Best in the nation? ‘Forever’ Trae Young states his case

Oklahoma guard Trae Young just keeps stacking dominant performances, one on top of another.

You read about his exploits and you wonder if he can really be that good, and then he does it again.

After he led OU to a 91-83 victory at No. 3 Wichita State on Saturday, he stirred the discussion again.

Read a story by Taylor Eldridge in the Wichita Eagle for the latest on a player that is storming NCAA Division I basketball.

At the jbreplay.com, we will be singing the praises of “Forever” Trae Young, at least until someone figures out a way to stop him.

UTSA routs Bethany as offense continues to roll

UTSA forward Nick Allen hits a three-pointer out of the corner in the second half Saturday night against Bethany College. Video: thejbreplay

UTSA guard Jhivvan Jackson told reporters Saturday night that coach Steve Henson delivered a mostly positive message in the dressing room after the Roadrunners scorched the NAIA Bethany College Swedes, 95-67.

“He said we played great, but we got to get better on the defensive end,” said Jackson, who led UTSA with 19 points. “Going into Nebraska, (we need to) have some good hard practices and play our best game.”

The Roadrunners (7-5) play at Nebraska on Wednesday night.

Thirteen UTSA players played against Bethany and 13 scored in Dan O’Dowd’s return to campus.

A former 10-year assistant with the Roadrunners, O’Dowd is the first-year head coach of the Swedes.

In spite of the lopsided score, O’Dowd took away a few positives from his first game back to the arena where he worked with former coach Brooks Thompson for a decade through 2016.

No. 1, the game didn’t count on his record.

No. 2, Bethany freshman point guard and former St. Anthony standout Isiah Saenz scored 21 points on seven three-pointers.

Saenz showed off a flashy game that included one-handed, no-look passes.

“He’s going to be good,” O’Dowd said.

Bethany point guard Isiah Saenz brings the ball up and drains a three-pointer. Video: thejbreplay.com

UIW holds on for 77-73 victory over Missouri-Kansas City

UIW point guard Jalin Hart drives to the basket on Missouri-Kansas City. (Soobum Im / The University of the Incarnate Word)

The University of the Incarnate Word Cardinals recorded their first victory of the season against an NCAA Division I opponent Saturday afternoon, holding off the Missouri-Kansas City Kangaroos 77-73 at home in the Convocation Center.

Forward Simi Socks led UIW with 20 points and eight rebounds.

Socks scored 13 in the second half when UIW (5-3) built leads as large as 12 points against UMKC (3-9).

Freshman guard Xavier Bishop led the ‘Roos with 25 points on a dynamic long-distance shooting display. Bishop hit 5 of 10 from three-point territory.

Cardinals guard Shawn Johnson said “it’s big” for the team to beat a Division I opponent leading into the last part of December.

“We’ve been playing smaller teams or top-of-the line teams,” Johnson said. “We’ve been going back and forth with it. Back on our playing field, we need to win.”

Both Socks and Johnson sparked UIW in the second half.

Johnson finished with 15 points and 11 rebounds for the game, but he proved to be especially effective after intermission, when he was seemingly everywhere, with 10 points and nine rebounds.

The 6-5 senior from New Orleans also pulled back into the paint on defense, recording three second-half blocked shots.

Forward Simi Socks rise up to shoot a jumper for the UIW Cardinals. (Soobum Im / The University of the Incarnate Word)

Bethany College coach’s trip to UTSA ‘like coming home’

Bethany College coach Dan O’Dowd chats with his players during Saturday’s shoot-around at UTSA. Video: thejbreplay.com

Dan O’Dowd walked into the UTSA Convocation Center Friday and angled toward the corridor leading into the home team dressing room.

“I started heading in there and, ‘Oh wait,’ ” he said, smiling.

Forgive the first-year head coach of the Bethany College Swedes for making a wrong turn on his first trip back to the ‘Bird Cage.’

Some things you do in life are just reflex, especially if you’re O’Dowd, and you’ve spent 10 years of your career working out of the home of the Roadrunners.

