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Rice Basketball drops Senior Day battle to North Texas

March 9, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball and North Texas battled back and forth throughout the first half before the Mean Green found another gear and pulled away, handing the Owls a loss on Senior Day.

The latest edition of an intrastate rivalry between Rice basketball and North Texas began with a technical foul against the Owls, dictated by AAC league rules because of shot clocks that weren’t working properly. That malfunction spotted the Mean Green to an early 1-0 lead and seemed to light a fire under the Owls, who didn’t trail for long.

After trading a few early baskets, Rice went on an 11-0 run, erasing a North Texas lead and giving the Owls a two-point advantage. From that point onward, the game was on.

Travis Evee, who led Rice in scoring with 21 points for the game, helped extend the Owls’ lead to as many as five points in the first half. When North Texas leveled the score once more in the second half Rice turned to everyone they could to keep the game within reach, but nobody had much success shooting after the halftime buzzer.

Rice made six field goals in the second half, shooting a dismal 22.2 percent from the floor. No amount of defensive production was going to make up for that level of shooting woe. The Owls end their season on a four-game losing streak heading into the AAC Tournament.

Final Box | North Texas 71 – Rice 55

FINAL | North Texas 71, @RiceMBB 55 pic.twitter.com/cwKbhCGrjA

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 10, 2024

Key takeaway | Insurmountable shooting slumps

Scoring droughts have been a persistent challenge for Rice basketball this season. There always seem to be a few moments in each game when something gets gummed up in the offense, causing prolonged stretches without points. Often, that’s proved disastrous for the Owls, allowing early leads to evaporate and causing close games to get away from them in the second half.

Against North Texas, Rice has two such instances. In the first half, Rice missed five field goals in a row, falling behind nine. The combo of Evee and Max Fiedler helped right the ship, powering the Owls back to an even game.

The next stretch came midway through the second half. Rice missed eight shots in a row and 12 shots out of 13. That resulted in a span of 10 minutes of court time with two made baskets, transforming a 1-point lead into a 10-point deficit. When Rice was forced to take a timeout with 2:24 on the clock, they had all but run out of time to mount a comeback.

This has been a streaky team all season. They can turn it on and score in bunches, but if they don’t find a way to smooth over their droughts and make them either less frequent or less severe, they won’t be sticking around very long in the upcoming conference tournament.

Up Next: AAC Tournament

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Filed Under: Basketball Tagged With: game recap, Max Fiedler, Rice basketball, Travis Evee

Rice Football 2024 Spring Practice Notebook 1: Spring Intros

March 8, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2024 Rice Football spring practices are officially underway. Here’s the latest on the roster and their plans this spring.

Rice football was back on the grass for the first week of spring practices this week. The Owls will have a short hiatus for spring break, then return to finish the final four weeks of camp and conclude with their spring game on April 13. That’s a short window to accomplish a lot. Stay tuned here for updates throughout the weeks ahead, starting right now with more on their starting point, some news faces, a notable position change and more.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Alex Bacchetta, Blaise Tita, Brad Baur, Braedon Nutter, Brank Bants, Charlie Looes, Chase Jenkins, Chibby Nwajuaku, Chike Anigbogu, Chris conti, Coleman Bennett, Cooper King, Daelen Alexander, EJ Warner, Ethan Onianwa, Ethan Powell, Justin Williams, Lavel Dumont, Michael Daley, Mike Leone, Peyton Stevenson, practice notes, Rice Football, Shepherd Bowling, Spencer Cassell, spring practice, Trey Phillippi, Tyson Thompson, Van Heitmann

2024 AAC Women’s Basketball Tournament Preview

March 8, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2024 AAC Women’s Basketball Tournament is slated to tip off in Fort Worth, TX this week. Here’s a preview of the action.

The Favorite: Tulsa

Temira Poindexter and Delanie Crawford rank second and third in the AAC in scoring. No team in the league boasts a tandem as productive as this one has been for the Golden Hurricane. Tulsa has the longest active winning streak in league play, five games, and head-to-head wins over No. 2 Seed North Texas and No. 3 Seed Temple (Tulsa split the season series with Temple 1-1).

The Contenders: North Texas, Temple

North Texas might be the most consistent team in the league. They shoot the ball well and play solid defense almost every game. In total, that’s driven the Mean Green to the top scoring margin in the AAC, outscoring opponents by 11.2 points, which is more than double every team in the league outside of Temple.

As for Temple, the Owls rank second in the AAC in defense, allowing 62.7 points per game. Opponents are shooting just 29 percent from three against the Owls and below 40 percent from the floor. There’s a reason the league standings ended in a three-way tie at the top with these three good teams.

The Dark Horse: South Florida

Once picked as the preseason No. 1 team, South Florida got off to a slow start in league play and fell toward the rest of the pack in the standings. The talent is still there, albeit with some inconsistency in performance from game to game. The Bulls lead the conference in assist/turnover ratio. If they can play clean basketball and keep up their solid defense they could make some noise.

The Wild Card: Memphis

The Tigers were left for dead in mid-February, bottom dwellers in the standings with a 4-11 record. Then something clicked. They ended the season on a 5-1 run, knocking off East Carolina, Rice, Tulane, UTSA and UAB before falling to North Texas. They get a rematch with ECU in Fort Worth. One upset against Tulsa in the next round and their Cinderella dreams might not sound that farfetched.

