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Rice Baseball suffers sweep by Yale

March 9, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

The losses continue to mount for Rice Baseball, which suffered a series loss to Yale, dropping the Owls’ overall record to 2-13 on the season.

FRIDAY | Yale 8, Rice 3

Rice baseball starter Davion Hickson found himself in early trouble on Friday night when a hit by pitch and an error thrust him into a jam. Yale would capitalize, striking for two in that inning before threatening in the second and breaking through in earnest in the third. Yale made it 5-0 after three, taking advantage of free passes and defensive errors to force Hickson out of the game before the fifth inning.

Last Weekend: Rice Baseball winless at Astros College Classic

The Rice bats got three back but two more runs charged to Von Baker made it 8-3 heading to the sixth. Even with an impressive four-inning, no-hit, six-strikeout showing form Garrett Stratton in relief, the deficit proved too large to overcome with the Owls falling in the series opener by a final score of 8-4.

SATURDAY | Yale 11, Rice 8

JD McCracken got Rice off to a much improved start on Saturday afternoon, mowing down Yale batters through six scoreless innings before the Bulldogs finally got to him with a solo home run to open the seventh. Even with the blemish, McCracken had done enough to put the Owls in a position to win, along with 3 RBI from Michael Zito and Graiden West’s first career home run at the plate.

“He was spectacular. He was amazing,” Rice baseball head coach Jose Cruz Jr. said of McCracken’s showing. “He does set the tone. And he pitches to contact. There’s a lot of action out there. We’re happy to have him. As long as he’s healthy, he’ll be out there as long as he can go.”

McCracken’s brilliance would fizzle quickly when he left the mound. It didn’t matter who came through the door, Tucker Alch, Jackson Blank and Caleb Williams were each responsible for runs that turned a significant Rice lead into an agonizing loss as Yale scored 11 in the final three innings. Rice would get three back, but it wouldn’t be enough to salvage the game.

SUNDAY | Yale 7, Rice 4

Yale struck first in the series finale, getting two runs in the first and two more in the second, forcing Rice starter Robert Fernandez from the game early on. This time, the Owls’ bats offered some resistance, though. Rice scored three in the bottom of the first, one run via an error and the final two coming on the first home run from freshman Blaine Brown.

More: 2025 Rice Baseball Season Preview

Trailing 4-3 after two innings, both bullpens kept the game close until Yale broke through in the seventh with one insurance run and two more in the eight. Down 7-3, Brown added another RBI on a single in the eighth but that would prove to be the end of the scoring for both teams on the weekend and Rice dropped the final game 7-4.

THREE FOR THE ROAD

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Filed Under: Archive, Baseball, Premium Tagged With: Blaine Brown, Caleb Williams, Davion Hickson, game recap, Garrett Stratton, Graiden West, Jackson Blank, JD McCracken, Marco Fuentes, Michael Zito, Rice baseball, Robert Fernandez, Tucker Alch

Rice Women’s Basketball surges past UAB at AAC Tournament

March 9, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Women’s Basketball finished off an early lead with a dominant fourth quarter run to extend their season and defeat UAB in the American Conference Tournament.

UAB got out of the gates in a hurry in the first game of a full four-game Sunday slate at Dickies Arena, the hosting venue for the bulk of the 2025 American Conference Tournament. The eight-seed Blazers took a 10-3 over Rice Women’s Basketball as the Owls struggled to get their shots to fall in the opening minutes of the contest.

Rice would close the quarter on a 7-0 run to bring the score even at 15 apiece before building themselves a modest lead at halftime, furthered by a buzzer-beating three from Malia Fisher as the clock expired before the break. Fisher’s three put Rice up by eight and while UAB would inch closer in the third quarter, Rice was able to maintain a healthy lead and enter the final frame up by nine.

More: Rice Football: 2025 Recruiting Class Analysis — Defense

UTSA scored the first four points in the fourth quarter to get back within five but that was the moment Rice women’s basketball seized control and never looked back. Rice scored 12 unanswered points, turning a close game into a relatively comfortable win to survive an advance to the next round of the American Conference Tournament.

