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Rice Basketball: Robert Martin finds home as Owls’ sixth man

March 26, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Robert Martin found his role for Rice basketball midway through his senior season. How a switch to the bench paid off for Martin and his team.

Basketball is a game of adjustments. On the simplest level, each player strives to take their best shot. How that shot is executed — and who takes it — varies from series to series, game to game and season to season. What worked for a team in November isn’t always the best recipe by February. That’s the puzzle Rice Basketball and senior Robert Martin found themselves in this season.

Martin started nine of his first 10 games and had a decent amount of success. He scored a season-high 23 points with five three-pointers against Houston. That was part of a five-game run of double-digit points. But a six-point outing against Lamar in which he shot 1-for-10 from the field served as a reminder that things weren’t clicking quite at 100 percent for the Owls’ senior.

Then Martin made the bold decision to ask head coach Scott Pera to come off the bench rather than play from the starting lineup. It was Martin who approached Pera about the switch, not the other way around. “The fact that he would say that and think that could be beneficial to him and the team says a lot about him,” Pera said, recalling the conversation. “It just worked.”

The shift was almost instantaneous. Martin dropped 20 points against Houston Baptist in his first game after his starting streak ended. He scored in double-digits in 13 of his final 17 games from that point onward.

There was a mental shift in Martin that impacted how he played on the court. He shot 36.0 percent from the field in games he started and 49.6 percent when he came off the bench. He hit 27.1 of his three-point shots as a starter and 41.3 percent off the bench. Martin averaged slightly more assists (2.1 per game to 1.9) and fewer turnovers (1.5 per game to 2.1) in his new role compared to when he was starting. It was almost as if a switch had flipped.

More: Erica Ogwumike talks end of season, Rice career on The Roost Podcast

Martin’s mental pivot impacted his teammates. Shortly after he moved to the bench the team fell into a tough stretch, opening C-USA play 1-7.

“At this point, we really have nothing to lose. So I think that although all the pressures, the jitters, being nervous, we can kind of throw that all out the door,” Martin said following a heartbreaking home loss to UTEP. Rice would lose their next game to UTSA, but then things turned around.

Rice basketball knocked off C-USA’s eventual champion North Texas at home to begin a hot streak. They won six of their next eight games, clinching a spot in the conference tournament. The credit doesn’t belong to Martin alone, but his decision impacted the team in a big way.

Pera admitted he didn’t know how Martin was going to fit into the rotation at the beginning of the season. “I wasn’t a hundred percent sure which way it was gonna go. Were we going to start him? Weren’t we going to start him,” he recalled.

Ultimately Martin made the decision on his own. Pera supported him. It didn’t come to pass like either had drawn it up, but some plans require a bit of tinkering. Martin owes his strong finish to his senior season to a course correction that impacted everyone for the better.

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

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball, Featured Tagged With: Rice basketball, Robert Martin, Scott Pera

Rice Basketball: Young talent the backbone for future success

March 25, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball wasn’t forced to rely too heavily on true freshman this season, giving the Owls younger players time to grow into their collegiate roles.

Rice basketball entered the 2019-2020 season with an established core of key players. No freshman was thrown to the wolves before he was ready. Instead each contributor had time to add weight, learn and gel into the rotation at their own pace.

Zach Crisler, Max Fielder and Quincy Olivari represent the future of Rice basketball. “All three of them have really high ceilings,” head coach Scott Pera said. “They’re really going to help us next year and in all their years here.”

Fiedler saw most of his action early on, cracking the starting lineup for the Bahamas showcase. He had three double-digit rebound games, providing much-needed size for the Owls on the inside. The decision to move to a smaller lineup, essentially inserting Josh Parris in place of Fiedler, saw his playing time diminish.

He finished the year with 23 appearances, averaging 2.4 points per game and 1.7 rebounds. He played more than 20 minutes once and never had many opportunities to get into a rhythm offensively. His value came from his interior presence.

Crisler’s usage was more sporadic. He saw a few minutes off the bench here and there, ramping up to an extended stretch in January where he started seven consecutive games. During that run, he averaged 4.0 points per game, scoring a career-high 11 points in the Owls’ upset of North Texas.

More: Erica Ogwumike talks end of season, Rice career on The Roost Podcast

There was a defined role on the court for Crisler through conference play. He wasn’t an integral piece but played meaningful minutes as a starter and off the bench. All that involvement should pay dividends toward his development going forward.

