Islanders hold off late charge to win, 65-59

Junior forward Isaac Mushila scored 16 points, and the Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Islanders held off a late challenge to post a 65-59 victory over the IUPUI Jaguars Tuesday night at UTSA.

With the win, the Islanders improved to 2-1 on the season under first-year coach Steve Lutz, a San Antonio native and 1991 graduate of East Central High School.

The Jaguars, meanwhile, fell to 0-4 under first-year coach Matt Crenshaw.

UTSA (1-2) will take on the University of Denver (2-1) in the second game of the night at 7:30.

Denver opened the three-day hoops festival on Monday with a 63-47 victory over IUPUI.

In the late game Monday, Division II Texas A&M Commerce upset Division I UTSA 65-62 on a buzzer beating, 3-point shot by Alphonso Willis.

The Roadrunners beat Trinity 97-66 last Tuesday, but since then, they have struggled. They fell 96-44 at Oklahoma last Friday and then dropped a game to the Division II Lions Monday night after leading by seven early in the second haf.

Tuesday’s scores, schedule

Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 65, IUPUI 59
7:30 p.m. — Denver vs. UTSA

Wednesday’s schedule

1 p.m. — Denver vs. Texas A&M-Corpus Christi
4:30 p.m. — IUPUI vs. UTSA

A&M-Commerce hits buzzer-beating three to stun UTSA, 65-62

Senior guard Alphonso Willis hoisted a three-pointer off the glass at the buzzer to lift the NCAA Division II Texas A&M-Commerce Lions to a 65-62 victory over the Division I UTSA Roadrunners Monday night at the Convocation Center.

Willis’ heroics came just moments after Jordan Ivy-Curry tied it for UTSA. Ivy-Curry buried a three with four seconds left to make it 62-62.

After the Lions pushed the ball upcourt, Willis fired over a couple of opponents to win the game. The Lions promptly rushed off the bench and mobbed Willis, piling on top of him in a wild celebration on the Roadrunners’ home court.

As the Lions continued their scrum, video shows one player with his head cocked back, his fists clenched at his side, screaming to the rafters.

“I’m happy for our guys,” fifth-year A&M-Commerce coach Jaret von Rosenberg told the team’s radio broadcast, “and that’s exciting for our fans.”

Records

UTSA 1-2
A&M-Commerce 0-0
Note: game counted as an exhibition for the Lions

A tough loss

For the Roadrunners, the loss to the Lions stung. It was UTSA’s first stumble at home to a sub-NCAA Division I program in three years, since it lost 77-76 to Division II St. Edward’s in the 2018 season opener.

Jordan Ivy-Curry. The UTSA men's basketball team lost to A&M-Commerce 65-62 on a 3-pointer at the buzzer on Monday, Nov. 15, 2021, at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA guard Jordan Ivy-Curry battles for a loose ball against Texas A&M-Commerce. He finished with 13 points – Photo by Joe Alexander

Worse yet, they were on the brink of a victory, and let it slip away. The Roadrunners held a seven-point lead on a Dhieu Deing drive with 14:27 remaining. They were up by six with 4:33 left.

And yet because of poor execution down the stretch, including a technical assessed for calling a timeout when they didn’t have any left, they lost a game they should have won.

After Ivy-Curry’s shot tied the game, UTSA coach Steve Henson said his players were in the right positions to defend the last play.

“You just got to stay between them and the bucket,” he said. “We did, and they heaved it from almost half court and it went in. Heartbreaker. Heartbreaker. So many plays prior to that. Shouldn’t have been in that position.”

Henson said the Roadrunners are struggling to run good offense.

“In the end, you got to convert and make open shots,” he said. “We had some looks, but, we’re just not moving the ball quickly enough. It’s not out of selfishness. We’re just not clicking on all cylinders. We’re still trying to figure it out.”

Individual leaders

A&M-Commerce: Alphonso Willis, 18 points on 5 of 9 shooting from the field. Jairus Roberson, 12 points. Clashon Gaffney, 12 points, six rebounds, four blocked shots.

Dhieu Deing. The UTSA men's basketball team lost to A&M-Commerce 65-62 on a 3-pointer at the buzzer on Monday, Nov. 15, 2021, at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Dhieu Deing led the Roadrunners with 16 points and nine rebounds. Deing was 6 of 19 from the field. – Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA: Dhieu Deing, 16 points. Jordan Ivy-Curry 13. Cedrick Alley, 13.

First half

With Clashon Gaffney controlling the paint, the Texas A&M-Commerce Lions led for much of the first half, only to give way at the end of the period to the Roadrunners, who started to execute at a higher level en route to a 31-29 edge at intermission.

Rough start

The Roadrunners opened the season last Tuesday with a 97-66 home victory over Division III Trinity University. UTSA shot 47 percent from the field to blow out the Tigers.

