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Rob Lanier checks every box for Rice Basketball

March 26, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Basketball has its next head coach, officially naming Rob Lanier to the position on Tuesday after a whirlwind search that concluded rapidly.

Twelve days ago Athletic Director Tommy McClelland met with assembled media and announced Rice basketball was making a leadership change, embarking on a national search immediately. Interviews began as the shortlist was whittled down. Then a curveball came: Rob Lanier “became available”. Two days later he and McClelland were in contact. On Tuesday, he was introduced.

The last week has been a blur. Lanier admitted as much, but the end result might just be a tremendous advance for everyone involved. “I didn’t see this coming,” Lanier said of his dismissal at SMU. “But there’s a reason why I was attracted to this as soon as the name was mentioned. I didn’t imagine it would happen, but I couldn’t have been happier that it did.”

McClelland quickly came to the same conclusion, summing up the hiring on Tuesday like this: “One thing became very clear to be during these conversations, that Rob Lanier the right fit, the right person, the right coach and the right visionary leader we had been looking for from the very beginning.”

Lanier will bring with him top assistant Chris Kreider, who previously served as an assistant at Rice from 2017 to 2019 before joining Lanier’s staff at Georgia State and eventually moving with him to SMU. Lanier’s son, Emory, will also join the team for his final season of eligibility. Emory was one of eight players to play in every game for the Mustangs last season.

As for the decision to pull the trigger and hire Lanier, McClelland acted with intentionality. He made a list, he said, the day the search began. He disclosed the items on that list on Tuesday, describing what his ideal candidate would look like:

  • A person of high integrity
  • A driven leader with an intensity for developing winning culture
  • A coach with a clear identity regarding style of play
  • An emphasis on community involvement, campus, alumni and Houston
  • Proven head coach experience
  • A program builder
  • Texas ties
  • Private school experience

As he sums it up, “These qualities and attributes aligned with coach Lanier, his character, how he leads his program and what he has accomplished in his career has led me to this day,” the announcement of Lanier as the program’s next head coach.

A few additional segments of the press conference are featured below. The full version is available here:

Rice AD Tommy McClelland details the search process and describes how the Owls landed on Lanier. pic.twitter.com/WZC09usdU5

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 26, 2024

What was @RiceMBB looking for in its next head coach? McClelland shares his wishlist and makes it clear Lanier checked all the right boxes. pic.twitter.com/z2JhhJOzti

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 26, 2024

Why Rice? Lanier details how the culture of the university mirrors what he wants his program to represent.

"I don't want to be in a silo. I want to be a part of a community." pic.twitter.com/iNE7h9wshd

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 26, 2024

BRB Gonna go run through a wall for @RiceMBB coach Rob Lanier.

"We're gonna win. It ain't a hope. It ain't a dream. It's a reality.

"We're going to be one of the best defensive teams in the country. That's a fact." pic.twitter.com/nqCRtuRMWe

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 26, 2024

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: Rice basketball, Rob Lanier

BREAKING: Rice Basketball hires Rob Lanier as next head coach

March 24, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball has named Rob Lanier as its next head coach. Lanier brings more than 30 years of collegiate coaching experience to South Main.

Lanier was most recently the head coach of SMU this past season. He led SMU to a 20-13 record, including 11-7 in AAC play. One of those wins came at Tudor Fieldhouse where Laniers’ Mustangs blasted Rice basketball 95-69. Athletic Director Tommy McClelland evidently was impressed with what he saw, hiring Lanier a little more than a month later.

Prior to arriving at SMU, Lanier spent three seasons at Georgia State. He went 53-30 there, taking the Panthers to the NCAA Tournament in the 2022 season before being hired at SMU. Lanier also had a prior stint at Siena where he took the Saints to the NCAA Tournament in 2002.

In between his head coaching stops, Lanier served as an assistant at Virginia, Florida, Texas and Tennessee. He’s worked under prominent head coaches in the sport such as Rick Barnes and Billy Donovan, among others.

Lanier’s dismissal was a surprise to many in the industry. He wasn’t a free agent long. He takes over for Scott Pera who was relieved of his duties just 10 days before Lanier’s appointment. The university has a formal introductory press conference planned for Tuesday. More details to come.

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: Rice basketball, Rob Lanier

Potential Rice Basketball head coaching candidates

March 15, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Basketball is in the market for a new head coach after moving on from Scott Pera. Who might the Owls target for the job?

Following an 11-21 season, Scott Pera is out as the head coach of Rice Basketball. This decision doesn’t come as a surprise to many and likely has been in the cards for some time now, giving athletic director Tommy McClelland ample time to begin mentally preparing a shortlist of potential targets. Who might the Owls tap to be the next head man on the court?

McClelland was adamant Rice basketball had a bright future ahead of it. “Talent is not an issue. We can get them here and we can win here,” he said, pointing toward recent successes like Quincy Olivari as well as NBA players who came from Rice like Trey Murphy and Drew Peterson. “I want to win,” he declared, making his intentions crystal clear.

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball, Premium Tagged With: Rice basketball

BREAKING: Rice Basketball parts ways with head coach Scott Pera

March 14, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Effective immediately, Scott Pera has been relieved of duties as the head coach of Rice Basketball following a 10-21 season, his seventh at South Main.

