UTSA’s Claunch says he’ll support Allette ‘every step of the way’ moving forward

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

UTSA men’s basketball coach Austin Claunch vowed on Monday that he will stand behind junior guard Vasean Allette “every step of the way” in his career even if he never plays for the Roadrunners.

The coach made his remarks Monday on a zoom conference after the program announced last week that the team’s top offseason pickup in the transfer portal would not play this season.

Allette had already sat out the first 12 games of the season before last week’s announcement on the American Conference’s new player availability notes.

With the Roadrunners on a seven-game losing streak going into a Wednesday night home game against the Charlotte 49ers, his name and biography remain on the program’s athletics website.

“Obviously, Vasean is somebody that we all — including him — had really high hopes (for),” Claunch said. “I want to be clear. It’s not a .. legal situation or anything like that. And I don’t want to dive too much into it.

“But, for him, (it’s) just trying to get himself back in the best place, to be ready to be him, and play basketball at a high level. Obviously, we’re here for him every step of the way and helping him figure out what his next steps are in his basketball journey — here, elsewhere — whatever the case may be.

“He won’t suit up for UTSA this year. And, obviously, I’m not going to dive too much into everything. Certainly he has our support in whatever he needs, to help him get back on his feet and get back to who he’s been, and play basketball.”

Claunch said he doesn’t know yet whether Allette will take classes at UTSA in the spring semester.

Record

Charlotte men 7-8, 1-1
UTSA men 4-10, 0-2

Coming up

Charlotte at UTSA men, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Tulane at UTSA men, Saturday, noon

Notable

Because of commercial airline flight delays, the UTSA women’s and men’s teams spent the night in the DFW airport Saturday and didn’t arrive in San Antonio until around 7 a.m. on Sunday.

Both teams played Saturday afternoon at Temple in Philadelphia.

Claunch said forward Macaleab Rich is nursing a groin strain and did not practice Monday. His status for the Charlotte game is uncertain.

On Dec. 22, Rich scored 25 points on 11 of 15 shooting in a 71-68 loss to Seattle at home in the Convocation Center. In the team’s first conference game last Wednesday afternoon, he played four minutes before suffering the injury in a 110-70 loss at Florida Atlantic.

Rich did not play in a 76-57 loss at Temple in Philadelphia on Saturday afternoon.

“Hard to win on the road and we didn’t do enough in either game to justify getting that result,” Claunch said. “FAU unfortunately reminded me a lot of the Tulane game last year (a 92-63 road loss). A lot of young players against a talented team and we were not prepared for the onslaught that they brought offensively.

“Our offense didn’t help our defense whatsoever. We gave up way too much (in the) paint, just in general … giving up too many layups, too many free throws.”

Claunch said the Roadrunners played “much better” against Temple before the home-team Owls pulled away in the last five minutes.

“We’ve got to manufacture better shots,” the coach said. “I thought we had good ball movement. Now within our ball movement we’ve got to do a better job of being aggressive to go create and score. Defensively it was much improved. We’ve got to continue to value our paint and value our ball offensively.”

Coming up

Charlotte at UTSA women, Saturday 4 p.m.

Records

Charlotte 8-7, 2-0
UTSA 7-6, 2-0

Cheyenne Rowe’s ‘monster’ game leads the UTSA women past Temple, 50-47

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Short-handed in the front court with an injury to Idara Udo and others, the UTSA Roadrunners found a way on Saturday.

They held on at the end of a tense struggle in Philadelphia to beat the Temple Owls, 50-47, behind a 14-point, 18-rebound performance from senior forward Cheyenne Rowe.

It was Rowe’s third double-double of the season and her second in two close American Conference victories.

“I thought she was a monster,” UTSA coach Karen Aston told the ESPN broadcast team. “She was very determined, on the boards, in particular. We’re obviously short-handed, and she was a beast.”

UTSA (7-6, 2-0) has won its first two games in American without Udo, who has been out for the past three games, and without three other power forwards who are out for the season.

The Roadrunners escaped the Liacouras Center victorious with a strong defense, holding the Owls (6-7, 0-1) to 27 points on 9 for 44 shooting through three quarters.

UTSA, the defending conference champions, built a 14-point lead late in the third and then fended off a charge at the end to claim its 11th straight regular-season conference victory dating back to last season.

Last year’s team won the conference with a 17-1 record.

