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Rice Basketball Roundup: MBB and WBB each fall to MTSU

January 11, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Both Rice basketball teams were in action against Middle Tennessee. Here’s a brief rundown of how the men and women faired and what’s next for both.

Rice Basketball

A last-second three-point attempt at the buzzer hit iron as Rice basketball ran out of time for a second-half comeback against MTSU.

Rice basketball arrived ready to play on Wednesday night against MTSU. Things were back and forth for a few minutes before Rice basketball started to click.

Travis Evee knocked down a couple of threes to help spark a 32-12 finish to the first half. The Owls shot the ball well, connecting on 50 percent of their shots from the floor in the first half, but defended even better, holding the Blue Raiders to 10 field goals before the break on 33 percent shooting.

Middle Tennessee would get their sea legs in the second half, cutting a 14-point Rice lead down to a single point with just over nine minutes to play. Then, after some back and forth, they’d take their first lead of the second half with just over five minutes remaining in the contest. Rice had their chances, including a three-point shot at the buzzer, but they ran out of time.

Final Box | MTSU 71 – Rice 68

FINAL | MTSU 71 – @RiceMBB 68

Last second three hits the rim as Owls drop to 2-3 in C-USA play. pic.twitter.com/dhNvSqNUPE

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) January 12, 2023

Key takeaway | Which team is it going to be?

It was hard to avoid feeling like the sky was falling on Rice basketball through the first eight days of their 2022-2023 season. The Owls opened the season with a 39-point defeat against Pepperdine (a team they handled comfortably last season) and followed it up seven days later with a 35-point loss to Middle Tennessee. The season has just started and things were already a mess.

Since then? Rice is 9-3 with crucial conference wins over WKU and UTEP and a heartbreaking Middle Tennessee team that embarrassed them in Murfeesborro two months ago. Even Wednesday was a tale of two halves. The first half looked like the team that played through most of December. The second half was reminiscent of the November version.

Head coach Scott Pera took the loss hard on himself, calling the team’s second half defense “atrocious” and vowing “I have to do better,” as a string of challenging league games await them.

Guard Quincy Olivari shared the disappointment but was resolute in his focus on moving forward and climb out of their 2-3 conference start. “We can only win one game at a time,” he said. ” We can only focus on the next game ahead.”

Up Next: vs UTEP – Saturday, Jan. 14 at 2:00 p.m.


Rice Women's Basketball

Rice women’s basketball put together an early push, but fell apart late, getting blown out on the road against Middle Tennessee.

Middle Tennesse made one field goal in the first four and a half minutes of regulation, allowing Rice women’s basketball to build an early 9-3 advantage. After some challenging starts for the Owls, an early lead felt meaningful, but it quickly disappeared. They ended the quarter trailing by three and were outscored by the same 16-16 margin in the second quarter, too.

Trailing by six at halftime, things started going further south until — as the broadcast put it — “the wheels came off.” Rice was outscored 53-30 in the second half. Leading players Malia Fisher and Ashlee Austin each fouled out. The team shot 32.7 percent from the field in the game and allowed MTSU to shoot 51.6 percent. Rice missed nine free throws. It wasn’t a good night.

Final Box | MTSU 85 – Rice 56

FINAL | MTSU 85 – @RiceWBB 56

Owls fall to 1-4 in C-USA play after 9-0 start. pic.twitter.com/n0Gve9DeQO

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) January 12, 2023

Key takeaway | Something isn’t right

For the fourth time in their last five games, Rice women’s basketball has lost. They’ve also allowed 74 points or more in all four of those losses, a scoring threshold they’d allowed opponents to pass just twice in their first eight games that didn’t reach overtime. The defense hasn’t been stellar in recent weeks.

But that’s not the only cause for concern. Rice scored at least 76 points in their first six games of the season, only failing to reach that mark three times in the non-conference play, against Texas A&M, TCU and Sam Houston (all wins). In five conference games, Rice has scored 76 points zero times.

There haven’t been significant changes to player availability. They aren’t playing teams that are drastically more talented than they are. But something isn’t working. It’s time to go back to the drawing board and figure it out, beginning with a win against UTEP on Saturday.

Up Next: at UTEP – Saturday, Jan. 14 at 1:00 p.m.

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

Rice Basketball Roundup: MBB and WBB each fall to LA Tech

January 5, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Both Rice basketball teams were in action against Louisiana Tech. Here’s a brief rundown of how the men and women faired and what’s next for both.

