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Early deficit dooms Rice Women’s Basketball against Gonzaga

December 9, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice women’s basketball was unable to climb out of a massive early hole against Gonzaga, falling to the ranked Bulldogs at home.

The visiting Gonzaga Bulldogs were the No. 23 team in the country entering the game and gave every indication they belonged among the nation’s best from the star, opening their contest against Rice women’s basketball on a 15-0 run before Shelby Hayes broke their scoring streak nearly halfway through the first quarter.

Trailing by 15, the situation grew more dire as Zags shooter Eliza Hollingsworth delivered a career-best performance, matching her best-ever totals for points and three-pointers by the middle of the second quarter. That enabled the visitors to extend their lead to 21 before the Owls scratched the deficit down to 14 in the final minutes before halftime.

Rice was able to trim the hole to single digits in the final moments of the third quarter, leaning on a complete team effort on both sides of the court to get within seven points. After falling behind big early, to have the game in reach entering the fourth was encouraging, but the deficit would prove too big to overcome.

Gonzaga would do just enough offensively in the fourth quarter — including a pair of dagger three-pointers — to keep the game out of reach. Rice threatened, but could never close the gap, ultimately falling to 5-4 on the season.

Final Box | Gonzaga 80 – Rice 72

FINAL | Gonzaga 80 – @RiceWBB 72 pic.twitter.com/6sY9VI9H8K

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 9, 2023

Key takeaway |  When the threes don’t fall

Rice women’s basketball is 4-1 when making at least eight threes this year and 1-3 when they don’t (they made three today on 18 attempts).  Their lone victory when they didn’t shoot the three particularly well came against Houston Christian, a team the Owls should be more than capable of handling regardless of how well their outside shooting fairs — Rice made 32.2 percent of their threes (6-for-21) in that game.

The Owls have had some career performances from long-range this year. Maya Bokunewicz tied the school record with seven triples against Saint Mary’s. Dominque Ennis had a personal best six threes against Texas Southern. When someone wasn’t lights out from deep, though, this team has struggled to find its groove offensively.

Finding a solution to that problem is becoming increasingly more important and Saturday’s third quarter might have served as one of the most tangible signs of progress yet. When Rice took possession for the first time in the period, they trailed by 16 points. They made just one three but entered the fourth quarter down by just nine.

It took some strain to get there, but Rice was able to attack the rim, get to the line a couple of times and make their foul shots. That’s a recipe for success, regardless of what’s happening from long range and it’s one Rice might need to lean on again in the near future if the cold streaks from three continue.

Up Next: vs Prairie View A&M (Sat. Dec 9)

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

Rice Basketball falls to Houston for eighth straight time

December 6, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball trade blows with crosstown rival Houston in the early goings, but couldn’t sustain it for 40 minutes against the No. 3 Cougars.

Wednesday night’s battle of intracity foes started off with an exchange of long-range shots. Houston connected on the first three. Then Travis Evee drained one for Rice basketball. Then Houston hit another and the Owls responded with a pair, one apiece from Alem Husenovic and Mekhi Mason, to take their first lead of the evening. It wouldn’t last long.

Trailing 9-8, Houston went on a 22-4 run in the middle portions of the first half. The Rice defense had held its own early, but offensive turnovers and foul trouble for Max Fiedler put the Owls in peril rather quickly.

With Fiedler on the bench, Houston went on the attack. The Coogs took a 16-point lead into the half and opened the second frame on a 9-2 run. Their advantage continued to balloon from that point onward, cresting to 39 points at one point, unofficially putting this game far beyond the Owls’ reach.

Houston entered this game as the No. 3 team in the nation. It was going to take a perfect game to have a chance for Rice to keep pace with this team. The Owls didn’t come close.

Final Box | Houston 75 – Rice 39

FINAL | UH 75 – @RiceMBB 39 pic.twitter.com/o7BBmav5lE

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 7, 2023

Key takeaway | Max or Bust?

It’s possible no college basketball player means more to their program at this very moment than Max Fielder does to Rice basketball. The veteran big man is one of the best facilitators in the sport and the key cog that makes the Owls’ offense go. So when he picked up his third foul midway through the first half — a half in which he only played six minutes — alarm bells had to be sounding in head coach Scott Pera’s head.

The offense without Fiedler on the floor was not nearly as effective. That’s to be expected, but it’s also something Rice probably needs to have a better solution for moving forward. Rather than funneling the ball through the top of the key, movement was pushed toward the edges and it felt like Rice was settling for shots rather than taking the most opportune chances.