“I thought we played really (resiliently) today,” Aston told the ESPN broadcasters. “We’ve had a lot of adversity this year. We’ve got kids out. You know, this group is growing up. We’re really super young. A lot of them haven’t been in this moment before.

“…I can’t say enough about how great my staff is doing with the preparation and how locked in the kids are. I mean, they’re really trying. They really want to be good.”

UTSA won in spite of some poor offensive execution. The Roadrunners shot only 34 percent from the field and 14.3 percent from the three-point line. From three, they hit only two out of 14.

At the end, in the final nine seconds, the Roadrunners missed three out of four free throws, leaving the door open for the Owls to send the game into overtime.

With Temple down by the eventual final score, the Owls failed to capitalize. Coming out of a timeout, they got the ball to guard Tristen Taylor, who missed a long three-pointer at the buzzer.

Rowe was the difference for the Roadrunners, as the senior from Canada made four of 13 from the field and six of six at the free throw line. On the boards, she pulled down four offensive and 10 defensive boards for her career high.

Damara Allen finished with 12 points, and Mia Hammonds and Ereauna Hardaway added 10 apiece.

For the Owls, Taylor scored 18 points and Drew Alexander added 11, including nine in the fourth quarter on three 3-pointers.

Kaylah Turner, the leading scorer in the conference, averaging 17 points per game, couldn’t get going. She was held to seven points on 3 for 18 shooting. One of the most prolific three-point shooters in the nation, Turner hit only one of seven from beyond the arc.

Records

UTSA 7-6, 2-0
Temple 6-7, 0-1

Coming up

Charlotte at UTSA, Saturday, Jan. 10, noon.

First half

Rowe asserted herself with six points and four rebounds in the second quarter, leading the Roadrunners into the dressing room with a 25-18 lead at intermission.

With UTSA outscoring Temple 18-10 in the second, Damara Allen, Mia Hammonds and Adriana Robles also played key roles.

Allen scored four points on a couple of strong moves to the rim with left-handed layups. Hammonds also had four points in the period, one on a drive through traffic for a layup.

On another play, Robles and Hammonds trapped Temple star Kayla Turner and forced a turnover. Robles picked up the loose ball and tossed ahead to Hammonds for a layup.

The Owls made a play at the end to stem the Roadrunners’ momentum, with Turner getting a steal off Ereauna Hardaway and driving for a layup with one second left.

For Turner, the leading scorer in the American Conference, it was only her second field goal. The Roadrunners held her four points on two of 10 shooting.

Neither team could execute in a first quarter that ended with the Owls holding an 8-7 lead. Temple shot 4 of 19 in the period to UTSA’s 3 of 15.

Notable

Once again, the Roadrunners started the game with a two point-guard lineup, with both Ereauna Hardaway and Adriana Robles on the floor, along with Damara Allen on the wing.

Starting forwards were Cheyenne Rowe and Emilia Dannebauer.

Cleared to play for the first time this season, UTSA guard Siena Guttadauro played seven minutes off the bench and misfired on all three field goal attempts, including two 3-pointers. She sat out the team’s first 12 games. Guttadauro gave birth to a son, Dante, on July 24.

With Guttadauro in the lineup again, it left the Roadrunners with six scholarship athletes on the inactive list. Besides Udo, power forwards who are out for the season include Nyayongah Gony, Taylor Ross and Sema Udo.

Sema Udo is Idara Udo’s younger sister.

Temple sends the UTSA men to their seventh straight loss

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Gavin Griffiths scored 23 points and San Antonio’s Jordan Mason produced a double double Saturday afternoon as the Temple Owls turned back the UTSA men, 76-57, handing the Roadrunners their seventh straight loss.

The Owls, playing at home in the Liacouras Center in Philadelphia, produced runs of 15-2 in the first half and 10-0 after intermission to remain undefeated in the American Conference. It was their sixth straight victory.

Coming out on top in a duel of point guards from San Antonio, Mason (from Clark High School) finished with 15 points, 12 assists and five rebounds. Mason hit five for 10 from the field.

UTSA’s Austin Nunez (from Wagner) had 12 points, three assists and a steal. Nunez shot four for five from the floor and four for four at the free throw line.

Jamir Simpson, Kaidon Rayfield and Dorian Hayes each scored 11 for the Roadrunners, who shot 32 percent from the field.

Records

UTSA 4-10, 0-2
Temple 10-5, 2-0

Coming up

Charlotte at UTSA, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

First half

Mason produced 10 points and five assists as the Owls built a 39-30 halftime lead on the Roadrunners.