On Friday, UTSA was blown out 96-44 on the road at Division I power Oklahoma. The Roadrunners shot 22.7 percent from the field, just off the school record for the lowest number in school history.

Against A&M-Commerce, the Roadrunners hit only 40 percent from the floor, including 36.4 percent in the second half. Underscoring problems with ball movement and rhythm, UTSA compiled only nine assists against 17 turnovers.

Denver beats IUPUI

Guard KJ Hunt scored 22 points and forward Michael Henn added 20 as the University of Denver Pioneers downed the IUPUI Jaguars 63-47 on Monday afternoon in the opening game of a UTSA multi-team event at the Convocation Center.

B.J. Maxwell scored 14 for IUPUI, the acronym for Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis.

Tuesday’s schedule

5 p.m. — IUPUI vs. Texas A&M-Corpus Christi
7:30 p.m. — Denver vs. UTSA

Wednesday’s schedule

1 p.m. — Denver vs. Texas A&M-Corpus Christi
4:30 p.m. — IUPUI vs. UTSA

Notebook

Steve Lutz, a 1991 East Central High School graduate, is in his first season as head coach at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi. Lutz has been a long-time Division I assistant with stops at Incarnate Word, Stephen F. Austin, SMU, Creighton and Purdue. At Creighton, he helped develop scoring whiz Doug McDermott, who now plays with the Spurs. Lutz spent his last four seasons at Purdue.

Oklahoma’s defense suffocates UTSA in a 96-44 blowout

The Oklahoma Sooners held UTSA scoreless for a span of almost eight minutes in the first half Friday night and then capitalized on the momentum, rolling to an easy 96-44 victory over the Roadrunners.

In the game played at the Noble Center in Norman, Okla., UTSA kept its head above water in the first few minutes, leading 4-2, before the home team set in motion a crushing defensive performance with a 17-0 run.

As the teams took a break for intermission, OU entered the UTSA record book by holding the Roadrunners to their fewest points in a half (10).

With a 33-10 lead, the Sooners came out and kept pouring it on in the second half, increasing the advantage to 30 with 16:55 left, to 40 with eight minutes remaining and, ultimately, to 53 with 33 seconds to go.

In the end, it was one of the most lopsided losses in UTSA’s 41-year school history.

“They just got after us from the start,” UTSA coach Steve Henson told Jay Howard on the team’s radio broadcast. “We just couldn’t get a good shot early on. We were fighting. We fought defensively for awhile. But I think just the fact that we could not get good looks at the basket eventually took some of our energy away from the defensive end, and it just steamrolled on us.”

Late in the half, OU center Tanner Groves asserted himself with shot-making both inside the paint and from 3-point range. Groves, during the streak, fired in one shot from beyond the arc, sank a mid-range jumper and flipped in a jump hook.

He finished with 21 points to lead four players in double figures. Umoja Gibson, Elijah Harkless and Marvin Johnson scored 10 each for the Sooners, who shot 61.5 percent from the field in the second half and ended with 58.2 percent for the game.

On the flip side, UTSA shot 22.7 percent, just off the school record 22.6 percent set on March 2, 2013, in a 53-37 home loss to Seattle.

With first-year coach Porter Moser in charge, Oklahoma employed a switching defense, with obvious positive results.

“They got a bunch of interchangeable sized guys. That’s kind of what we try to do defensively. Certainly, they were able to blow up a lot of our action with their switching,” Henson said.

A bright spot for UTSA was forward Dhieu Deing, a newcomer to the team who played his high school career at High Point, N.C. Held scoreless early, Deing got hot late and hit five three-pointers. He finished with 15 points. Guard Jordan Ivy-Curry scored 10 points and center Jacob Germany six.

Records

Oklahoma 2-0
UTSA 1-1

Coming up

UTSA hosts a three-day, multi-team event starting Monday at the Convocation Center. The Roadrunners play Texas A&M-Commerce on Monday night at 7:30. They’ll take on Denver on Tuesday night at 7:30 and IUPUI on Wednesday afternoon at 4:30.

UTSA-OU notebook

With the victory, Oklahoma of the Big 12 Conference improved to 7-0 against UTSA all time, including 5-0 against the Henson-coached Roadrunners. OU handed Henson his worst loss last year, 105-66.

Coming into the game, UTSA men’s basketball was winless in 12 years against teams from the five biggest revenue-producing athletic conferences. The loss dropped UTSA to 0-24 against Power Five opponents in that span. The program’s last victory over a P5 team came in November of 2009 at Iowa of the Big Ten.

Moser came to OU from Loyola-Chicago to replace Lon Kruger, who retired after last season. Moser is best known by fans in South Texas for leading his team to the 2018 NCAA Final Four at the Alamodome.

Under Moser, OU has stocked its roster with transfers, including brothers Tanner Groves and Jacob Groves from Eastern Washington, Ethan Chargois (SMU) and Jordan Goldwire (Duke). Also, super senior Marvin Johnson (Eastern Illinois).