Rice Basketball

Rice basketball was on the wrong end of 14 lead changes in a back-and-forth affair, falling at home to Louisiana Tech on Thursday.

There was little separation between Rice basketball and Louisiana Tech on Thursday night at Tudor Fieldhouse. From the opening tip until the waning moments of the game, the two teams traded barbs. The Owls led by as many as nine before the Bulldogs powered back to tie the game for the seventh time with just under nine minutes to play in the second half.

Travie Evee and Quincy Olivari, the Owls’ leading scorers, were tremendous, combining for 44 points and eight three-pointers. Evee’s final heave of regulation was tremendous, falling through at the buzzer to force overtime.

Here's the Evee's three to end regulation. Ridiculous.pic.twitter.com/4MKquuBRua

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) January 6, 2023

Louisiana Tech would connect on 6-of-8 shots in the extra period and both three pointers. Rice came within two points of equalizing, but missed two crucial free throws down the stretch before running out of time.

Final Box | Rice 72 – UTEP 67

FINAL | @RiceMBB 72 – UTEP 67 (OT) pic.twitter.com/jOYez6bsms

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 31, 2022

Key takeaway | Defense no longer optional

Rice basketball dubbed itself “Green Light U” last year in reference to their willingness to shoot the ball early and often. That’s been a staple of their game since head coach Scott Pera arrived on campus. It’s been the defensive side that, so far, has been the missing component in the Owls’ arsenal.

No one is going to bang the gavel and declare Rice a defensive juggernaut just yet, but the frequency with which individuals continue to make significant defensive contributions is increasing. Even after an up-and-down first half, they came up big plays in key moments.

“We did make some plays when we had to, yeah, some big ones,” Pera said. “Because these kids are playing hard. They’re trying like heck and they’ve gotten better at a lot of those things.

Cameron Sheffield had two blocks and 11 defensive rebounds. Seryee Lewis forced a kick out pass, then corralled the rebound on the ensuing deep three. Max Fiedler forced a shot clock violation in the final 90 seconds with a strong position in the lane. Little by little, these individual moments are beginning to cascade.

Ultimately though, it was not enough. Rice doesn’t get to OT without some of those big defensive plays, but they’re going to need more of them to finish off games like this.

Up Next: vs Middle Tennessee – Wednesday, Jan. 11 at 7:00 p.m.


Rice Women's Basketball

Rice women’s basketball never got it in gear on the road, falling to Louisiana Tech in Ruston, falling to 1-3 in conference play.

Aside from a single three from Katelyn Crosthwait and seven points from Ashlee Austin, things got off to a rocky start in Ruston for Rice women’s basketball on Thursday night. Crosthwait and Austin were the only Owls to score in the opening quarter as the team fell behind 20-10 on a meager 26.7 percent shooting from the floor.

Rice chipped away a few points from that double-digit deficit in the second quarter and a few more in the third. After a rough beginning, they trailed Louisiana Tech by five entering the final frame and would have their chance to recover but the shots just weren’t falling. The Owls started 1-for-6 from the field, going over seven minutes without a field goal in the fourth quarter alone.

“We dug a deep hole and even though we fought and won the last three quarters, it was just too much to overcome,” head coach Lindsay Edmonds said.

They were able to extend the game on free throws and get within three in the final seconds, but things never quite clicked and Rice women’s basketball is now 1-3 in conference play.

Final Box | LA Tech 79 – Rice 74

FINAL | LA Tech 79 – @RiceWBB 74.

Owls fall to 1-3 in C-USA play action after 9-0 start. pic.twitter.com/SkyfIgWe3t

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) January 6, 2023

Key takeaway | Mid season slump is real, but not irreversible

You wouldn’t know it from watching their start to conference play, but this team began the season 9-0 and blazed through a couple of Power 5 programs in-state to get there. It’s been tough sledding ever since.

Unfortunately for the Owls, every game remaining is a conference game and the stakes will continue to raise with each successive contest. Non-conference wins won’t count in their quest for a top seed in the C-USA Tournament. They know that, though. And they’ve shown the ability to course correct before, even within their winning streak.

Oddly enough, this program went through a similar stretch last season. Edmonds sent the team home after an 0-5 start and they came back and finished 8-4 in their final 12 regular season games.

Up Next: at Middle Tennessee – Wednesday, Jan. 11 at 6:00 p.m.

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

Rice Basketball Roundup: MBB and WBB sweep UTEP

December 31, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Both Rice basketball teams were in action on New Year’s Eve. Here’s a brief rundown of how the men and women faired and what’s next for both.