Final Box | Rice 76, UAB 63

FINAL | @RiceWBB 76, UAB 63

Owls earn a rematch with UTSA tomorrow. #GoOwls pic.twitter.com/ENVox2S9mA

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 9, 2025

What They’re Saying

I’m just incredibly proud of our group. Grateful for the opportunity to compete in the Conference Tournament. Grateful to get the first win. I thought we had a very well balanced attack and it was everything that we needed to make sure that we get this first win. – Rice women’s Basketball head coach Lindsay Edmonds

Key takeaway | Finding that fourth quarter fight

Closing out games has been the Achilles heel for Rice women’s basketball this season. So many fourth quarter leads have evaporated in the matter of minutes dropping the Owls down the standings all the way to the No. 9 seed.

There was a moment on Sunday afternoon when it felt like that nagging pain would resurface for one final, fateful time. UAB opened the fourth quarter on a quick 4-0 run, cutting a nine-point deficit down to five to get back within striking distance with a full quarter remaining.

Rather than fold, Rice rallied. The Owls rattled off 12 unanswered points, catapulting themselves to a 17-point lead, their largest of the game. That furious rally is what this team has been missing all too often this season. If they can showcase that fight just a few more times they’ll have a real chance to keep their season alive a few more days and replicate last year’s historic run.

“We start the year saying that are season is three seasons, non-conference, conference and then the conference tournament is our third season. It was 0-0 before today, the wins and the losses didn’t matter. We wanted to come out and be the best team that we could be today and get the first win. We talked about last year. We talked about the run that we had,” Edmonds said.

“Last year was incredible and we want to feel that again, but nobody is going to hand it to us. We got to make sure that we go and take it every single day. We need to be hungry for the wins that we need here.”

The task doesn’t get any easier, though. Rice draws No. 1 Seed UTSA in their next game. The Roadrunners edged the Owls’ 57-55 a few weeks ago on Senior Day.

Up Next: AAC Tournament (vs 1-Seed UTSA | Monday, March 10 at 12:00 PM CT)

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

Rice Basketball loses to Wichita State on Senior Day

March 6, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

As has been the case for much of the season, Rice Basketball took another team down to the wire, this time falling to Wichita State.

A swarming Rice basketball defense set the tone for what would become a grind of a game at Tudor Fieldhouse on Senior Night. The Owls forced three Wichita State turnovers in the first two minutes, jumping out quickly to an 8-2 advantage. They’d hold a small lead for the better portion of the first half before things began to unravel.

Wichita State went on a thunderous 12-0 run to go in front by seven, taking advantage of six Rice turnovers in that span. Despite an ice-cold stretch in which Rice missed 11-of-12 shots from the field and fell behind by 10, the Owls were able to rally and get back within three points at halftime.

More: Rice Football: 2025 Recruiting Class Analysis — Offense

After a bit of shooting lull to open the second half, Rice finally started to heat up from the field. Four consecutive field goals, two from Andrew Akuchie inside and a pair of threes from Alem Huseinovic brought the game back within one possession. That razor thin margin would linger for the rest of the game.

Emory Lanier his a layup to bring Rice within four with 6:57 to play. Neither side would make a field goal for more than six minutes until Wichita State finally got a jumper to go, snapping a stretch of 12 missed shots in a row. Unfortunately for Rice, their seven consecutive misses prevented them from closing the gap and resulted in yet another deflating, close loss.

Final Box | Wichita State 63, Rice 59

FINAL | Wichita State 63, @RiceMBB 59. pic.twitter.com/rh6pp4ScaB

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 7, 2025

What They’re Saying

.@RiceMBB head coach Rob Lanier shares his thoughts on the game and what he's learned about the team this season. pic.twitter.com/jDcr6hXrx3

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 7, 2025

Key takeaway | Onto Denton, then Fort Worth?

The final standings won’t be determined until after the weekend, but Rice basketball will be playing at the Super Pit next Wednesday. By virtue of the Owls’ loss on Thursday, they won’t catch Tulsa in the standings and will most likely be playing Charlotte in the play-in game. The seeding, whether Rice will be the No. 12 or No. 13, is yet to be determined.

If Rice can win that game, set to be played at the Super Pit in Denton, then they’ll join the rest of the conference at Dickies Arena in Fort Worth for the rest of the tournament.