Goldwire played 116 games at Duke over the last four years.

Germany scores 24 as UTSA wins its opener, 97-66, over Trinity

After some shaky moments in the opening few minutes of the season, the UTSA Roadrunners kicked their transition game into high gear.

They went on to shoot 55 percent from the floor in the first half to forge a commanding 19-point lead, en route to an easy 97-66 victory over the Division III Trinity University Tigers.

Darius McNeill. UTSA won its 2021-22 season opener on Tuesday, beating Trinity 97-66 at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Point guard Darius McNeill made his UTSA debut with 11 points, six assists and four rebounds. – Photo by Joe Alexander

A crowd of 1,302 gathered at the Convocation Center, curious to see what the Roadrunners could do without departed four-year scoring stars Jhivvan Jackson and Keaton Wallace.

What they witnessed was pleasing, to say the least.

“There were some real positive things out there,” UTSA coach Steve Henson said. “We’ve got a lot of work to do. Long way to go. But some of the things that jumped out at us were the limited amount of turnovers — eight, and I’m guessing five or six were charges.

“I liked the way we took care of the basketball. (We had) a huge number of assists (24). I thought our guys were unselfish. They were trying to make plays for each other.

“The fact that the (Tigers) played 40 minutes of zone, and we hadn’t put a lot of our zone stuff in (was significant). Back earlier in the year we did some research, and last year, less than nine percent of our possessions were zone offense possessions.

“You’re going to work on what you do a lot. We’re going to play man to man offense most of this year, so we didn’t have a big package of things in. We had two alignments and basically two plays, and they played two different kinds of defenses.

Jordan Ivy-Curry. UTSA won its 2021-22 season opener on Tuesday, beating Trinity 97-66 at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Jordan Ivy-Curry, who started at shooting guard, scored 19 points on six of 12 shooting. – Photo by Joe Alexander

“Makes it a little bit hard to get a rhythm … But to see that (zone) for 40 minutes, I thought our guys handled it pretty well.”

Center Jacob Germany did most of the damage. He scored 24 points in 19 minutes, and he did it by hitting on 10 of 15 shots from the field.

Coming up

The Roadrunners will play on the road Friday when they meet the Oklahoma Sooners, a Division I power conference program.

Stat leaders

UTSA — Center Jacob Germany, 24 points on 10 of 15 shooting. Guard Jordan Ivy-Curry, 19, with three 3-pointers. Forward Dhieu Deing, 13, also with three from beyond the arc. Guard Darius McNeill, 11 points, 6 assists, 4 rebounds.

Trinity — Ben Hanley and Tanner Brown led the Tigers with nine points apiece. Brown is a 6-3 sophomore from Brandeis.

Germany’s take

The 6-foot-11 post from Oklahoma had a tough week last week when he sprained his right ankle at practice and was limited in workouts for a few days.

He was running well against the Tigers but acknowledged that he may have lost some conditioning with the missed practice time.

“I definitely felt, in the first 45 seconds of the game, I was gassed,” Germany said. “But in the first game, I think everyone’s kind of gassed. You know, they’re excited. And their adrenaline is going … but, no, I was out for like a day, a little sprained ankle.

“We have a great under-water treadmill. Treadmills like that, you can run on with no weight, so that definitely helped me through that.”

A family feeling

UTSA started the season with a lineup consisting of Germany at center, Cedric Alley Jr. at power forward, Deing at the small forward, Ivy-Curry at shooting guard and McNeill at the point.

It was the first game in a UTSA uniform for both Deing and McNeill, and both had some big moments to get the team started.

In his first half as a member of the Roadrunners, Deing introduced himself to the fans by hitting 4 of 6 from the field and 3 of 5 from three. He also had three assists and three rebounds.

Deing, who played at two colleges previously, said it felt great to get the victory. “It just feels good doing it with my new family,” he said. “It’s a great atmosphere. I love San Antonio so far.”

Asked about his own performance, he said, “Normal. It’s just a normal deal, playing relaxed, and playing my game. Just doing what I do to get the dub (the win).”

Getting the crowd going

Lachlan Bofinger came off the bench to get the crowd going early. He had two dunks, including one on a one-handed feed from McNeill that brought fans out of their seats. Bofinger finished the game with six points, four rebounds and a steal in nine minutes.

Everyone’s Buddy

With strong personal ties to the UTSA coaching staff, Sacramento Kings guard Buddy Hield attended the game and also talked to the players.

“Don’t know if you’ve had an opportunity, but if you haven’t, you need to spend some time with Buddy,” Henson said. “He’s one of the most unique, special people I’ve ever been around.”

Hield led the University of Oklahoma to the 2016 NCAA Final Four.