Frankly, the simple reality could be this team probably isn’t nearly as dangerous when Fiedler is off the court. But given the number of shooters they have and the players capable of creating opportunities for others, that doesn’t feel like it out to be the case. The offense might be different, but it should still work. For better or worse, Rice basketball got some practice with that scenario Wednesday night.

Up Next: vs Incarnate Word – Dec. 13 (Wed.)

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: game recap, Rice basketball

Rice Basketball thunders back to avoid upset vs HCU

December 2, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball fell behind early before thundering back, riding their defense rather than their shooting to a win over Houston Christian.

Alem Huseinovic opened the game with a jumper that drew applause from the assembled crowd at Tudor Fieldhouse, but onlooking fans wouldn’t have much to cheer from for the next several sequences up and down the court. A brief Rice basketball lead evaporated and the Owls quickly found themselves playing catch up on their own court.

Houston Christian pounced on Rice from that first shot, climbing to a 25-12 lead at the under-eight media timeout and putting some pressure on the home team to find a way to settle down and avoid a disastrous loss.

Down by 13 on a day when they shot just 25 percent from three, Rice made three of the five triples they would convert for the entire game over the course of the next six minutes. A large deficit turned into a tie game, opening the door for a second-half rally.

Rice went on a 22-8 run to start the second half, leaning on their defense rather than their shot making ability to flip the script and build a double-digit lead of their own. HCU would climb back within five, but a few clutch shots from Huseinovic, Max Fiedler and Keanu Dawes kept them at bay and allowed the Owls to secure a hard-fought home win.

Final Box | Rice 65 – HCU 56

FINAL | @RiceMBB 65 – HCU 56 pic.twitter.com/1FvpIyEDeS

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 2, 2023

What They’re Saying

“I’m really happy to get the win. A good word to use for this game is sloppy. Offensively, we just couldn’t get any rhythm going. That’s a credit to (Houston Christian’s) defense. But, the good news is, we would not have won that game in the past. We won with our defense. They shot 35 percent from the floor and 18 percent from three. Any chance you do that, you’re going to give yourself a chance to win. So I’m really proud of that. That’s back-to-back pretty good defensive performances by us.” – Head coach Scott Pera

Key takeaway | The defense is in there somewhere

Despite promises that this would be the season when Rice basketball found its footing on the defensive end of the court, nothing consistent or impactful truly materialized through the first seven games of the season. There were flashes here and there, but nothing nearly as impressive as the performance the Owls put on display Saturday afternoon — and they needed every little bit of it to get past HCU.

As Pera mentioned postgame, the defense was superb. Rice also forced 14 turnovers and only allowed their opponents to get to the free throw line 15 times.

Imperfect rebounding did lead to more defensive opportunities than should have been absolutely necessary, but at the end of the day, holding any team under 60 points is a solid start for this program right now. Over the past two seasons, Rice is 4-0 when holding their opponent below 60 total points.

Rice basketball probably isn’t ever going to turn into a defensive juggernaut, but they have the makings of a team that can play enough defense to get by, provided the offense holds up its end of the bargain. It has to be encouraging then that the offense was rather uninspiring by its standards on Saturday and the Owls still found a way to walk away with a win

Up Next: at Houston – Dec. 6 (Wed.)

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Filed Under: Basketball, Featured Tagged With: game recap, Rice basketball

Rice Women’s Basketball rolls past TAMU-CC on the road

December 2, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice women’s basketball started fast and never let up, rolling past Texas A&M Corpus Christi on the road to improve to 5-3 on the season.

Before Texas A&M Corpus Christi had exhaled from the opening tip, Rice women’s basketball had a 9-0 lead. The visiting Owls wasted no time announcing their presence on the Islanders’ court, jumping out in front quickly thanks to the return of Malia Fisher and well-placed shots from Dominque Ennis and Shelby Hayes.

Staked to a near-double-digit lead, Rice expanded their cushion in the second quarter in which they shot 67 percent from the field including a trio of three-pointers. That lengthened the Owls’ advantage over the Islanders by a ten spot and sent Rice into halftime with a 56-28 advantage.

Both teams traded baskets after the break, but the result of the game was never really in doubt thanks to the Owls’ tremendous opening effort. Not only did Rice never trail in this game, they spent the majority of the second half with the game well out of reach. It was a dominant effort away from home and an extremely encouraging showing near the midway point of nonconference play.