Temple surged on a 15-2 run late in the half to break the game open. Forward Babatunde Durodola sparked the burst with two three-point plays.

He spun past UTSA forward Mo Njie, got fouled and hit a free throw with 5:14 remaining to push the Owls into a 32-18 advantage.

UTSA retaliated by scoring eight of the next 11 points, with seven of them coming from freshman guard Dorian Hayes.

Later on, with less than a minute remaining, Nunez executed a cross-over dribble to free himself for a driving layup, and UTSA had pulled to within 37-30.

On the other end, Mason finished the scoring for the half on a drive to the bucket and a layup.

Hayes led the Roadrunners in the half with nine points on two of five shooting. With the performance he broke out of a slump in which he shot three of 24 from the field in his last three games.

Notable

Temple played without Derrion Ford, the team’s leading scorer. UTSA was without forward Macaleab Rich, who suffered a groin injury in a loss at Florida Atlantic on New Year’s Eve.

UTSA has lost seven in a row, the longest skid in Austin Claunch’s two years as coach. The Roadrunners haven’t won since it defeated Georgia Southern on Nov. 25 in Jacksonville, Fla.

Two of the losses have been by 40 points more more, including 97-55 at Alabama and 110-70 at Florida Atlantic on Wednesday. UTSA’s opponents in the skid were 75-24 coming into the weekend.

San Antonio standouts to duel as Temple hosts the UTSA men

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Two former San Antonio high school standouts will meet in Philadelphia Saturday when the UTSA Roadrunners and the Temple Owls tip off in American Conference men’s basketball at 11 a.m. Central time.

Both guards Austin Nunez of the Roadrunners, from Wagner, and Jordan Mason of the Owls, from Clark, are coming off season-high scoring performances.

Mason, a senior transfer from the University of Illinois-Chicago, scored 18 points as the Owls opened play in the American Conference with a 76-73 road victory Tuesday at Charlotte.

After starting his college career at Texas State and then moving on last season to UIC, Mason has won a starter’s role in his first season at Temple, averaging 11.6 points, 4.4 assists and 2.9 rebounds.

Nunez, a redshirt junior transfer from Arizona State, produced 22 points as one of the only bright spots for UTSA in a 110-70 road loss Wednesday to Florida Atlantic.

Opening his college career at Arizona State, transferring to Ole Miss in 2023-24 and then moving back to Arizona State last season, Nunez also has become a starter at UTSA, averaging 8.5 points, 2.4 assists and 2.3 rebounds.

The women’s teams for the respective schools will follow with a game that starts at 1:30 p.m., with both games set to be played in Philadelphia at the Liacouras Center.

Records

Men’s game: UTSA (4-9, 0-1) at Temple (9-5, 1-0), Saturday, 11 a.m.
Women’s game: UTSA (6-6, 1-0) at Temple (6-6, 0-0), Saturday, 1:30 p.m.

Coming up

Charlotte at UTSA men, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 7 p.m.
Charlotte at UTSA women, Saturday, Jan. 10, noon

Notable

Men’s game: In the NET rankings, Temple comes in ranked 172nd, while UTSA is 314th out of 365 teams in the nation. The Owls, who average 77.6 points a game on 46.7 percent shooting, have won five straight.

UTSA has lost six in a row and hasn’t won since it defeated Georgia Southern on Nov. 25 in Jacksonville, Fla. Two of the losses have been by 40 points more more, including 97-55 at Alabama and 110-70 at Florida Atlantic on Wednesday.

UTSA’s opponents in the skid were 64-19 coming into the weekend.

Roadrunners forward Macaleab Rich is listed as questionable today, according to the conference’s player availability report. Guards Vasean Allette and Pierce Spencer are both out for the season, and Stanley Borden is out for the game.

Women’s game: In the NET rankings, Temple enters Saturday’s game ranked 95th in the nation, while UTSA comes in 135th.

The Roadrunners are coming off a win at home. The Roadrunners edged the Tulane Green Wave 65-63 Tuesday in San Antonio. In that contest, newcomer Ereauna Hardaway had 16 points, seven assists and five rebounds.

For Temple, the UTSA game is the conference opener. In the Owls’ last outing, they lost on the road against No. 25 Princeton, 87-77. Guard Kayla Turner leads the American in both scoring (17.8) and three-point shooting percentage (46.0).