OU’s head coach at the time was Lon Kruger. Two of Kruger’s staffers were Henson, then an OU assistant coach and Scott Thompson. Thompson is one of Henson’s assistants with the Roadrunners.

Jacob Germany. UTSA won its 2021-22 season opener on Tuesday, beating Trinity 97-66 at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Jacob Germany connected on 10 of 15 shots from the field and scored 24 points against the Trinity Tigers. – Photo by Joe Alexander

SFA women claim 77-50 victory over UTSA in season opener

Karen Aston. The UTSA women's basketball team lost its 2021-22 season opener to Stephen F. Austin 77-50 on Tuesday at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

First-year UTSA women’s basketball coach Karen Aston says her team needs to learn how to play consistently from play to play. – Photo by Joe Alexander

The UTSA Roadrunners pushed the pace and tried to run with the Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks. The Roadrunners played with a determined effort in Karen Aston’s first game as coach.

But while they showed up with the will to win, they couldn’t get that done. Not against an SFA team that showed off a talented group of players capable of challenging for a second straight trip to the NCAA tournament.

The Ladyjacks bolted to an early lead, forced 33 turnovers and cruised to a 77-50 victory Tuesday night in the season-opener for both teams at the UTSA Convocation Center.

“I thought we started the game off well and then a couple of things didn’t go our way,” Aston said. “So we started to get a little antsy and got passive. And they kind of smelled the blood a little bit in the first half.”

Aston said the Roadrunners need to learn how to play every possession.

“I thought we showed signs of some good things and then we’d turn back around and foul,” she said. “Or … not get back on defense. I think there’s a play-to-play aspect that this team just doesn’t understand right now that we’ll get to.”

LaPraisjah Johnson. The UTSA women's basketball team lost its 2021-22 season opener to Stephen F. Austin 77-50 on Tuesday at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Lapraisjah Johnson led the Roadrunners in scoring with 13 points. She also had four rebounds. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Scoring leaders

UTSA: Lapraisjah Johnson 13.
SFA: Stephanie Visscher 15, Tasharian Robinson 11, Angel Scott 10.

Third quarter

SFA leads 57-36

Despite eight points and three rebounds in the quarter from Lapraisjah Johnson and a determined effort from Queen Ulabo and others, the Roadrunners couldn’t slow down the Ladyjacks. UTSA, trailing by 16 at the half, cut the lead to 13 early in the period but failed to get any closer. Tasharian Robinson nailed a three to ignite a 15-7 run for SFA.

Second quarter

SFA leads 38-22 at halftime.

Playing better at the outset of the quarter, the Roadrunners pulled to within 10 when Jadyn Pimentel knocked down a 3 from the top of the circle. From there, the offense went a little bit haywire. UTSA went 0 for 6 from the field in a lull that stretched to the halftime buzzer. The Roadrunners were called for a shot-clock violation on their final possession, their 20th turnover of the game to that point. Stephanie Visscher had four points and an assist for the Ladyjacks in the period.

First quarter

SFA leads 22-9.

Tasharian Robinson hit two 3-pointers in a furious 13-3 run to close out the first quarter for the Ladyjacks. SFA sank five of six from the field during the streak. UTSA played good defense early, holding SFA to 3 of 11 shooting at one point. But the Roadrunners committed 13 turnovers and couldn’t get much going offensively.

Pregame

UTSA entered the opener under new leadership in coach Karen Aston, a former coach at Texas.
The Roadrunners are riding a streak of six straight seasons with losing records, including 2-18 last year.

UTSA also came in on a streak of 12 seasons without a trip to the NCAA tournament. In UTSA’s last NCAA appearance, in 2009, the team was 24-9 under coach Rae Rippetoe-Blair.

SFA played its opener coming off a 24-3 season last year and a trip to the NCAAs.

In the tournament, the Ladyjacks played in San Antonio at Greehey Arena and lost a heartbreaker, falling 54-52 in overtime to fifth-seeded Georgia Tech. Most of the players from last year’s team are back to try and make another run.

A longtime member of the Southland Conference, SFA has a new home in the Western Athletic Conference.

Breaking down the ABC’s of Josh Farmer’s potential

Josh Farmer, a 6-foot-9 freshman forward from Houston Sharpstown, at the first day of UTSA men's basketball practice. - photo by Joe Alexander

Josh Farmer, a 6-foot-9 freshman, has had a solid training camp leading into tonight’s season opener against Trinity University. – Photo by Joe Alexander

As UTSA preseason basketball practices played out over the past month, I had to make sure that I talked to freshman Josh Farmer before it was all over.

The lanky forward caught my eye early with:

A) A resolve to mix it up in the paint with more physical players;

B) An advanced ability to create both his own shot and shots for others, and;

C) A certain confidence that he belongs in the playing rotation even as a young man who is only a few months out of high school.