Final Box | Rice 84 – Texas A&M Corpus Christi 56

FINAL | @RiceWBB 84 – TAMUCC 56 pic.twitter.com/PsxzZ7faNh

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 2, 2023

Key takeaway | Winning away from home

The road had not been kind to Rice Women’s Basketball in this young season. The Owls sludged through a victory at Abilene Chrisitan in their first game away from Tudor Fieldhouse before dropping successive away contests, the first at TCU and the second at SFA.

This is a very similar team to the one that went undefeated in nonconference play a season ago, so the ability to win away from home is clearly there, but for whatever reason, it wasn’t clicking. Saturday’s performance against Texas A&M Corpus Christi served as a powerful reminder that the Owls still have what it takes to go into someone else’s gym and walk away with a win.

As cliched as it is, winning on the road is hard. The Owls were effective on offense, rebounded well and made their free throws. The defense was stingy, too. It wasn’t a perfect performance, but it was a respectable one and one that will be good enough to get the job done, more often than not.

Up Next: vs Gonzaga (Sat. Dec 9)

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

Travis Evee makes history as Rice Basketball blasts UT Martin

November 30, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball rebounded from a tough road trip with a lopsided home victory over UT Martin, capped off by a record-setting shot from Travis Evee.

Returning home from a disappointing road trip, Rice basketball reentered Tudor Field house in need of a jolt. It had been a minute since the Owls started a game with superb play on both sides of the court. They did just that in their homecoming after their recent road trip, roaring out to a 34-13 first half lead against UT Martin in just over 11 minutes of action.

Rice shot the ball incredibly well and defended with gusto. UT Martin converted just five of their first 17 shots from the field. Rice went 14-for-22. Everything was coming up Owls in a game that had all the makings of a romp.

The blowout was averted late in the first half when UT Martin was gifted too many open looks from three and converted four long range shots in the final nine minutes, slashing the sizable Rice advantage to 10 points at the break.

The lead shrunk to nine points in the opening moments of the second half before the Owls exploded with a 14-0 run to blow the game wide open. And if the 23-point advantage wasn’t enough, Travie Evee delivered the exclamation point with his 253th career three, a program record.

The Owls have a new career three point leader @travise3_ !! He says most importantly the record came in a win. pic.twitter.com/i0Tj16H9VP

— J.P. Heath (@RiceOwlsVoice) December 1, 2023

“It’s a heck of an accomplishment. Not only is he breaking it now, he’s about to put a lot of separation between him and whoever is going to try and beat him next,” head coach Scott Pera said. “It’s really cool.”

The bounce-back win won’t fix all woes, but it did provide this team with momentum and belief they desperately needed to be restored. Perhaps what happened in Vegas will stay in Vegas after all. This rejuvenated version of Rice basketball was decidedly more effective.

“Tonight was the first time Rice basketball played like we think we’re capable of,” Pera said with a sigh of relief. “I’m proud of the guys.”

Final Box | Rice 98 – UT Martin 78

FINAL | @RiceMBB 98 – UT Martin 78 pic.twitter.com/8J8ps5XpD7

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 1, 2023

What They’re Saying

“I thought for first time all year we executed the game plan defensive to the best of our ability and it made a huge difference… we played team defense. We rebounded. We held them to 40 percent shooting. They’re a very good team. They’re going to win 20 games. They’re going to compete for their league title. I’m just really proud of our guys” – Head coach Scott Pera

Key takeaway | Keep tinkering

Through seven games, Rice basketball has yet to settle into a consistent starting five. Considering how head coach Scott Pera has operated in the past, that’s somewhat unexpected. Part of the reason for the lack of consistency in the lineups has been a lack of production in the games. If the same five had been played at a high level, there would be no need for the changeups, instead the Owls press on.

Thursday’s newest wrinkle was the insertion of Alem Husenivoc into the starting lineup for his first start this season. He delivered with a season-high 11 points on a season-high 26 minutes played.

“Alem has done a terrific job of growing into a leader, being all about the right things. This was an easy decision actually, for me, because he is deserving of starting,” Pera said.

Whether Husenovic sticks in the starting five remains to be seen. Pera noted he challenges all of his guys to earn that spot and play well enough to keep it. No matter the rotation, though, Rice found something tonight that worked. With no set return date for forward Cam Sheffield, they’ll need to continue to find a way to gel with the pieces they do have on the court. Thursday was evidence the ceiling can be pretty high.

Up Next: vs Houston Christian – Dec. 2 (Sat.)

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: game recap, Rice basketball

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