O’Dowd admitted Saturday morning that it’s an emotional visit for him as his Kansas-based NAIA team prepares to play a road game against UTSA tonight.

Tipoff is at 7 p.m. between the Swedes and the NCAA Division I Roadrunners.

“You know, San Antonio is home,” O’Dowd said. “My wife and kids are still here. Our oldest finished high school last year. The youngest is a junior and we wanted him to finish school and sports with all the kids he’s grown up with.

“So, it’s like coming home. You know, I spent a lot of time in this gym. It’s just fun to see the changes and improvements that they’ve made.”

O’Dowd, a Colorado native and a Bethany graduate, worked for a decade at UTSA through 2016 under the late Brooks Thompson.

After UTSA, he moved on to work for a year at North Texas, before taking the job at Bethany last May.

Nick Allen, one UTSA’s hottest players at the moment, said it was fun to see O’Dowd again on Friday.

The two were able to catch up in a brief conversation.

“He just wanted to see how I was doing,” Allen said.

It was sort of like Allen’s first meeting with the coach, when O’Dowd visited his high school on a recruiting trip.

Of the first meeting, Allen remembers the coach being “really cool, really relaxed.”

“But you could tell he was serious,” said Allen, from Surprise, Arizona. “He was about his business when he came in. Just a good guy. I don’t know. I didn’t get any bad vibes from him. He’s the one that recruited me here. So I’ve got a lot of appreciation for him, a lot of respect for him.

“He’s a great coach. If it wasn’t for him, I probably wouldn’t be here. He’s a good dude. He means a lot to me.”

Dane Pavlovich, Bethany’s dean of athletics and student development, said it’s been fun to watch O’Dowd at work in his first year.

“He’s been a joy to work with,” Pavlovich said. “He also serves as assistant athletic director. So he helps us out with game management for football games and all the different other events.

“He’s really thrown himself into being a part of the Bethany culture. Being an alum, the job isn’t too small for him.

“He’s coached at some of the highest levels of NCAA basketball … but he’s thrown himself into (this job), being a part of the Bethany campus and the Lindsborg community … It’s been a lot of fun.”

O’Dowd, who has worked as an assistant at high-major jobs at Ole Miss and Arizona State, said he’s enjoying being the head coach.

“As an assistant coach for 30 years, you have a special relationship with your players, but you’re not the guy. Being head coach is fun, just the respect factor they have for you is a little bit different,” he said. “But it doesn’t change much. Biggest difference is that as an assistant you’re making suggestions. As a head coach you’re making decisions.

“I’ve been fortunate to work for coaches that prepared me for that. Whether its dealing with the media, going out (and) speaking at fundraisers, everything that I’ve needed to do to be prepared. So, it’s been a lot of fun.”

UIW’s Brown is dancing again after injury setback

Video: Courtesy, UIW athletics

Forward Charles Brown III says the University of the Incarnate Word Cardinals are striking just the right balance in staying disciplined, while also taking time to relax as the holidays approach.

On one hand, Brown says the Cardinals enjoyed the fun associated with production of a holiday music video promoting Saturday’s home game against the Missouri-Kansas City Kangaroos.

At the same time, he said his teammates also know that it is time to elevate their level of play, with the Southland Conference phase of their schedule looming at the end of the month.

“We’re more focused now than ever,” Brown said before practice Friday morning at Incarnate Word High School. “The Gonzaga game and the Houston game, kind of woke us up a little bit.

“(That) told us we need to step our game up if we’re going to make a run in the conference tournament.

“So, we’re more focused than ever. But, we still have a positive attitude. We still like to have fun. We’re not too tight. But we’re not too loose, either. Just right in between.”

Routed in road games at Houston and at nationally-ranked Gonzaga, the Cardinals (4-3) returned home last week to beat Division III Texas Lutheran, 91-63.

All this week, they’ve been busy taking final exams.

But they did break away from the grind one day to shoot a video, “A Charles Brown III Christmas,” a take off on the popular, animated holiday classic, “A Charlie Brown Christmas.