Standing 6-feet-9 and weighing 197 pounds, it seems that all he needs is a few years to get stronger, and the Roadrunners could really have something special.

Farmer said recently that he has already started on a rigorous weight-training regimen.

“I’ve been in the weight room,” he said in an interview last Friday. “I (was) in the weight room four times this week. Four times last week. And I’ve been eating, and drinking water. That’s it. My metabolism is fast. I might not think I’m eating a lot, but I am.”

With UTSA opening tonight against Division III Trinity and playing again Friday on the road at Division I power Oklahoma, the former standout from Houston Sharpstown is expected to play off the bench for the Roadrunners.

Just how much, is not certain. What is certain is that he has caught the attention of the UTSA coaching staff.

“It’s going to be fun watching him,” sixth-year coach Steve Henson said. “There’s not a question of if (he can play). I mean, he’s so talented, and he’s very coachable. Got a great basketball IQ.

“You tell him something once and he’s got it. Great attitude. He’s going to be a big contributor.”

Henson said last week that coaches are working to accelerate his development.

“We need to speed up that process,” Henson said. “We’ve talked about that with our coaches, with some of our players, as well. They know it. They can see it. Anybody walks in the gym, whether you know anything about basketball or not, you can see his talent.

“We just got to speed that process up and see how he can impact games. You know, right now, he’s behind some other guys. But he’s also got a ton of upside.”

Farmer’s practice battles with burly senior Cedric Alley Jr. have been entertaining. On one end of the floor, Alley will go into his bump-and-grind routine, and then forcefully will spin inside.

On the other end, Farmer isn’t shy about using his dribble handle to get around traffic in the paint. Then, with his length, he creates just enough space to pass. Or, at times, enough space to shoot a bank shot.

A brazen move, for a freshman. Like Keaton Wallace or Jhivvan Jackson four years ago, Farmer is not shy about anything that happens between the lines on a basketball court.

Almost matter of factly, he said he expected to play as a freshman when he arrived on campus. He said he had a feeling he would based on his conversations with the coaches and with the trust he had in his ability to rebound and run the floor.

Nevertheless, he still had to prove himself, and he did.

“Yes sir,” he said.

So, how does Josh Farmer grade himself on his performance in camp?

“It kind of took me time to get used to the pace of the game,” he said. “When I got used to it, it kind of converted to me attacking (on offense) and on defense being able to see everybody … It just takes time to adapt to everything.

“But I feel good about it, overall.”

Basketball season opens at UTSA with a two-for-Tuesday

A new era in UTSA basketball will dawn on Tuesday night at the Convocation Center.

The UTSA women will start the season under first-year Coach Karen Aston, with the Roadrunners tipping off against the Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks at 5 p.m.

The men’s team, having retooled in the offseason without departed four-year scoring stars Jhivvan Jackson and Keaton Wallace, will play its opener at 7:30 against the Division III Trinity Tigers.

The atmosphere in the arena, meanwhile, is expected to return to pre-pandemic dynamics.

There will be no Covid-19 restrictions on seating capacity, said a spokeswoman, who added that face coverings are recommended but not required.

Also, the school band is expected to return to the arena for the first time since the end of the 2019-20 season.

“Just as we’re excited to get back to playing ball games, I think the fans, the students and the band and all those folks are going to be excited about getting in here and getting the Convo going again,” sixth-year UTSA men’s coach Steve Henson said. “We start out (the season) with a doubleheader, with the women playing (first), which is kind of a unique situation, so I hope a bunch of people come out and plan on spending several hours in the Convo tomorrow night.”

Aston, announced on March 29 as UTSA’s 10th head coach in women’s basketball, is tasked with a monumental rebuilding job.

Over the past four years, the UTSA women have finished 9-21, 7-21, 6-23 and 2-18, respectively. In the past three seasons, the Roadrunners’ record in Conference USA is a combined 4-44, including 0-14 last year.

If anyone can right the ship, it might be Aston, who has forged a career record in NCAA Division I of 285-146 (.661). Aston coached at Texas from 2012-2020 and went 184-83 (.689) in that time, leading the Longhorns to six NCAA tournaments, including three Sweet 16s and an Elite 8.

UTSA sophomore Kyleigh McGuire said the new coaching staff, which also includes Jamie Carey, Empress Davenport and Cameron Miles, has been demanding.

“I think it’s a lot different than last year,” McGuire said. “They’re very particular when it comes to the small details. I think it really pushes us to try to be perfectionists. At the same time, they understand that we can make mistakes, so they’re very understanding, but they want to help us get better.

“They’re very encouraging. They want to see us succeed.”

In college basketball, turnarounds can happen fairly quickly, as evidenced by Henson’s first few years as the UTSA men’s coach.

When Henson and the current coaching staff arrived, the program had suffered through four straight losing seasons. In 2015-16, the last year under the previous staff, the Roadrunners’ fortunes plummeted as they finished 5-27 and 3-15 in Conference USA.

