensive effort powered Rice Basketball past Louisiana Monroe, who barely reached 50 points in a losing effort.
Defense took center stage at Tudor Fieldhouse on Tuesday evening. Rice basketball and the visiting Louisiana Monroe Warhawks started the game a combined 5-for-27 by the second media timeout, an underwhelming 19 percent from the floor. Regression would find both teams eventually and the shots began to fall, but it wouldn’t be a banner night for either side when it came to scoring the basketball.
“We want it to be characteristic of our program that defense is at the forefront of what we do without compromising on how we want to play on offense,” head coach Rob Lanier said. “But sometimes when you’re establishing that, one thing winds up taking priority and the offense has to catch up with that because if you really get good at keep getting the ball back then what you do with it matters.”
Because of those low margins, the game was close throughout. A three from Alem Huseinovic in the final seconds of the first half gave Rice basketball a seven-point advantage, the largest lead for either side before the break. In fact, Huseinovic’s 11 points doubled up everyone else on the court. No other player had more than five points when the halftime buzzer sounded. It was just going to be that kind of game: tough and physical.
More: Rice Basketball 2024-2025 Season Preview
Rice’s effort began to shine through in earnest once the second half began. Louisiana Monroe missed their first two shots. Rice missed their first. Then Jimmy Oladokun Jr. made a leaping play on the baseline to corral a loose ball and deflect it off the leg of a Louisiana Monroe defender. That allowed Rice to maintain possession, setting Huseinovic up for a crucial three and propelling the Owls to an 11-point advantage.
That it was Oladokun was fitting to the culture this team is trying to build. Laner said postgame that Oladokun was in the lineup because he’d earned a greater role in practice this week and with his contributions against Florida State following only seeing two minutes in the Owls’ opener against FIU.
Louisiana Monroe wasn’t going to go away that easily. On the strength of a 7-0 run, the Warhawks got back within three but couldn’t get any closer. The Owls mounted a defense stop and quickly created impactful transition points, converting not one, but two massive alley-oop dunks, the first by Andrew Akuchie and the next by Kellen Amos to put Rice in front by 12.
We are having #fun at Tudor Fieldhouse. Thanks @RiceMBB pic.twitter.com/bcORl3XnyA
— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) November 13, 2024
The high-flying plays were celebrated by the entire arena, including the Owls’ bench. No matter who was on the court — and Rice basketball played 14 players on Tuesday night — the energy was inescapable.
“As a group, you’re starting to see a group of guys that are really pulling for one another and just putting the team first,” Lanier said. “We’ve got an acronym, INAM. It simply means ‘it’s not about me’ and we want them to live that as teammates. We want them to believe in that. And that is how you establish a defensive culture and it’s how you establish a real winning program culture. It’s starting to take effect. We’re just at the beginning and we haven’t had enough adversity to know if it really is who we are just yet.
Final Box | Rice 66, FSU 50
FINAL | @RiceMBB 66 – ULM 50
For just the THIRD time since 2017, Rice has held an opponent to 50 or fewer points. pic.twitter.com/Fkzd7XdVsj
— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) November 13, 2024
What They’re Saying
.@RiceMBB head coach Rob Lanier’s opening statement following the win over Louisiana Monroe. pic.twitter.com/HiMPK3fcau
— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) November 13, 2024
Key takeaway | Defense
Through the early days of the 2024-2025 Rice basketball season, Lanier has used words like “scattered” and out of rhythm when referring to the Owls’ scoring efforts. He’s attributed much of that inefficiency to the learning curve of players learning his offense and how they fit together things that should, in theory, get better over time as the team begins to accrue more court time together.
Lanier ran through a list of talented shooters he remains confident in like Trey Patterson and Denver Anglin, former top 100 recruits who had career highs today after seeing lighter usage early this season. He touted Jacob Darr’s offensive game, too. But all of the offensive praise came with this important caveat: “He’s a really good offensive player. He doesn’t get to do what he wants to do until he does what I want him to do.”
While the Owls wait for the offense, the defense has emphatically arrived. Pitted against a more traditional opponent which doesn’t switch or play as exotic of a scheme as either of their first two opponents, Rice flat-out suffocated Louisiana Monroe. The 50 points scored by Louisiana Monroe was the lowest total Rice basketball has allowed against a D1 team since February 11, 2012 (SMU).
“Ever since Rob Lanier came and took over the head coaching job he’s been very intense on defense, he’s been very minded on defense as his priority,” Alem Huseinovic, who led the team with 15 points said. “All summer, preseason, into the season now, that’s really what we focus on. We want to change the narrative here at Rice and I think we did a really good job tonight.”
On three separate occasions, Louisiana Monroe missed six or more consecutive shots including eight straight misses following their opening bucket to start the game.