The Scott Pera era of Rice basketball has officially come to an end, the program announced on Thursday, the day following the end of the Owls’ season with a conference tournament loss to Wichita State. Pera leaves Rice with a 96-127 record across seven seasons, finishing 11-21 in his most recent campaign.

Athletic Director Tommy McClelland issued this statement:

“I appreciate the efforts of Scott and his staff and their dedication to their student-athletes, but over the course of this season, it became apparent to me that a change in the leadership of our men’s basketball team was needed for it to become a championship-caliber program. President DesRoaches and the Board of Trustees have shown a great desire for this program to take its place among the best in the AAC and agreed with my assessment that a coaching change was the appropriate step towards reaching that goal.”

The move isn’t surprising, considering how this season has transpired. Rice went 5-13 in American Athletic Conference play, winning just one conference game at Tudor Fieldhouse, a feat they didn’t achieve until February 24 against East Carolina. The team was 6-10 at home and had won more than two consecutive games just once all season, a December sweep of Incarnate Word, Northwestern State and Prairie View A&M.

Pera finished above .500 just twice in his seven years, going 15-13 in 2020-2021 and 19-16 in 2022-2023 as he guided the team to a CBI Tournament appearance and a postseason win, a first-round victory over Duquesne.

With veteran leaders Max Fiedler and Travis Evee out of eligibility and the program moving in the wrong direction, it was evident a change in leadership was necessary. Rice will immediately begin a national search for Pera’s replacement. Van Green will take over as the Owls’ interim head coach during the transition period.

** Photo Credit: Maria Lysaker **
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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: Rice basketball, Scott Pera

Rice Basketball season comes to an end with AAC Tourney loss to Wichita State

March 13, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball came out hot but was unable to finish, falling to Wichita State in the first round of the AAC Tournament in Fort Worth, TX.

Shocked doesn’t even begin to accurately describe how Rice basketball must have felt midway through the first half on Wednesday afternoon. The 13-Seed Owls had taken a 17-4 lead over the 12-Seed Wichita State Shockers to start the game. Things were going well. And then Wichita State just could not miss.

Wichita State hit 19 of their final 22 shots of the first half, thundering back from a 13-point deficit to take a 13-point lead at the break. During that stretch, the Shockers shot 86.3 percent from the field. Few could have anticipated quite how quickly the script could have been flipped, even when accounting for the Owls’ inconsistency on defense and a potent shooting performance.

“Basketball is a game of runs, right?” Travis Evee mused when recalling that furious Wichita State rally. “I think we really stayed together. It heightened our focus, our energy to climb back and weather that storm.”

Down by double-digits to start the second half with their backs against the wall, Rice basketball thundered back. Evee knocked down a pair of threes, keying a 12-0 Rice run to turn a potential blowout into a one-point game after Alem Husenovic knocked down a key jump shot.

It truly was back and forth from that point onward with 11 lead changes transpired over the course of the next five minutes and neither team leading by more than two possessions until the Shockers’ Xavier Bell knocked down a fast break layup with six seconds on the clock to put the game out of reach.

With the loss, Rice basketball falls to 11-21 on the season. A streak of back-to-back seasons in which the Owls played in a postseason tournament will come to an end as the program does some soul-searching in hopes of charting a brighter future moving forward.

Final Box | Wichita State 88 – Rice 81

FINAL | WSU 88 – @RiceMBB 81

Owls' season comes to an end in Fort Worth. pic.twitter.com/tz9bCH9hqd

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) March 13, 2024

What They’re Saying |

“It’s been a great four years and this one’s going to sting, probably for a while. It’s not the way that we wanted to go out, but I think in about a week or two weeks, whenever this wears off, I’ll really be able to look back and really be thankful for everything that this university has given me, everything that [head coach Scott Pera and Max Fiedler] have given me. I’m gonna miss playing with them. I’m gonna miss putting on the jersey. I’m gonna miss being in the locker room with these guys.” – Travis Evee on his Rice basketball career

Key takeaway | Going the wrong way

In the seventh season under Pera, Rice basketball has officially taken a significant step backward. The Owls finished above .500 under Pera for the second time last season but will finish this campaign 10 games below .500, their worst mark since his inaugural season.

The offense, which has been Pera’s calling card, has regressed from scoring 76.9 points per game last season to 71.7 points per game this season. The defense, a constant source of frustration, ranks 269th in the nation, allowing 75.3 points per game, a number that will worse after allowing 88 points on Wednesday.

“It’s uncanny, the misfortune we had this year,” Pera said, noting the series of close losses and bad bounces along the way.

Pera has built his tenure on the back of steady, gradual improvement. Faced with a tougher league schedule with the move to the AAC and the departure of star guard Quincy Olivari, who led the Big East in scoring for Xavier this season, it feels like that train has jumped the tracks.

Pera’s seventh season ends like many of the ones before it, with him at the podium reiterating “We’ve got to get better defensively.” Seven seasons in and the refrain is the same. And it’s not going to get any easier.

Rice basketball will lose Travis Evee and Max Fiedler this offseason. There is talent remaining on the roster, but the proof of concept of what this could be feels sufficient. At its best, this has been a .500 program under Pera, whose future on South Main is in question. Athletic Director Tommy McClelland has proven amenable to patience in other sports, but that’s come in conjunction with progress. This was a step back — and a significant one at that — one that Pera might not survive.

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: game recap, Max Fiedler, Rice basketball, Travis Evee

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