Up Next: AAC Tournament

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

Rice Baseball thumped by Houston

March 5, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball dropped the first game of the Silver Glove Series against Houston, sleepwalking through the Cougars’ offensive assault.

Fans had barely had time to wolf down their dollar hot dogs before the game was effectively ended on Wednesday night. Rice baseball came out flat in the first game of the Silver Glove Series against Houston, allowing four runs in the first, three in the second and five more in the third, falling into a 12-0 deficit before they came to bat in the third inning.

Read More: Rice Baseball winless at Astros College Classic

Nolan Roycraft got the start and couldn’t make it out of the first. Reed Gallant was next up and wore eight runs before being lifted for Jackson Blank, who pitched 2.2 scoreless innings. By then, the damage was done.

Between Blank and Von Baker, Rice held Houston off the board in the next three innings. Colin Robson got Rice on the board with an RBI groundout in the sixth but that was all the Owls could manage in another run-rule defeat. Houston scored six in the seventh to put the game away for good, winning by a final score of 18-1 in seven innings.

Generally, it’s hard to put too much stock in a midweek game, especially considering the randomness associated with college baseball and the various permutations of lineups and pitching staffs, but getting run-ruled in your own ballpark by your biggest rival is going to sting for some time. This was not the way Rice baseball envisioned beginning its 2025 season.

What it means | Midweek mess

Rice baseball did win its first midweek game of the season, defeating Sam Houston 6-1, primarily on the arm of Tucker Alch who twirled a gem to pick up the Owls’ first win of the season. When Alch isn’t at his absolute best, who is Rice supposed to turn to get outs during the midweek?

More: 2025 Rice Baseball Season Preview

Lamar scored 11. Houston had topped that number before the end of the third inning. Rice has a total of three additional games still to come against that pair of teams. Fortunately, no midweek matchups with in-state power conference teams like Texas or Baylor are on the docket, but this pitching staff just doesn’t seem to have the depth to face any caliber of D1 opponent this weekend.

That puts pressure onto the starting rotation to get more length during the weekend to preserve the rest of the arms on staff and amplifies the impact needed from the bats, which have been promising at times, but erratic from game to game.

ON DECK | vs Yale (Fri-Sun), TAMU-CC (Mon)

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Filed Under: Archive, Baseball Tagged With: game recap, Rice baseball

Rice Baseball defeated by Lamar

March 4, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball overcame an early deficit but couldn’t keep up with the Lamar bats, falling to the Cardinals on Tuesday night at Reckling Park.

The situation looked dire on Tuesday night when Rice baseball found itself in a 4-0 hole against the visiting Lamar Cardinals as starter Tucker Alch labored through the early innings. The bats would come to his rescue, getting all four runs back in the bottom of the second and putting Rice in front with a two-spot in the fourth.

By the time Alch left the contest, he was in line for the win. Expectations had to be measured, though, as Alch handed the ball off to Garrett Stratton in the top of the fifth with two on and none out, clinging to a one-run advantage.

Last Time Out: Rice Baseball winless at Astros College Classic

Not only did that advantage go up in smoke, but the Owls’ lead would never materialize again. After jumping in front by two, Lamar would score the last seven runs of the game, battering a beleaguered Rice bullpen and sending the Owls to a fifth consecutive loss

What it means | Youth Movement

The lineup has continued to skew younger and younger as the Owls’ season has progressed and that youth movement doesn’t seem to be going away. In just his second game in the leadoff spot, Hiram Bocachica went 3-for-6 with 2 RBI. Fellow freshman Michael Zito and Cole Green each scored two runs with Zito adding a three-hit game, too.

Although he’s not a freshman, Tobias Motley became the only Rice player this season to leave the yard multiple times, getting the Owls on the board with a solo shot in the second inning. Fellow sophomore Landon West walked twice. Blaine Brown got into the action later on, picking up a pair of hits, one of them a double.

More: 2025 Rice Baseball Season Preview

In a season full of more bad news than Rice baseball fans would have hoped, the younger players have been the bright spot. Watching them develop and progress has the potential to be one of the defining throughlines of the season.

ON DECK | vs Houston (Wed), vs Yale (Fri-Sun)

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Filed Under: Archive, Baseball Tagged With: game recap, Rice baseball

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