Olivari’s maturation was seemingly the most linear. He played in 30 of the Owls’ 32 games, becoming more and more involved as the season progressed. His shooting stroke off the bench was his primary contribution.

He averaged eight points a game in the Owls’ first four contests of the year despite playing 15 minutes or fewer in all of those games. From there he went from meaningful depth piece to a key cog of the bench, playing at least 14 minutes of the final 11 games, playing a career-high 28 minutes twice, one against Old Dominion and once against Middle Tennesse.

All three had their bright spots, reinforced by positive behaviors off the court. Pera praised their efforts, saying their first season was “‘a roller coaster for them in so many ways. I think all three of them experienced it. They handled it with great maturity.”

That trio, plus a new crop of recruits, make for an encouraging starting point for next season. Rice basketball has two signees in its 2020 class: forward Mylyjael Poteat and guard Cameron Sheffield. They are likely to add another player over the course of the next few months.

It takes talent and execution to win. The Owls are getting close to getting the right bodies to South Main. Now the hard part. Transforming raw ability into a cohesive squad.

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

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Filed Under: Basketball, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Max Fiedler, Quincy Olivari, Rice basketball, Zach Crisler

Rice Basketball bids goodbye to pair of senior leaders

March 24, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball retains a young core, but they’ll miss the leadership of Ako Adams and Robert Martin on and off the court next season.

Year 3 of the Scott Pera era of Rice basketball featured a young team growing into their collective ability. The nucleus of the Owls’ 2019-2020 squad consisted of three sophomore guards: Trey Murphy, Drew Peterson and Chris Mullins. Seniors Ako Adams and Robert Martin were the elder statesmen with some freshman and various role players filling out a developing rotation.

The team felt like a work in progress for much of the season. Yet somehow the tandem of Adams and Martin always seemed to keep them from veering too far off course. Their leadership will be miss even more than their talents on the court.

“The growth that they showed, through everything not being how they wanted it and being perfect, to hang in there and continue to do the right things [was important],” head coach Scott Pera said of his departing senior class.

More: Erica Ogwumike talks end of season, Rice career on The Roost Podcast

Although he’d never draw attention to himself, Ako Adams leaves Rice basketball as one of the program’s most decorated players. He finished his career as the all-time program leader in three-point attempts, three points made, free throw percentage and games played. He finished 12th in assists, 17th in three-point field goal percentage and 28th in scoring.

Adams’ ability to understand the rhythm of the offense and flow within it might have been his most impressive skill. He didn’t rack up his record-breaking numbers with sheer volume. He shared the basketball and waited for good shots. All the while he was confident enough to step into big moments. Adams was never afraid to put a shot up from anywhere on the court.

Martin found his home as the Owls’ sixth man, averaging 11.8 points per game off the bench. He shot 34.4 percent from three and finished second on the team with 4.8 defensive rebounds per game.

That duo, along with occasional cameos from Tim Harrison, Addison Owen and Tommy McCarthy formed a senior class that was instrumental to the growth of the Rice basketball program.

“That’s kind of what I told the seniors in the locker room after the [Conference USA Tournament] game. [I told them] how much I appreciated how they helped this program grow,” head coach Scott Pera said. “They were part of the beginning blocks of building this program.”

Pera’s program has continued to take small steps in the right direction. He credits players like Adams and Martin with setting the course for the growing team. Pointed in the right direction, it will be up to their teammates to stay the course. The Rice seniors gave all that they could.

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

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Filed Under: Basketball, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Ako Adams, Rice basketball, Robert Martin, Scott Pera

Rice Basketball: Making sense of an up and down season

March 23, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

From its rocky start to awkward ending, the 2019-2020 Rice Basketball season was a roller coaster ride. Coach Scott Pera believes the best is yet to come.

Rice basketball ended their 2019-2020 season sooner than they’d hoped. The Owls fell to the FIU Panthers in the first round of the Conference USA Tournament on Wednesday, March 11th. Rice boarded the busses and headed home.

Less than 12 hours later on Thursday, March 12, every other team in C-USA followed suit.

“It was obviously weird, bizarre,” head coach Scott Pera said of the sudden shutdown. “I didn’t see it heading this way quickly and that’s what happened.”

Safeguards against the coronavirus had forced the suspension of the NBA season while Pera’s team was still on the court, battling for what they believed was their season. Pera is still processing that.