With Henson in charge, the team finished 14-19 in his first season. But then it began to improve steadily with the arrival of Jackson and Wallace.

Over the next four years, with Jackson and Wallace scoring more than 4,500 points between them, the Roadrunners posted three winning records overall and in the C-USA. Last year, they finished 15-11 and 9-7 in conference.

Now that the two have moved on, the Roadrunners will be a team in search of a new identity. Outside of a few injuries, Henson said the preseason camp was good for his team.

“First two or three weeks, I thought we were terrific,” he said. “I thought we lost our edge there for about a week and a half. But we’ve put together some good (practices). Two of the last three have been really good.”

On Monday, junior center Jacob Germany worked out through the entirety of an afternoon practice, a good sign for the Roadrunners. Germany, the team’s leading returning scorer, was hobbled for a few days last week after twisting his foot.

Henson said Germany won’t be on a minutes restriction against Trinity. “He was nearly 100 percent today, so we’ll play him as needed tomorrow night,” the coach said.

UTSA’s Henson predicts that Germany will play the opener

Jacob Germany. UTSA beat UTEP 86-79 in a Conference USA game on Thursday, Jan. 28, 2021 at the UTSA Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

After twisting his foot earlier this week, UTSA center Jacob Germany has continued to practice on a limited basis, aiming to play in the season opener Tuesday night at home against Trinity. — File photo by Joe Alexander

Fighting through discomfort in his right foot for the second straight day, UTSA center Jacob Germany should be able to play in next week’s season-opener for the men’s basketball team, Roadrunners coach Steve Henson said Friday afternoon.

“Based on what he did today, I’d be shocked if we didn’t play him some,” Henson said after a workout on campus.

UTSA will open on Tuesday night in its 41st season of basketball with a doubleheader at the Convocation Center.

The women’s team will host Stephen F. Austin at 5, followed by Henson’s men’s squad against the Trinity University Tigers at 7:30.

Earlier this week, on Wednesday, Germany’s status for the opener was clouded when he went down and with an injured foot or ankle.

“Twisted it badly,” was how Henson described the mishap.

On Thursday, Germany was limited to shooting the ball in his on-court work. By Friday, though, the 6-foot-11 junior participated in most of the practice, even in some of the half-court drills.

The only time he sat out was in the five-on-five, full-contact work.

“On one hand, you feel like that game (against Trinity) is right around the corner,” Henson said. “On the other, with the amount of treatment he’ll be able to get between now and then, that game’s a long way off.

“(Trainer) Josh (Modica) will take good care of him tomorrow,” Henson said. “We’re doing nothing together on Sunday as a team, so that’ll be a great recovery day, a great treatment day. Just guessing, just like you are, but I think he’ll be close to normal on Tuesday.”

Germany has enjoyed a highly productive preseason, showing off an expanded offensive repertoire.

Last year, as a sophomore, he averaged 10 points per game with most of the production coming on dunks, short hooks and mid-range jumpers.

This fall, he looks much more versatile. He regularly knocks down shots from the 3-point line. Germany, a natural lefthander, was even seen recently making a right-handed hook.

Obviously, he is expected to be a lynchpin for the Roadrunners.

Henson hasn’t named his starting lineup or the players he plans to play regularly leading into the month of November. But he said he might have a nine-player rotation.

If Germany is ready physically, he is expected to start at center. Senior Cedric Alley Jr. likely is the power forward. On the wings, the Roadrunners appear to be leaning toward a backcourt of Darius McNeill and Jordan Ivy-Curry, with Dhieu Deing at small forward.

Others who appear to be in the plans for the rotation, based on what has transpired in recent practices, are highly-touted freshman Josh Farmer, and also Lachlan Bofinger and Lamin Sabally, all of them forwards. Erik Czumbel is expected to back up at both guard spots, with Phoenix Ford coming in to spell Germany.

Farmer played last season at Houston Sharpstown High School, where he was regarded as one of the top forwards in the state. Sabally, another freshman, played at a prep school in Arizona last season after moving from his native Germany.

“Lamin’s been stringing together a lot of good practices,” Henson said. “I mean, he’s been really, really good.”

As UTSA’s McNeill settles in at point guard, Farmer pushes for a prominent role

Darius McNeill is one of the new players on the UTSA men's basketball roster. He is a 6-foot-3 senior transfer guard. - photo by Joe Alexander

Senior transfer Darius McNeill enjoyed a solid practice Thursday afternoon at the UTSA Convocation Center. – File photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA coach Steve Henson says that he’s getting “pretty close’ to identifying his playing rotation leading into next week’s season opener.

While the coach is not naming any names, it has become evident to anyone watching practices that point guard duties and floor leadership responsibilities will fall to senior transfer Darius McNeill.