Rice Basketball

Rice basketball capped off a 2-0 road trip on Saturday, taking down UTEP in overtime. It was their ninth win in their last 10 games.

Days removed from a big road win at Western Kentucky, Rice basketball found itself in an early hole in El Paso against UTEP. The Miners were up 20-15 just past the halfway mark of the first half. Not only did Rice do enough to narrow the deficit, the Owls’ finally got their shots to fall, going on a 16-0 run over the next six minutes and entering halftime with a 32-25 lead.

Rice was able to hold UTEP at bay for much of the second frame, taking their advantage to as many as 15 points. It wouldn’t last long, though. UTEP responded with a 12-0 run and then, with Rice up by 12 with 3:23 to go, UTEP finished the half on a 14-2 run to force overtime. On a day which Rice missed seven free throws, they made enough down the stretch in OT to secure the win with Quincy Olivari delivering the final pair.

Final Box | Rice 72 – UTEP 67

FINAL | @RiceMBB 72 – UTEP 67 (OT) pic.twitter.com/jOYez6bsms

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 31, 2022

Key takeaway | If Rice can win games like this… watch out

Quincy Olivari and Travis Evee are the most dangerous shooters the Owls have. They went 8-of-34 from the field on Saturday… and Rice still won. The Owls have quietly won nine of their last 10 with the only loss in that timeframe coming to a Top 10 Texas team in overtime. Rice has proven they can take the nation’s best to extra minutes and win on the road in conference play, twice in one weekend.

“Our kids had resolved. They dealt with adversity. They made plays when they had to,” head coach Scott Pera said.

Pera has this team playing great basketball as they enter the meat of conference play. Already with 11 wins, they’re five wins shy of matching Pera’s best mark at Rice (16) with 17 games left to play before the Conference USA Tournament.

Up Next: vs Louisiana Tech – Thursday, Jan. 5 at 7:00 p.m.


Rice Women's Basketball

Rice women’s basketball took charge of a close game late, powering past UTEP to earn their first conference win of the season.

It wasn’t until past the 4-minute mark in the third quarter that the margin between Rice women’s basketball and the UTEP Miners exceeded five points. The close game had reached a six-point UTEP advantage courtesy of a three-pointer, which proceeded a quick Rice rally to tie the game by the time the quarter reached its conclusion.

Then Rice put on the clamps. UTEP made two shots from the floor in the fourth quarter on 22.2 percent shooting. Rice held them scoreless in the final 3:05, meanwhile, Rice scored the final eight points of the game, ending with a nine-point advantage, the largest by either team in the game.

Final Box | Rice 62 – UTEP 53

FINAL | @RiceWBB 62 – UTEP 53

Owls close the game on an 8-0 run to earn their first conference win. pic.twitter.com/fZv9jEAHya

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 31, 2022

Key takeaway | Winning on defense

Head coach Lindsay Edmonds was quick to give much of the credit to the Owls’ work on defense. “I thought we hung our hats more on defense and rebounding this game, which is what we’ve been focusing on since we dropped the last one,” she said. Rice did outrebound UTEP eight to six in the pivotal fourth quarter, finishing just shy of even on the game (UTEP had 32 boards to Rice’s 30.)

Rice held UTEP to 34.6 percent shooting for the game, their best defensive showing since holding Texas Southern to 23.3 percent shooting on November 23. The 53 points allowed was the second fewest scored on Rice this year, better than only Texas Southern’s 49 points. It wasn’t a perfect defensive performance, but it was much better than the Owls have had in recent weeks, and most importantly, it was best when it mattered the most.  

Up Next: at Louisiana Tech – Thursday, Jan. 5 at 6:00 p.m.

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

Rice Women’s Basketball topped by WKU, falls to 0-2 in CUSA

December 29, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice women’s basketball took an early lead but wasn’t able to close it out, falling at home to Western Kentucky for their second straight C-USA defeat.

After a program-best 9-0 start, Rice women’s basketball’s last game before Christmas was an uncharacteristic loss to Middle Tennesee. Afterward, head coach Lindsay Edmonds was adamant it would not be the new norm.

“I’m going to remember this feeling. I hope the players remember this feeling,” she said. “We’re ready to get back to work so that we don’t feel this feeling too often.”

Early on it seemed like the team was cognizant of that warning. The Owls were at their best from the jump, outscoring WKU 26-16 in the opening quarter, but it wouldn’t be quite that easy. WKU would cut the Rice lead to one at the half, setting up a tight ballgame down the stretch.

