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Rice Women’s Basketball climbs AAC standings with win vs Tulane

January 20, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice women’s basketball blew past Tulane on Saturday, leading for 35 minutes on their way to first place in the AAC standings.

Any doubts as to the result of Saturday’s contest between Rice women’s basketball and Tulane were put to bed rather quickly. Tulane scored first, taking a 2-0 lead on a layup during their first possession. It would be their largest lead of the game. Rice quickly took charge, making their next seven consecutive field goals, closing out the first quarter with a nine-point advantage.

The Owls’ defense took over in the second frame. They held the Green Wave to 3-for-12 shooting from the floor in that period, holding the line until the offense got back into gear. Dominque Ennis provided that jump-start quickly after the halftime break, propelling Rice to an 18-point lead and seemingly putting the game out of reach given Tulane’s shooting struggles.

Tulane’s last gasp came at the beginning of the fourth quarter which they opened on 9-2 run, closing the deficit to eight points. They wouldn’t score again for the remainder of the afternoon. Maya Bokunewicz delivered an incredible under-the-basket shot to push the lead back to double-digits before Rice closed the game on a 9-0 run.

Final Box | Rice 61 – Tulane 44

FINAL | @RiceWBB 61 – Tulane 44
Rice is tied for 1st in the AAC. pic.twitter.com/i3fksCEQX1

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) January 20, 2024

Key takeaway | No. 1

With the win, Rice women’s basketball moves to a tie for first place in the league with Charlotte. The Owls have won four of their last five with their only loss coming to those 49ers at home. Rice doesn’t play Charlotte again in the regular season, giving Charlotte a potential tiebreaker for seeding purposes should that be necessary down the road. For now, though, Rice controls its own destiny and the future looks brighter than ever.

It wasn’t just the impact on the conference standings that made this game meaningful. It was the Owls’ first shot to go on the road against a team they were clearly better than and prove they have the focus and determination to take care of business.

Rice ought to have won this game, and they did. But to do so in the manner in which they did, holding Tulane to a season-low 44 points with four double-digit scorers of their own, speaks to a team that wasn’t just fortunate, they were dominant. There’s a long road ahead, but Rice women’s basketball very much so looks the part of the AACs top team.

Up Next: at Tulsa (Wednesday, Jan. 24)

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball, Women's Athletics Tagged With: game recap, Rice Women's basketball

Rice Basketball outlasts Temple for first-ever AAC win

January 20, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

It wasn’t easy, but Rice basketball is heading home from Temple with their first-ever AAC win, taking down the conference’s other Owls 69-66.

The visiting Owls made themselves feel right at home against Temple on Saturday afternoon. Rice basketball knocked down a trio of three-point shots in the opening minutes, jumping out ahead 11-5 on the road. From there, the combination of Max Fiedler and Mekhi Mason took over, stretching a close game to yet another double-digit advantage for Rice.

A 13-point halftime lead did not last long. Temple opened the second half on a 7-0 run and, as if that wasn’t daunting enough, Travis Evee picked up his fourth foul shortly after that run. Not only was Rice going to have to find a way to hold onto the lead, they were going to have to do so without their top scorer on the floor for much of the second half.

Evee went to the bench. Rice lost the lead. Temple slowly added to their advantage, going up by six points before Evee was reinserted into the game. Playing with no foul margin, Evee scored eight straight points, spurring a Rice rally that was desperately needed.

With the game back in reach, a stressful series of closing possessions soon followed. Missed free throws from both sides and errant passes culminated in two clutch free throws from Mason, who finished with a team-high 20 points, powering Rice to a lead in the final seconds. A three-ball from Temple at the buzzer would clank off the rim, giving Rice basketball its first-ever AAC win.

The win was Pera’s 350th career win.

Welcome to the club Coach!

Congratulations to @RiceCoachPera on his 350th career win! #GoOwls👐 pic.twitter.com/i6jJSOHiVP

— Rice Men’s Basketball (@RiceMBB) January 20, 2024

“This has been a tough stretch, one of the toughest of my career of 33 years,” head coach Scott Pera said after the game. “They’ve just hung with it. They’ve practiced good. We’ve been playing better. We just gotta win. We found a way today. I’m just so proud of them.”

Final Box | Rice 69 – Temple 66

Final | @RiceMBB 69 – Temple 66
Owls earn their first-ever AAC win. pic.twitter.com/qbVANKyVj8

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) January 20, 2024

Key takeaway | A win is a win is a win

Despite a slow start in conference play, getting a lead hasn’t been too difficult for Rice basketball over the last several weeks. This has been a good first half team, building sizable advantages early in games but not having the ability to sustain that level of play over 40 minutes. Whether it’s endurance, focus or misfortune of one kind or another, leads have too frequently disappeared as quickly as they have come.

So when Rice took a 16-point lead in the waning minutes of the first half, confidences were mixed. After all, the Owls had done this before but they hadn’t finished yet. On Saturday on the road, Rice finally got it done.