“You wanted to be mad you lost, but it didn’t matter if you won… But if we had won the game, then it’s all like well, what if? What if? And I don’t want to feel any of that stuff either.”

More: Erica Ogwumike talks end of season, Rice career on The Roost Podcast

The weird end to the year parallels an up and down season. Rice basketball finished the year 15-17 (7-11), one victory shy of a .500 record. The Owls boasted a few impressive program firsts along the way.

Rice took down Penn, UCSB and ECU in non-conference play. The win over ECU was the program’s first over an AAC opponent. When conference play began, the Owls won on the road against UAB and Middle Tennessee for the first time in program history. They also topped C-USA regular season champion North Texas at Tudor Fieldhouse. Meanwhile, Ako Adams smashed through the Rice record books, leaving Rice with the most games played in program history.

Although the team was a touch more consistent than they had been in previous seasons, the low points were seemingly just as frequent. Rice went 0-3 against C-USA Tournament 11-Seed UTEP. Losses to Southern Miss and UTSA in the regular season pushed them into the bottom pod for bonus play.

After taking time to collect his thoughts after the season’s whirlwind finish, Pera is able to walk away with some sense of closure. “We played we lost. We had finality,” he said of the conference tournament.

Panning out further toward the season as a whole, Pera takes a more optimistic vantage point. “I have one major goal and purpose, and that is to continue to grow the program. That goal, in my mind, I think was undoubtedly accomplished,” Pera remarked. “Could we want a few more games? Sure, we could have… but it’s all part of the growth. I feel like we took a necessary step.”

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

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Filed Under: Basketball, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Ako Adams, Rice basketball, Scott Pera

Rice Football: 2020 Spring practice closing thoughts

March 22, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football snuck in six spring practices before they were canceled by Conference USA. Here are a few things we learned and questions still unanswered.

My notebook is an organized mess every time Rice football practice is underway. I have notes from each session I attend. Those range from individual moments that impressed me to far-reaching questions that I’ve yet to reach a conclusion. Sometimes coaches or players can shed light on my queries, other times they’re left to ruminate until next session, next week, or longer.

More: Erica Ogwumike talks end of season, Rice career on The Roost Podcast

Rice is fortunate they got to practice at all. Several Conference USA teams called off all sessions before they ever stepped foot on the field. There are a lot of question marks scribbled in the pages from the Owls’ six spring practice sessions. In this case, some clarity is better than none.

Depth Charts

I hesitate to put out defined depth charts, especially from spring ball. Players are cycling in and out, some are learning new positions. The alignment of the team on any one play varies tremendously. Starters are easier to determine. Backups are … well, an exercise best guessing. With that caveat, take these words as being scribed in pencil.

Rice Football First Team Offense

QB | Collins OR Johnson
RB | Otoviano
WR | Trammell, Rozner, Pitre
TE | Myers
OL | Servin (LT), Garcia OR Sheriff (LG), Klarkowski (C), Baker (RG), Woolford (RT)

Rice Football Second Team Offense

QB | McMahon
RB | Montgomery OR King
WR | Knipe, Bailey, Palmer
TE | Bull OR Bradley
OL | Ferraro (LT), Riddle (LG), Baker (C), Floyd (RG), Peterson (RT)

Offensive depth chart notes

I hate OR designations, but I really do believe there are several open spots on the offense right now. Quarterback is the most obvious. If Rice football had to play tomorrow, I’d bet Mike Collins is the guy, but it’s close. That’s not to say he stole the show this spring — he and JoVoni Johnson were both solid — but I like Collins’ combination of size and elusiveness. I’m still looking to see who can make more consistent plays downfield between those two. The more accurate passer could win the job in fall camp.

Cam Montgomery looks really good. Really good. Rice had a deep backfield last year and Montgomery fumbled away some of his opportunities, leaving him buried on the bench. He’s probably the fastest player on the team right now (or at least in the top five). He’ll be the third down and pass catching back. There’s plenty of room for Jawan King to carve out a role as well.

Not much changed on the pass catching front outside of some good plays from sophomore tight end Jack Bradley. He was on a very short list of true freshman that played every game. They’d like to see him more involved this year. August Pitre had a great showing, too. He was much more aggressive in the air, fighting for the football and winning one-one-one matchups.

On the offensive line, it’s encouraging to see Izeya Floyd running with the twos. So far, the transition seems to be going well. Klarkowski as the starting center surprised me a bit, but I attribute that more to the need for answers at guard. If someone emerges there, Baker more than likely moves back to center. JoVaun Woolford is an impressive human being. If he adds another 15 to 20 pounds this offseason he’s going to be a huge asset at the tackle spot.

