Rice Women’s Basketball dropped its fifth consecutive contest, falling on the road to UTSA in the final game of the regular season.
Malia Fisher went supernova, delivering a Herculean performance in the final Rice women’s basketball game of the regular season. She scored the first points for the Owls. She scored the last points. Altogether she tallied 30 points — more than the next two closest players on the court combined — and 12 boards. It wasn’t enough, though.
Despite Fisher’s efforts, Rice women’s basketball was unable to overcome a poor shooting night as a whole. The 30 percent shooting performance was most noticeable in the second quarter when UTSA opened up a close game and earned its first double-digit advantage. Then came the third period in which Rice made just two shots (both from Fisher) and saw their deficit grow to as many as 19 points.
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The team never gave up, fighting and clawing from that seemingly insurmountable hole to get the game back within reach. Fisher’s trio of successive baskets in the final minutes got Rice within three. The comeback would stop there, however, as UTSA knocked down a layup and a few ensuing foul shots to secure the win and hand loss its fifth consecutive loss in conference play.
Final Box | UTSA 60 – Rice 52
FINAL | UTSA 60 – @RiceWBB 52 pic.twitter.com/gosc0tfkiH
— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 6, 2024
Key takeaway | Coming in cold
You want to be playing your best ball in March. It has to be the most overused cliche in college basketball. The Owls had better hope it’s a cliche and nothing more. Of the 14 teams in the American Conference, only one has been worse over the last three weeks of the regular season than Rice. Tulane (3-15 in the AACP) has lost eight consecutive games.
The standings are so tight. One more win and the Owls probably could have snuck into the final double-bye, earning the No. 4 Seed instead of the No. 10 seed. Instead, the low mark in the standings serves as a gut punch for a team that was picked to finish third in the preseason polls and swept East Carolina and USF, the preseason frontrunners.
That sets up a very intriguing week ahead. At their best, this team took down Tulsa, the AAC’s regular season champ. Rice is going to need to recapture that magic if they want to reshape the narrative on a season that has not gone according to plan.