The victory in itself will not awe anyone on the outside. Temple entered the game 8-10 (1-4 AAC). It won’t go down in any record books or be spoken about as a resume builder for a program looking to turn the corner and get going back in the right direction. However, it should serve as proof of concept for what this team is capable of when they can play well and execute offensively.

Getting out of an 0-4 AAC start can’t happen overnight. It’s one game at a time. This was one baby step, sorely needed after an arduous beginning.

Up Next: vs Florida Atlantic (Wednesday, Jan. 24)

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

Rice Football 2023 Defensive Player of the Year: Sean Fresch

January 18, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Sean Fresch took his game to new heights this season, earning our highly contested 2023 Rice Football Defensive Player of the Year award.

The 2023 Rice Football defense was filled with standout performers. The entire defensive line played well, veteran linebacker Myron Morrison was a stabilizing for in the middle of the field and defensive backs Gabe Taylor and Tre’shon Devones made big plays in big moments. Picking a Defensive Player of the Year was incredibly challenging, but Sean Fresch ultimately earned the nod partly because of his journey to this point.

A season ago, there were games in which opposing offenses chose to build their entire game plan around Fresch, and not in a complimentary way. They viewed him as a player they could beat, pushing the ball in his direction. Fresch was hunted, not feared, and to some extent, that’s what to be expected when a 5-foot-8 defensive back takes on FBS-caliber wide receivers. That’s where this story starts.

Rice hired Jeremy Modkins to coach corners in the offseason. Through his work with Modkins and a personal rededication to bettering himself, Fresch made a leap players make in their fourth collegiate season. Even before the games began, the buzz around South Main regarding Fresch’s improvement was inescapable.

“Sean Fresch is playing the most outstanding football I’ve ever seen him play,” head coach Mike Bloomgren declared before the season-opening game against Texas. Expectations and pressures were already mounting. Top corner Jordan Dunbar had taken a leave of absence from the team in the week prior to the season, thrusting Fresch into the spotlight. He did not blink.

Fresch began the season strong, tallying three pass breakups in the Owls’ upset win over the Houston Cougars and leading a secondary that would go on to finish second in the AAC in yards per game allowed through the air. Fresch started every game and provided a spark on special teams with his dynamic punt return abilities. Opposing defenses didn’t key in on him anymore. In fact, they started going the other way.

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“He doesn’t get the [pass break ups] because he’s covered the guy,” coach Modkins would joke midseason.

Whether the ball was headed his way or not Fresch, played like a new man.

“How I feel. How I play. How I carry myself around this building. How I carry myself with my teammates. The leadership role that I have, I walk around and the confidence is there,” Fresch said. “I’m just playing different.”

Fresch started every game this season, posting career highs in tackles, tackles for a loss, punt returns and punt return yardage. He also had his first sack on a big third down play against Charlotte. He was so amped up that he almost forgot to sprint down to the other end of the field and return the ensuing punt. It soon became just another exciting moment for Fresch in an incredible season.

Modkins, in his first season working with Fresch, didn’t have a full perspective of what Fresch looked like a year ago compared to the player he became under his tutelage. Nevertheless, Modkins says he never doubted Fresch putting together the kind of year that he did.

“He’s a tremendous competitor. He works his tail off. He does whatever you say to do and he wants to get better. He listens. He works,” Modkins said. “The proof is kind of in the pudding with him. I’m not surprised by the results he’s having at all.”

More: Rice Football Rising Star — Dean Connors

A surprise or not, Fresch’s resurgent season made this defense function at a high level. Defensive coordinator Brian Smith has built his scheme around having two strong cover corners who can win one-on-one battles on the outside. When the corners do that, in this scheme, it frees up the rest of the defense to pressure the quarterback and make plays.

Through it all, Fresch credited confidence and discipline as the driving force for his sustained improvement. “Just trusting that and falling back on my technique every single play,” he said. “Staying disciplined and finishing.”

One needs to look no further than the season finale against Texas State in the SERVPRO First Responders Bowl. Although it wasn’t a banner day for the team as a whole, the secondary held a potent Texas State offense to 150 yards passing with eight three-and-outs. It was a fitting end for Fresch and a strong defensive season.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: postseason awards, Rice Football, Sean Fresch

Rice Football 2023 Rising Star: Dean Connors

January 17, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

From JUCO playmaker to bonafide FBS superstar, running back Dean Connors is our 2023 Rice Football Rising Star.

If Dean Connors had gotten tired, he would never tell you so. “The energizer bunny” who “doesn’t have an off switch” as offensive coordinator Marques Tuiasosopo called him, Connors emerged as the newfound star Rice football running back this season. It was quite a long journey from the JUCO ranks to get him to where he is today, but the winding path is finally paying dividends.

In 2020, his senior season of high school was canceled and moved to the spring. He played a shortened season in March and April of 2021, then enrolled at Riverside City Junior College where he played a full 13-game schedule that fall. By the time he arrived at South Main, he’d played 18 football games in the span of six months.

