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Rice Swimming says goodbye to faithful senior class

May 6, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

The Rice Swimming senior class had their careers ended earlier than they would have hoped, but they still managed some special moments in the pool.

Every so often a phenomenal young athlete steps on campus and turns heads. The once-in-a-lifetime type talent that wows everyone from the very start. For most members of the Rice swimming team, things don’t start that way. It’s a process, one that when followed to completion, leaves a satisfying reward for the swimmer and the program.

The culmination of years of focus is what made this senior class so special. As head coach Seth Huston described it, “It was just about them growing up.”

That development process shined through in their work ethic both in and out of the pool. “In a lot of ways they trained and raced better than they had throughout their career,” Huston said. “Honestly, they were their best [version of themselves].”

The Roost Podcast: Listen now to our Extended Offseason Interview Series

It was that buy in and commitment to work that made them special. Sarah Nowaski, Harper Gillentine, Kate Nezelek and Claire Therien left their mark on Rice swimming in more ways than one.

In the water, these seniors were solid. The quarter was well decorated at the C-USA Championships alone. Nowaski placed third in the 400 IM. Gillentine was part of the 200 Free Relay team that finished second. Nezelek finished second in the 50 Free, 100 Free, 200 Free Relay and 400 Free. She also placed third in the 400 Medley Relay.

Therien’s story combines success with sweetness. The senior had never won an event entering in her career entering the final day of the Conference USA Championship. Then she got in the pool and swam the best race of her Rice career.

“She just got in there and kind of swam her race and came out on top in the end,” Huston said with pride. Therien’s moment encapsulated a career of hard work and served as the perfect summary of this senior class.

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Filed Under: Women's Athletics, Archive Tagged With: Rice swimming

Rice Swimming: The last Owls standing this spring

May 4, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice swimming was the last of the Owls’ teams to compete this spring, ending their season with a top five finish at a truncated CSCAA National College Invitational.

On a Tuesday evening in March Rice swimming flew from Houston to Cleveland to compete in the CSCAA National College Invitational. Coronavirus concerns had put some on edge, but the team hadn’t fully come to terms with the breadth and the pace of the problem at that time.

Still, the meet began as scheduled on Thursday, March 12. Although swimmers were in and out of the water as usual, the air in the Busbey Natatorium was flat. Rice swimming head coach Set Huston characterized the atmosphere as “distracted”, something he doesn’t ever really associated with his team.

To the contrary, Huston called the continued maturity of his team the defining achievement of the Owls’ season. He cited the teams’ resiliency through adversity and their ability to compete “anytime, anywhere, any place”. That growing resolve was put on display during the invitational.

The Roost Podcast: Listen now to our Extended Offseason Interview Series

The swimmers were in the middle of their preliminary events when conferences around the country began canceling their basketball championships. The NBA had been shut down the night prior. Still, they swam on. Some teams pulled out between prelims and finals. As long as city of Cleveland and the hosting school Cleveland State deemed it permissible to compete, the Owls would press on.

As the final swims were beginning that night, teams were notified this would be the last day of the invitational. It too, like all other major sporting events around the world, had been tabled by the coronavirus pandemic.

Even with the world coming to a halt around them, Rice swimming competed to the very end. The Owls’ finished fifth place out of 33 teams, taking home silver medals in the 50-yard freestyle swam by Kate Nezelek and the team sprint relay. Rice has now placed in the top five in every appearance at the invitation, starting with the inaugural 2014 meet which the Owls won.

There were several impressive results along the way. Huston is particularly proud of his team’s sweep at the Dual-A-Palooza. A two-day event in which Rice topped Denver, Tulane and eventual C-USA Champion FIU. By and large, it was a successful season, and one that lasted longer than most every other collegiate season around the country.

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Filed Under: Women's Athletics, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Rice swimming

Erica Ogwumike still in awe of WNBA Draft and Minnesota Lynx future

April 21, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Erica Ogwumike has put medical school on hold. The Rice women’s basketball alum will first give pro ball a shot with the WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx.

It’s been a wild few weeks for former Rice women’s basketball guard Erica Ogwumike. One month ago she was a guest on The Roost Podcast where we chatted about the abrupt end of her collegiate career. What would come next, even Ogwumike admits, was something that she hadn’t really started to process.

The WNBA wasn’t brought up in that discussion. Ogwumike says the possibility of being drafted hadn’t really been on her mind. “Honestly, a couple of days before the draft is kind of when it hit, that my name was consistently being out there.”

Then, in the third round of the 2020 WNBA Draft, the New York Liberty selected Ogwumike 26th overall. She was promptly traded to the Minnesota Lynx, but the moment itself is something she’ll never forget.

“I’m just grateful that my name was called,” Ogwumike said, in awe. “I was like, okay, this is really gonna happen. And yeah, even now, it still feels kind of strange.”

Ogwumike knows she’ll field just as many questions about herself as she will about her family name. Her sisters were mentioned numerous times during her introductory zoom call (a sign of the times, right?) with the Lynx.

Erica credited favorable genetics and the challenge of playing against Nneka and Chiney growing up for part of her ability to reach this point in her basketball career. She admitted rebounding might be attributable as much be to her bloodline as her efforts.