Rice Football First Team Defense

DL | Schuman, Hubbard, Carrol, Orji
LB | Alldredge, Montero
CB | Devones, Thornton
Saf | Smith, Nyakwol, Chamberlain

Rice Football Second Team Defense

DL | Doddridge, Enechukwu, Garcia, Page
LB | Morrison, Grammer
CB | Bird, White
Saf | Calderon, Lockhart, Richardson

Defensive depth chart notes

The defense looks pretty cookie cutter from how Rice football ended last season. De’Braylon Carroll will slide up into a starting spot replacing the departing Myles Adams. Kenneth Orji will become the full-time man at rush end with Anthony Ekpe gone. The rest of the first team is essentially unchanged.

Myron Morrison has entrenched himself as a rotation player at linebacker. The coaches love his work ethic and he made several big plays this spring. He and Garrett Grammer will back up Antonio Montero and Blaze Alldredge.

There’s a pretty clear delineation from the first and second teams in the secondary, but the top 10 guys are solid. Rice is bringing in some talented playmakers in the secondary, but this shouldn’t be a situation where anyone is forced to play early from necessity. They’ll have to earn it, which they very well might do.

The defensive line is a spot to monitor. I loved what I saw from Kebreyun Page, and Ikenna Enechukwu has been steadily improving from last season until now. I’m not sure about the defensive end spot. Joshua Pearcy and Jacob Doddridge both took some time there during the spring.

Special Teams

There are a few certainties on special teams.

  1. Austin Trammell will be the punt returner
  2. Stanford transfer Collin Riccitelli will be the place kicker
  3. Charlie Mendes will be the punter
  4. Cam Riddle will be the long snapper

There really won’t be any competition whatsoever at those four spots. That leaves kickoffs and the holder as the only real question marks. Those auditions will continue into the fall.

Unanswered questions

1. Who is going to be the starting quarterback?

Collins and Johnson separated themselves this spring, but neither “seized the job” as coach Bloomgren has often wished of his quarterbacks. They’re both great on the ground with Collins getting a slight edge because of his size. Johnson may not be injury prone, but he’s slimmer and did get forced out of his start against Marshall last year with an injury. I still think we could have one guy before the season opener, but don’t expect the competition closed before a week or two of fall camp.

2. Which offense will Rice run?

The way Rice lined up against Army was night and day different from how they played against Middle Tennessee. Bloomgren will stick to his guns and run the football, but he’s not going to discount the success they found through the air. The offensive line might be the key determinant in how Rice attacks on offense. But we still don’t know how that unit will be pieced together quite yet.

3. Where are the gaps that incoming players need to fill?

In previous springs, it’s been fairly evident where the team needs an impact player. Given the little sample size this time, it’s hard to know which of the incoming signing class is going to have the clearest path to playing time.

I have a hunch someone is going to emerge from the running backs. Kobie Campbell and Khalan Griffin are special talents that could impact the game on special teams or as offensive weapons. On defense, I want to see what happens in the secondary. Can someone like Lamont Narcisse work his way onto the field? That might depend on a few factors. On both sides of the ball, we’ll have to wait and see what happens in the fall.

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

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Adam Sheriff, Andrew Bird, Antonio Montero, August Pitre, Austin Trammell, Blaze Alldredge, Bradley Rozner, Brandt Peterson, Cam Montgomery, Cam Riddle, Charlie Mendes, Clay Servin, Cole Garcia, Collin Riccitelli, De'Braylon Carroll, Derek Ferraro, Elijah Garcia, Garrett Grammer, George Nyakwol, Isaac Klarkowski, Isaiah Richardson, Izeya Floyd, Jack Bradley, Jacob Doddridge, Jaeger Bull, Jake Bailey, Jashon Palmer, Jason White, JaVante Hubbard, Jawan King, Jordan Myers, Jovaun Woolford, Jovoni Johnson, Juma Otoviano, Kebreyun Page, Kenneth Orji, Kirk Lockhart, Mike Collins, Myron Morrison, Naeem Smith, Prudy Calderon, Regan Riddle, Rice Football, Shea Baker, TJ McMahon, Tre'shon Devones, Treshawn Chamberlain, Trey Schuman, Tyrae Thornton, Zane Knipe

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