The Bracket

The opening day of games will take place on Saturday, March 9, with the majority of the teams in action on Sunday, March 10. Here are the first two days of action. The full schedule is available on the conference website. All early-round games can be streamed on ESPN+, with the championship on ESPNU.

First Round | Saturday, March 9

Game 1: No. 13 Wichita State vs. No. 12 Florida Atlantic – 4 p.m. CT
Game 2: No. 14 Tulane vs. No. 11 SMU – 6 p.m. CT

Second Round | Sunday, March 10

Game 3: No. 9 East Carolina vs. No. 8 Memphis – 12 p.m. CT
Game 4: Game 1 winner vs. No. 5 South Florida – 2 p.m. CT
Game 5: No. 10 Rice vs. No. 7 UAB – 6 p.m. CT
Game 6: Game 2 winner vs. No. 6 Charlotte – 8 p.m. CT

https://twitter.com/American_Conf/status/1765556810608431384

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Filed Under: AAC, Archive, Basketball, Women's Athletics Tagged With: AAC

Rice Basketball comes up short at Charlotte

March 6, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball stayed within striking distance but was never able to land a finishing blow, dropping a hard-fought game to Charlotte.

It wouldn’t have been readily apparent to any onlookers Wednesday night that the on-court battle they were witnessing was between teams on opposite ends of the American Conference standings. Rice basketball took Charlotte to the wire, coming within a timely basket or two of upsetting one of the AAC’s best.

Rice was able to keep things close thanks to an inspired performance by their defense. Charlotte shot just 36 percent from the field and 6-of-27 (22 percent) from three, essentially relying on forward Igor Milicic (26 points, 10 rebounds) to carry the rest of the team.

More: Roost Podcast — Spring Roundup

Charlotte led by seven at halftime and increased their edge to as many as 12 points. But each and every time the game got to the brink, Rice battled back. Midway through the second half, Travis Evee and Max Fiedler spurred an 11-2 run that brought the game within three points. Then the battle was on.

Both sides traded baskets as the clock wound down. Anthony Selden delivered a slashing layup to get the score within two with 26 seconds to play. Charlotte would hit their free throws and hold on, but not without some labored breathing down the stretch.

Final Box | Charlotte 69 – Rice 65

FINAL | Charlotte 69, @RiceMBB 64 pic.twitter.com/dFmDM1kT8R

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 7, 2024

Key takeaway | Workable rotations

It’s taken most of the season to get to this point, but Rice basketball seems to have found itself the right balance of starters’ minutes, bench usage and rotations between the two units. Andrew Akuchie has been effective in his minutes, but so too has Anthony Selden off the bench and Keanu Dawes, albeit not as much against Charlotte.

This roster has talent, more so than it did at this point last season. Trusting that talent to come through in crucial situations should be the next step of a progressing program. It hasn’t resulted in victories as often as the Owls’ faithful would have hoped, but the pieces are there.

If Rice can add an effective three-point shot to a roster that is effective up close — Rice led Charlotte 40-26 in points in the paint — they could make some noise over the last few weeks of the season. The players are there.

Up Next: at North Texas (Wednesday, Mar. 9)

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Rice Baseball bounces back with midweek win over PVAMU

March 5, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Baseball got back in the win column on Tuesday night, taking care of business against Prairie View A&M at Reckling Park, 6-1.

Prairie View struck first on Tuesday night, launching a second inning pitch from Rice baseball starter Robert Fernandez over the right field wall to take the lead. The Owls were able to respond immediately, softening any lingering concerns about the offensive woes showcased in their weekend series loss to Stanford with a trio of multi-run frames.

Last Time Out: Rice Baseball swept by Stanford

Ben Royo collected the first RBI in the bottom of the second, moving the line with a single to left center. Max Johnson followed with a sacrifice fly to put Rice in front, 2-1. Staked to a modest lead, Fernandez and the bullpen, patrolled this time by Jackson Mayo and Mauricio Rodriguez, keep the Panthers’ bats quiet.

PVAMU had two hits and two walks, never posing any meaningful threats outside of that isolated home run ball early on. Rice would add two more runs of their own in the fifth, courtesy of a double from Nathan Becker. The final two would cross in the sixth on a sac fly from Pierce Gallo and a wild pitch.

For the night, Rice outhit PVAMU 11-2 and the Rice pitching staff worked nine innings of one-run ball, striking out eight while allowing six total base runners, including one hit batter and one who reached via an error.

What it means | The price of victory

With the outcome essentially decided, the injury bug snuck up and bit Rice baseball again in the ninth inning. Max Johnson went down in a heap, stretching for a ball thrown off the bag before collapsing to the turf in pain. He had to be helped off the field by trainers and didn’t look to be able to put much weight on his leg.

Johnson had yet to register his first hit of the season but had earned the trust of the coaching staff for his improved competitiveness at the plate as well as his defense. His 10-pitch at bat against Stanford on Sunday that kept the Owls in it late drew positive reviews from head coach Jose Cruz Jr afterward.

“I thought Max had really good at bats,” Cruz said, singling out that crucial at bat. “I’m happy for that progress.”

If Johnson does indeed miss time, Rice will have to reshuffle the lineup again after settling in on Johnson as the first baseman for the time being. That would likely put Treyton Rank back on the infield and keep Ben Royo at shortstop. At some point, it’s a numbers game, and Rice is running out of options with the season just a few weeks old.

ON DECK | vs Hawaii (Fri-Mon)

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Filed Under: Archive, Baseball Tagged With: game recap, Rice baseball

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