The Roost Podcast: Check out our Extended Offseason Interview Series

Another thank you was extended to Tina Langley, Ogwumike’s coach at Rice over her last three seasons. Ogwumike said Langley was in contact with her before and after the draft, reaching out to her former player to share her congratulations. “She’s really happy that I was able to accomplish this and I credit a lot of it to her as well,” Ogwumike said. “She’s been a great coach, a great mentor and I’m happy to have her in my life.”

Life will look a bit different in Minnesota than it did at South Main. Whenever Ogwumike is able to arrive she’ll trade labs for full-time hoops, eager to give pro basketball her all for the time being. As with everything else, she’s ready for the challenge.

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Filed Under: Basketball, Archive, Featured, Women's Athletics Tagged With: Erica Ogwumike, Rice Women's basketball

WNBA Draft: Erica Ogwumike chosen by Liberty, traded to Lynx

April 17, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Former Rice women’s basketball star Erica Ogwumike has been selected by the New York Liberty in the 2020 WNBA Draft and traded to the Minnesota Lynx.

When her Rice women’s basketball career came to a close, Erica Ogwumike had already paved the way for her future off the court. The Owls’ all-time leader in scoring average had spent most of the preseason flying back and forth across the country as she interviewed with medical schools. Ogwumike has since been accepted to nine medical schools, but her immediate future was somewhat in flux.

That was true until Friday night, when Ogwumike was selected by the New York with the second pick of the third round of the WNBA Draft. She was soon traded to the Minnesota Lynx.

Another one joins the squad!

We've acquired @Ogwumi13 in the third round from New York Liberty for Stephanie Talbot. pic.twitter.com/cjH6BOfgUR

— Minnesota Lynx (@minnesotalynx) April 18, 2020

Erica joins her sisters, Nneka and Chiney in the professional ranks. She is the third of four sisters to earn a WNBA Draft selection. Both Nneka and Chiney were chosen first overall, Nneka by the Los Angeles Sparks in 2012 and Chiney by the Connecticut Sun in 2014. Ogwumike had to wait her turn to come off the board, but still joined an exclusive group of WNBA draftees.

More on The Roost Podcast: Erica Ogwumike talks COVID-19 and her Rice career

As evidenced by her medical school opportunities, the youngest sister took a different path to begin her professional career. Erica was not a highly-touted recruited. Nor did she make any NCAA Tournament Final Four appearances like her sisters. She took a less conventional route, going from Pepperdine to Rice, where she caught fire as her career progressed.

Ogwumike finished her collegiate career as the back-to-back Conference USA Player of the Year. She led her team to back-to-back regular season conference championships and an NCAA Tournament appearance in 2019. A truncated 2020 season prevented what could have been another postseason run.

Those memories will take a back seat for now as Ogwumike embarks on a new adventure. For now, med school is on hold. Ogwumike is headed to the WNBA.

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Filed Under: Basketball, Featured, Women's Athletics Tagged With: Erica Ogwumike, Rice Women's basketball

Rice Volleyball: Raising the bar for 2020 and beyond

April 13, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Volleyball won its first NCAA Tournament match in school history in 2019. How will the Owls’ measure future success in light of that achievement?

How do you improve on the best season you’ve ever had? That’s the question hanging over Rice Volleyball this offseason. The Owls will lose several key pieces and ask new ones to help carry the load. The objective will always be to win, but the standard has been set higher than it’s ever been before.

Coach Genny Volpe has made the program’s expectations crystal clear.

“Getting to the NCAA Tournament is our expectation, and its been our expectation to continue to elevate and advance in the tournament, but for me, and more importantly, are we maximizing our potential? Are we improving when we get on the court daily? Because then all of those things fall into place.

In the midst of a world that focuses all too often on the end result, Volpe remains committed to the journey. Rather than use terms like optimist or realist, Volpe calls herself “a real process-oriented type of person.”

That mindset is apropos to the culture of Rice Athletics and it makes a lot of sense. It takes so many things to go right to reach the pinnacle of any endeavor. There can only be one national champion every year. Reaching that apex takes effort and focus, but it also takes a little bit of luck.

Volpe knows that she can train consistency and focus. If she does that, the Owls will be set up to capitalize on any breaks that do come her way. And they’ll be better prepared to navigate the obstacles that will inevitably appear as well.

Seasons are measured in wins and losses, but that’s not the metric Volpe deems most vital. “Are we maximizing our potential?” is the question that runs through her head over and over again.

Potential is much more difficult to quantify. It can’t be measured by a number, rather calculated through less tangible facets: culture, chemistry, buy-in and others.

Seamlessly integrating newcomers into a program that has already found a productive rhythm is a challenge, but one that will prove vital toward the Owls’ success on the court next fall. Volpe’s messaging is consistent in that arena as well. “Find what your role is, no matter how big or how small, and embrace it for the good of the team.” Compiling those roles into offensive and defensive strategies is the starting point for what Rice hopes will be another year of record-setting success.

“It’s going to take work. There’s no question we lost a lot of pieces to that puzzle,” Volpe said. But there was no hesitation in her voice. The talent to win exists on the roster. Her job is to assemble the pieces, something she’s excelled at in her decade-plus tenure at Rice.

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Volleyball Tagged With: Rice Volleyball

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