Wary of overworking their new investment, the Rice coaching staff utilized Connors sparingly in his first year with the Owls. He carried the ball just 28 times for 128 yards and scored just one touchdown via a reception, not a carry.

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If Connors was ever frustrated by the slow start to this Rice career, he never showed it. By his own admission, he spent his first season trying to soak in as much football knowledge as possible. “Up until now, I’ve really kind of just went out there and played,” Connors said this past spring. “But I think once I got here I’ve been really expanding my knowledge of the game.”

He stole the show in spring practices and operated as the co-starter with veteran Juma Otoviano through fall camp. When the season arrived, Connors exploded with 145 all-purpose yards in a win over crosstown rival, Houston and scored his first FBS rushing touchdown a week later against Texas Southern.

Still, everyone in the offensive meeting rooms felt like Connors and the offense could do more. Following that game against Texas Southern in which the Owls hung 59 points on their opponent, Connors said he and the offense were “not close at all” to reaching their ceiling.

Connors had runs in that game he wanted to have back. The offensive line was working through some early season challenges. Everything wasn’t lining up just yet. But rather than get discouraged, Connors got to work.

“When Dean Connors does it the way he’s coached, it’s pretty impressive,” running backs coach John Settle said around that time. “Good Dean, is really good.”

More: Rice Football Special Teams Player of the Year — Peyton Stevenson

Bit by bit, play by play, Connors started to find his groove. He hauled in an 80-yard touchdown reception against USF, the longest play from scrimmage Rice football had this year. A few weeks later, he exploded for 120 yards and three touchdowns on just nine carries during a Thursday night primetime game against Tulsa.

“Dean is such a proven commodity to this coaching staff that anything he does in a game now, it doesn’t surprise any of us,” head coach Mike Bloomgren said that night. “We expected that of Dean.”

With the Owls’ backs against the wall, in need of two wins in two weeks to clinch bowl eligibility, Connors delivered a combined 33 carries for 259 yards, the best two-game stretch of his entire career. Rice won both games and made it to the postseason, thanks in large part to Connors’ efforts.

Even with his meteoric rise, Connors remains level-headed and focused on what’s in front of him. A comment he made in the preseason rings true. “I can’t really think about starting or how many carries I’m gonna get,” he said. “I just gotta come here and work like I’m just that JUCO kid that just got here.”

That JUCO kid amassed the most scrimmage yards on the team and the fifth most yards in the American Athletic Conference. A relatively unknown commodity outside of Houston, Connors had officially arrived. He won’t be flying under the radar for much longer.

** Photo Credit: Maria Lysaker **
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Dean Connors, postseason awards, Rice Football

Rice Women’s Basketball puts AAC on notice with win at ECU

January 17, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice women’s basketball went on the road and posted a commanding victory, topping East Carolina to improve to 4-1 in AAC play.

It took Rice women’s basketball a moment to settle in for an early morning tip against East Carolina. The Owls fell behind 7-2 in the opening minutes, allowing the Pirates to score on three straight possessions, aided by a Rice turnover. Then the defense woke up, the shooting found its groove and the Owls became the aggressors.

Rice outscored ECU 20-6 to close out the first quarter. As the Owls’ zone defense flummoxed the Pirates on offense, Shelby Hayes emerged as a force when the Owls were on the attack. Hayes posted a tying a career-high with 18 points, perfectly complimenting the outside shooting of Dominque Ennis and the slashing drives of Destiny Jackson.

Up by eight at the half, Rice was able to keep ECU at bay for the next quarter, maintaining a double-digit advantage until ECU opened the fourth frame with a 7-0 run to get the game back within reach. In front by seven, Rice dug deep and found the resolve to battle for just a bit longer with the usual suspects coming through in big junctures.

Ennis hit a couple of threes. Jackson and Fisher hit shots inside. Soon a tenuous lead became a 17-point edge, the Owls’ largest of the ballgame. By the time the final buzzer had sounded, the Owls had left no doubt. Rice women’s basketball is the team to beat in the AAC.

Final Box | Rice 80 – ECU 67

FINAL | @RiceWBB 80 – ECU 67 pic.twitter.com/RRF7tCakw6

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) January 17, 2024

Key takeaway | AAC on notice

South Florida, East Carolina, Rice and SMU were tabbed to finish first through fourth, respectively, in the preseason coaches poll. In just a few weeks of conference action, Rice is 3-0 against those other teams, posting consecutive, convincing victories over the top teams in the span of a few days. And Rice might not have played its best basketball just yet.

Rice sits tied atop the American Conference standings as the calendar moves past the midpoint of January.

There’s a long way to go before the season wraps up and nobody within the walls of Tudor Fieldhouse is counting their proverbial chickens at this moment. Nevertheless, it’s impossible to look at the results of the past few weeks and come to any other conclusion: Rice women’s basketball is the AAC front-runner until further notice.

Up Next: at Tulane (Saturday, Jan. 20)

Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball, Women's Athletics Tagged With: game recap, Rice Women's basketball

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