It was a perfect script for Brown, the gregarious native of New Orleans, who joined the team this summer.

Not only does the 6-7, 215-pound forward have double-double ability on the court, but he also has impressed his teammates with his impromptu dance moves in the locker room.

Brown said he thinks the video turned out well.

“I thought it was hilarious,” he said. “A nice promotion video. The guys had fun doing it. I love dancing, so I didn’t mind it at all. It was nice.”

As one of UIW’s best newcomers, Brown played well and contributed heavily in the team’s 3-0 start to the season.

But late in Game 4, when the Cardinals hosted Loyola Marymount on Nov. 22, it looked as if his dance moves — not to mention his season — might be in jeopardy.

Trailing a fast break, he was hit from the side and fell to the floor near the top of the key, clutching his knee.

The action stopped. He was helped off the floor to the bench. A few minutes later, he was assisted to the locker room. It looked bad.

But in a pleasant surprise, medical staff told Brown that it wasn’t serious. That the knee was bruised, and he could be back in a few weeks. He was.

Brown returned on Dec. 5 against TLU, played 18 minutes and contributed six points and five rebounds. In subsequent practices over the past week, he seems to have regained his old form.

“Charles is back,” UIW coach Ken Burmeister said. “He can go at full pace, at 100 percent, which is what we need because he’s a double double machine when he’s going good.

“You can see the difference (in our team) when he’s in there. We were up seven against Loyola Marymount, when he got hurt. (Then) we went down seven … He’s very valuable to us.”

UIW NOTEBOOK

Tipoff time for UIW (4-3) and UMKC (3-8) is at 3 p.m. Saturday at the Convocation Center …

Burmeister said point guard Jalin Hart should be able to play after returning to practice Friday. He had missed some time earlier in the week with concussion symptoms …

Reserve guards Augustine Ene and Jorden Kite, who sat out against TLU, are both expected to be ready for UMKC. Ene was nursing an ankle sprain and Kite has experienced back issues …

UIW plays at UTEP next Tuesday and and at nationally-ranked Florida next Friday. The Cardinals open their SLC schedule Dec. 28 at McNeese State …

Seven-foot center Konstantin Kulikov, who has yet to see action this season, will be eligible to play at Florida after being cleared by the NCAA …

UIW center Konstantin Kulikov (32) hits a jumper during shooting drills Friday morning. Video: thejbreplay.com

Baylor’s Lual-Acuil scores 18 in front of his proud parents

The video from Baylor athletics says it all.

Senior center Jo Lual-Acuil, Jr., running ahead of the competition on the fast break, fielding a pass and dunking.

Lual-Acuil punctuated a big day in his college basketball career with 18 points, as the 21st-ranked Bears ran away with a 99-68 victory Thursday night over the Texas Southern Tigers.

What was so big about a game in December? Well, for starters, his parents traveled from Africa to Waco to see him play.

According to ESPN, his parents made the trip to see their son play and to attend his graduation, which is scheduled Saturday.

For more on Lual-Acuil’s amazing story, here is an article authored by John Werner of the Waco Tribune-Herald.

Published in January last season, it’s a fascinating chronicle of Lual-Acuil’s journey from the Sudan, to Uganda, to Australia, to Chanute, Kansas, and, finally, to Waco.

Lual-Acuil is listed on the roster at 7-feet and 225 pounds.

After sitting out the 2015-16 season with a heart condition, the transfer from Neosho Community College (in Kansas) emerged last year as one of the top shot-blockers in the nation.

Lual-Acuil had 87 blocks in 35 games.

This year, his game is expanding. Both his scoring and rebounding numbers are up. Coming into the Texas Southern game, Lual-Acuil was averaging 13.9 points and 10.1 rebounds.

After blocking two shots against the Tigers, he has produced 14 rejections in 10 games for the Bears (8-2).

Baylor, in a push to prepare for the start of Big 12 play later this month, hosts Savannah State at home on Sunday.

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Charlotte fires Mark Price after a 3-6 start; assistant takes over

UNC Charlotte has fired basketball coach Mark Price, according to a statement from the university’s athletic department.