McNeill, who has played at the University of California and at SMU, looked sharp in running the show in practice on Thursday afternoon.

When he wasn’t finding cutters to the basket with crisp bounce passes, he was pulling up to knock down shots, showing that he’s capable of hitting from both inside and outside the 3-point arc.

“He’s getting more comfortable,” Henson said. “I think he’ll continue to do that. Just trying to get him to free up his mind a little more. He’s very, very talented.

“He’s thinking too much right now. Part of it is, everything’s new. New terminology. New schemes.”

Even though the team is sort of in search mode right now with lineups and rotations, Henson agreed that McNeill is starting to find a rhythm.

“(Today) was one of his better days,” he said. “I just thing every day he’s with these guys and around the terminology and the coaches, I think he’ll continue to get more comfortable. That’s very important to him. Trying to free his mind up. (Trying to) use his talent right now.”

With the Roadrunners set to play eight games in November, an intriguing question centers on how much of an impact that talented, 6-9 freshman forward Josh Farmer can make right away.

“It’s going to be fun watching him,” Henson said. “There’s not a question of if (he can play). I mean, he’s so talented, and he’s very coachable. Got a great basketball IQ.

“You tell him something once and he’s got it. Great attitude. He’s going to be a big contributor.”

“We need to speed up that process. We’ve talked about that with our coaches, with some of our players, as well. They know it. They can see it. Anybody walks in the gym whether you know anything about basketball or not, you can see his talent.

“We just got to speed that process up and see how he can impact games. You know, right now, he’s behind some other guys. But he’s also got a ton of upside.”

Injury slows Germany

Slowed by a soreness in his right foot, center Jacob Germany sat out most of Thursday’s practice as the UTSA Roadrunners continued preparation for their season opener, now less than a week away.

The adversity involving one of the team’s top offensive weapons comes at an awkward time with the Roadrunners trying to fine-tune for their season opener next Tuesday night at home against cross-town neighbor Trinity University.

Henson said Germany suffered the injury in practice on Wednesday.

“I was pleasantly surprised when I walked out here (today) and saw he wasn’t in a boot,” Henson said. “He went down really hard. Twisted it badly. He was in a ton of pain yesterday. Sure thought he’d be in a lot worse shape than he is today.

“That was pretty encouraging when I walked out and saw him walking around a little bit.”

Germany participated in a shooting drill and then didn’t do much else the rest of the afternoon.

“Nothing anywhere near game speed but the fact that he wasn’t sitting around in a boot was good news,” the coach said.

UTSA’s Deing draws inspiration from his African heritage

Dhieu Deing is a 6-foot-5 guard who comes to the UTSA men's basketball team from Dodge City Kansas Community College. - photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA newcomer Dhieu Deing seems to thrive in the open court in a fast-paced game. UTSA coaches love his energy. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special report, for The JB Replay

As an American-born son of parents who grew up in northeastern Africa, UTSA forward Dhieu Deing has an almost ever-present smile on his face.

It’s a clear indication that he is grateful for the chance to pursue an NCAA Division I basketball dream.

Dhieu Deing is a 6-foot-5 guard who comes to the UTSA men's basketball team from Dodge City Kansas Community College. - photo by Joe Alexander

Dhieu Deing is a 6-foot-5 guard/forward who comes to UTSA from Dodge City (Kan.) Community College. His family’s roots are in Africa, in South Sudan. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Preparing to play his first season with the Roadrunners, Deing says he thinks virtually every day about how much his parents sacrificed in their lives and how fortunate he is, as a result.

His mother and father, after all, would walk for miles through the Sudan some 25 years ago to flee an armed force determined to take over the area where they lived.

Once, he said, his parents picked up their six-month-old son – Dhieu’s older brother — and fled. They trekked all the way, on a north-bound path, to the nation of Egypt.

“Obviously my childhood wasn’t as crazy as (my mom’s) growing up,” Deing said. “But (my mother and father) came from Africa. They didn’t have any money (when they arrived in America). They didn’t have any clothes. They didn’t know English. There were a lot of things going on.”

Soon after the family arrived in the United States, Dhieu (pronounced dill) was born in Lafayette, La. The family later moved to North Carolina. Deing (pronounced ding) was in fifth grade when his father passed away.

“We lived in a shelter for about four years, five years,” he said. “So, it was a long childhood. I’m just blessed I didn’t have to go through (the experience of) army people coming to my house, trying to kill me and things like that. Trying to force me out of my house.

“My mom tells me stories every day. How she had to walk through fields, from country to country, I can’t even imagine how she went through all that. Every day I wake up and think about the sacrifice she put in for me.”

Deing, a 6-foot-5 guard/forward, evolved from these humble beginnings into an all-state player at High Point (N.C.) Central High School. He played a year in college at Division II South Carolina Aiken and then spent last season in junior college at Dodge City, Kan.