Katelyn Crosthwait tied the game with two minutes to go on a big three-point shot. No longer staked with a double-digit lead, Rice was going to have to up their execution if they wanted to walk out of Tudor Fieldhouse with a win. Unfortunately, turnovers and missed free throws will make Rice wait at least two more days to get that ugly taste of defeat out of their mouths.

The Owls were 5-of-10 from the free throw line in the fourth quarter, finishing 13-0f-21 (62 percent) at the line for the game. They turned the ball over 21 times, including twice in the final minute, marring a winnable game.

Spotlight | Kennedy Clifton

The depth of this roster continues to impress with relatively new faces emerging for big moments and big games at every turn. On Thursday night it was Kennedy Clifton’s turn to shine. She finished with 12 points on 5-of-11 shooting (2-of-6 from three) with one rebound and one assist. On a quiet night from some of the Owls’ typical scorers, Clifton’s contributions were crucial.

Final Box | WKU 79 – Rice 74

FINAL | WKU 79 – @RiceWBB 74

After starting the season 9-0, Rice moves to 0-2 in CUSA. pic.twitter.com/KUNT42PylH

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 30, 2022

Up Next | Full Schedule

Rice women’s basketball will have one last home game to close out the year, hosting UTEP on New Year’s Eve. That’s scheduled to be a 2:00 p.m. tip-off at Tudor Fieldhouse. It will be broadcast on CUSAtv.

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

Kings of the Hill: Rice Basketball knocks off WKU

December 29, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball fell behind early, but caught fire when it mattered, upsetting Western Kentucky to earn a big road win.

A season ago, Rice basketball gave Western Kentucky a good half of a game at E.A. Diddle Arena in Bowling Green, KY. The second half, though, was all Hilltoppers, who seemed to have another gear the Owls just could not match. Rice got their road rematch with WKU on Thursday night and while it was indeed a tale of two halves, Rice made sure it was the second stanza that shouted the loudest.

It wouldn’t start pretty, though. Western Kentucky opened the game with a 10-0 explosion. With six minutes left in the first half, Rice trailed 29-16. The defense had held in key moments, but the offense hadn’t found its shooting stroke and was held without a field goal in the first 10 minutes of play. Nothing was falling… until it was.

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Trailing by 10 points at the break, Rice took off. The Owls shot a dismal 21.9 percent from the floor in the first half, making just five of 19 from three. “You’re not going to beat anyone shooting 21 percent,” head coach Scott Pera quipped post game, noting one important caveat “[In] previous years when we didn’t shoot well, it affected our defense. This group is different.”

Still in the game because of that defense, Rice started to catch fire. In the second half, Rice shot 58.1 percent from the floor and made nine of 15 three-pointers, including a sequence in which Travis Evee, Quincy Olivari and Cameron Sheffield went back-to-back-to-back to put Rice in front by seven under six minutes to play.

Western Kentucky lost their leading scorer Dayvion McKnight, but managed to tie the game up with 90 seconds to go. Rice would go up by one before Travis Evee made the defensive play of the night, stealing back the basketball and knocking down a pair of three throws to take a three-point lead with under 10 seconds to play. Rice would hold on and clinch Pera’s first ever win over the Hilltoppers.

Player Spotlight | Travis Evee

Part of last season’s prolific scoring duo with Carl Pierre, Evee had taken somewhat of a secondary spot behind Quincy Olivari early on this season. Olivari had been hot and Evee had done his job, getting the ball in his hands. But it always felt like just a matter of time before Evee — who hadn’t reached the 20-point mark since November 21 — was going to go off again.

Evee led all scorers with 24 points and was a perfect 8-for-8 from the charity stripe, including a pair of game-sealing shots down the stretch. He also added six rebounds and five assists. It was his best performance of the season and the Owls wouldn’t have been able to do what they did without him on the court on Thursday night.

Final Box | Rice 81 – WKU 78

FINAL | @RiceMBB 92 – North American 54 pic.twitter.com/W1uirJJHfQ

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 15, 2022

Up Next | Full Schedule

Rice basketball will finish 2022 with a New Year’s Eve tilt in the desert against UTEP, the second and final game of their current road trip. That game is scheduled for a 3:00 p.m. tip-off on CUSAtv.

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: Cameron Sheffield, game recap, Quincy Olivari, Rice basketball, Travis Evee

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