Assistant Houston Fancher has been elevated to a position as interim coach.

In two-plus seasons with the 49ers, Price produced a 30-42 record.

Charlotte is 3-6 and has lost four games in a row heading into a road contest Monday at East Carolina.

The 49ers compete in Conference USA, along with UTSA.

Price’s ouster represents the second coaching change in the C-USA in 18 days, following Tim Floyd’s retirement at UTEP on Nov. 27.

Phil Johnson, a member of Floyd’s staff, has since taken over head coaching duties for the Miners on an interim basis.

UNC Charlotte chancellor Philip Dubois and athletic director Judy Rose made the announcement on Price in a news release Thursday morning.

According to the release, Price has been released from his contract, effective immediately.

Price enjoyed a standout career as a player, earning all-America honors at Georgia Tech and later spending parts of 12 seasons in the NBA.

Playing point guard, his best years in the NBA were in Cleveland, where he led the Cavaliers to the 1992 Eastern Conference finals against the Chicago Bulls.

As a head coach, his program at Charlotte never seemed to gain traction.

In 2015-16, Charlotte produced a record of 14-19 and 9-9 in the C-USA. Last year, he was 13-17 and 7-11.

The move caught Price by surprise, according to a story in the Charlotte Observer.

“I”m still stunned to be honest,” Price told the Observer. “I was called in this morning and was told they were going to make a change. … They said they didn’t like the direction of the program was taking and that I might have lost some of my players, which I don’t agree with.”

No. 9 Texas A&M hits 16 treys, beats Savannah State, 113-66

Texas A&M center Tonny Trocha-Morelos

Fans of the old American Basketball Association probably enjoyed the show on ESPN3 from Reed Arena Wednesday night.

No. 9 Texas A&M fired up 38 three-point attempts and made a school-record 16 of them en route to a 113-66 victory over Savannah State, Georgia.

The Tigers of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference attempted 40 from long distance and connected on 12.

“There’s not a lot of ‘D’ out there tonight,” said broadcaster and former A&M assistant coach John Thornton, during a hectic second-half sequence. “But there is a lot of fireworks.”

The visitors set the tone early in hitting six treys in the first 10 minutes.

At that point, A&M held a 24-22 lead.

But from there, the Aggies started to pull away with advantages in size and athleticism at every position.

Finishing with a team-high 18 points, forward DJ Hogg connected on five threes for the Aggies (9-1).

A&M guards Admon Gilder (15 points) and Duane Wilson (14) combined to shoot 12 of 23 from the field.

Wilson was also hot outside the arc, hitting four from distance. In all, seven A&M players finished in double figures.

Javaris Jenkins led Tigers (3-8) with 18 points.

Notes: A&M forward Robert Williams, an NBA draft prospect, did not play.

The Bryan Eagle reported Wednesday that Williams had been in concussion protocol after banging into freshman forward Isiah Jasey in practice.

Coach Billy Kennedy said he is day-to-day. The Aggies host Northern Kentucky next Tuesday.

A&M’s point total was its highest since it put up 114 against Florida International on Dec. 21, 1989.

Texas offense needs work after 59-52 loss to Michigan

The Texas Longhorns are expected to get an earful from Coach Shaka Smart in coming days.

Smart just might be in the players’ ears and in their faces through Saturday, when they host Louisiana Tech at the Erwin Center.

The coach said as much after Michigan throttled Texas 59-52 on Tuesday night.

Smart’s message? Stay with the game plan, even when adversity strikes.

“I think that the things that we didn’t do, in terms of following our plan, that stuff needs to be exposed on film and that stuff needs to be hammered hard,” Smart told reporters. “Because regardless of the opponent, the stuff we planned and worked to do in practice, that has to be carried over into the game.

“That (plan) could be different from game to game, but our willingness to go and execute that stuff, through whatever happens, must be better.”

Leading into the Michigan game, Texas planned for the absence of its leading scorer, Andrew Jones, who is out with a hairline fracture in his right wrist.