Over the last nine months, Deing has turned heads in the basketball world.
In the spring, he averaged 19.1 points per game at Dodge City, in the Jayhawk Athletic Conference. On top of that, he played in August and September for South Sudan’s national team in the FIBA AfroBasket tournament in Rwanda.

At age 20, he was the youngest player for South Sudan, which has been a country for only 10 years. In South Sudan’s first appearance at AfroBasket, Deing averaged 11.3 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.3 assists. His team finished a surprising seventh out of 16 teams.

“It was a really good opportunity for him,” UTSA coach Steve Henson said. “He was the youngest guy on his team. His country is one of the youngest countries in the world. So, they haven’t been on that stage before.”

Deing made the 12-man roster for South Sudan during a tryout camp held in Kigali, Rwanda, the nation’s capital city. He said about 25 players reported for the camp, and the competition to make the team was intense.

Adding to the pressure of the tryouts, for Deing, were the elements. The town of Kigali sits in a hilly region, at more than 4,100 feet above sea level.

“The altitude in Africa is way crazy … (camp) was going on for two or three days, and I’m contemplating whether I’m going to make the team,” he said. “People are like, ‘What’s going on?’ We were real tired. But once I adjusted, it was all right, from there.”

In South Sudan’s 88-86 victory over Uganda, Deing came off the bench to hit 7 of 15 shots from the floor. He scored 22 points, earning the praise of coach Royal Ivey.

“He can play,” Ivey said after the game. “He put on a show today for the world to see, that he is going to be around on this national team for a long time.” Added Uganda coach George Galanopoulos, “No. 6, he is a hell of a player, to be honest. He made some tough shots.”

Henson applauded the efforts of the South Sudanese team, which was organized by former NBA player Luol Deng.

“The expectations from the outside, I don’t think were very high for them,” Henson said. “I think they showed some people (what they could do). They overachieved and did some things that haven’t been done.

“I think as a group they felt good about it, and (Deing) certainly had a couple of really good games. He got a lot of people’s attention over there.”

Henson said Deing has had a good camp with the Roadrunners.

“He’s one of those guys, when you’re talking about playing fast, he’s at his best when it gets going up and down,” the coach said. “He’s at his best when we’re in the open court. He makes plays. Sees the floor pretty well. Just so energetic.

“You can see that. On the heart-rate monitors, he’s got the highest numbers every single day. That’s because he’s flying around.

“First few practices, we weren’t sure why his numbers were so high. It’s just, he gets from Point A to Point B and never stops moving. Offensively. Defensively.”

UTSA’s African connection this season doesn’t stop with Deing. His cousin is Aleu Aleu, a 6-8 forward who was born in Kenya. Aleu moved to the United States, attended high school in Austin and then moved on to Temple College.

Aleu Aleu is a 6-foot-8 junior guard/forward who comes to the UTSA men's basketball team from Temple Community College. - photo by Joe Alexander

Aleu Aleu, a 6-8 junior, is a newcomer out of Temple College. Aleu, who has been limited in workouts because of a leg injury, is from Kenya. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Both committed on the same day last year.

“Me and my cousin, Aleu, we decided, this is the perfect spot,” Deing said. “Coach Henson brought me and Aleu in. We just thought, we’re going to have to do this.”

Coaches are hopeful that Aleu will become a contributor in time, but, thus far, he has been limited to light workouts while rehabilitating an injured quad. Deing says he thinks Aleu will return to workouts soon.

“In about two weeks he’ll be back,” Deing said. “During the season, or, midseason, he’ll be 100 percent.”

Deing has had his ups and downs in UTSA practices. One day last week, he started workouts by making a couple of turnovers and then briefly hanging his head.

Later in the workout, he picked up the intensity and hit two 3-pointers, one of them from the corner as the clock was winding down.

“I’m still learning myself,” Deing said. “I’m still learning my game. I just turned 20 years old. I’m still trying to learn … what I can do to fix my game, trying to get to the next play (and) not just put my head down. Little things like that. That’s me.

“Sometimes I’m like that. I’m human. I make mistakes. I’m just trying to come back and fight better.”

Deing is a competitor who says he is inspired in basketball by Deng, the former All-American at Duke University who runs camps in America for South Sudanese athletes.

He also admires his mother, who works long shifts for a clothing manufacturer in North Carolina.

Long ago, she sacrificed for the family in the face of extreme adversity.

“That’s why I talk to her every day,” Deing said.

What is she like?

“She’s a sweet, sweet, sweet lady,” Deing said. “To me, she’s strict. But to everyone, she’s this loving person. I love my mom. I really don’t know how to explain it. She’s just like, always smiling. Never a dull moment. Always got confidence in me, even when I don’t have confidence in myself.

“She knows that I’m going to be doing something like Lu (Deng) one day. Giving back to the young kids like me. Wanting to do something big.”