In the aftermath, they learned that the adjustment won’t be easy.

At the outset against the Wolverines, the Longhorns played well on the defensive end. But a 2-0 lead after the first four minutes easily could have been 10-0 or more.

As the Longhorns sputtered, the Wolverines started to find a rhythm. They started hitting shots and surged into a 32-20 halftime lead.

Texas got within three once in the second half, but couldn’t dig out of the hole. The offense, without Jones on the floor, never got untracked for any extended period of time.

On top of that, Michigan occasionally would hit a difficult shot or would take advantage of a defensive breakdown, and the body language on the floor for Texas would sag again.

Smart traced it to not staying with original plan.

“With young guys like some of our freshmen, young guys that haven’t played a lot, it’s certainly understandable that that might affect them, but it’s not acceptable, the coach said. “There’s a difference between those two things and we have to understand that to whom much is given, when there’s an opportunity, much is expected, of all of us.

“And it starts with me.”

Texas center Mohamed Bamba who finished with 10 points, 10 rebounds and four blocks, said he can do more on the offensive end.

“I can definitely be more aggressive, get fouled more and just throw my body around, he said.

A case could be made that Bamba, a lithe, 6-foot-11 post, might benefit from getting a few more touches on the perimeter, facing the basket.

But, in the meantime, the heralded first-year player from New York said he needs to attack more from the low post.

“In high school, you don’t have guys who are 6-10 and 200-and-whatever pounds,” he said. “That’s one of the things we have the liberty of practicing against.

“We have to go up against DO (Dylan Osetkowski), James (Banks III), Jericho (Sims) and Royce (Hamm Jr.)

“When game time comes it’s a little bit easier, because there are fouls being called,” Bamba said. “But I still have to keep that aggressive mindset and keep attacking.”

Guard Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman paced the Wolverines with a double-double, producing 17 points and 10 rebounds.

Charles Matthews finished with 12 points, while Moritz Wagner and Duncan Robinson had 10 each for the Wolverines (9-3).

Texas (6-3) didn’t have as many players show up on offense as the coaching staff would have liked.

Osetkowski hit 6 of 11 from the field and scored 17. Guard Kerwin Roach II added 11 points on 4 of 8. Bamba, for his part, was 4 of 10 from the floor.

Michigan coach John Beilein said he thinks the Texas coaching staff will figure out how to adjust without Jones, a sophomore from Arlington.

“Hopefully Jones won’t be out too long, but watch other people just get better as they go through this,” he said. “We went through this three years in a row — your other guys get better and coach may have to change some things here and there.

“It’s hard to change that immediately, but Shaka (Smart) will find a way.

Interim coach Phil Johnson sparks UTEP basketball program

A few weeks ago, the UTEP basketball program was reeling with the news that Tim Floyd had retired from coaching. Today, it’s a different story, with interim coach Phil Johnson leading the Miners to back-to-back victories over New Mexico and Washington State. Read the story by Bill Knight of the El Paso Times.

Resurgence at Stephen F. Austin

Last season, the fortunes of the Stephen F. Austin basketball program declined in coach Kyle Keller’s first year on the job. The Lumberjacks finished 18-15 with a first-round loss in the CollegeInsider.com Tournament. It was a shock to fans who had experienced three straight trips to the NCAA tournament under the previous coach, Brad Underwood. Keller seems to have SFA moving in the right direction again, with the Lumberjacks (9-1) knocking off two Conference USA programs last week.

Freshman star on the rise

After a close loss at Arizona last weekend, Coach Avery Johnson’s Alabama Crimson Tide returns home next week to open a three-game stand. The Tide will play Mercer on Dec. 19 in Huntsville. Alabama meets Texas on Dec. 22 in Birmingham. Finally, the Tide hosts Texas A&M on Dec. 30 at Tuscaloosa in an SEC opener. With dynamic freshman Collin Sexton, Alabama has a chance for a run to the NCAA tournament this season. Sexton dumped 30 on Arizona in an 88-82 setback Saturday night.