UTSA women beat UT Arlington and move to 8-2 on the season

-Video courtesy of UTSA athletics, via ESPN+

Editor’s note: UTSA Roadrunners guard Sidney Love drills a 3-point shot off a sweet step-back move in the second quarter to cap what is described as a ‘helter-skelter’ possession. Upon review, it looks as if UTSA nearly turned it over three times before Love hit one of her three 3-pointers against the UT Arlington Mavericks.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Guard Sidney Love got knocked down a few times, but she always seemed to get back up and make a play. Love produced 21 points and four assists Thursday afternoon, leading the UTSA Roadrunners to a 76-61 victory over the UT Arlington Mavericks.

Jordyn Jenkins scored 14 points and Idara Udo 10 as the Roadrunners bounced back from Monday’s loss at Stanford and improved to 8-2 on the season, including 4-0 at home. It is the first 8-2 start for the UTSA women since the 1997-98 season.

To cap a busy week, the Roadrunners will play Saturday in San Marcos against the Texas State Bobcats. It’ll be their final non-conference game before starting play in The American on Dec. 29 at Charlotte.

Love, a junior from San Antonio-area Steele High School, put on a master-class performance against the Mavericks.

She hit eight of 10 shots from the field and hit three of three from 3-point range. Despite pressure from the UT Arlington defenders, Love made only one turnover.

Koi Love (no relation to Sidney) led the Mavericks with 17 points and seven rebounds.

First half

For Sidney Love, the first half was an adventure.

Not only did she have 12 points to lead the Roadrunners, she also had four assists and a hand in one crazy play early in the second quarter. Skidding on the floor after she was bumped off balance, she gained control and then fired — still on her side — a cross court pass through traffic.

At that point, the Roadrunners tossed another pass high over the defense and into the corner, where it was saved from going out of bounds. The ball ended up in Love’s hands near the top of the arc, where she lined up a three and drilled it.

Records

UT Arlington 4-6
UTSA 8-2

Coming up

UTSA at Texas State, Saturday, noon
x-UTSA at Charlotte, Dec. 29, 1 p.m.
x-American Athletic Conference opener

Notable

Sophomore guard Aysia Proctor made her regular-season debut for the Roadrunners against the Mavericks. Playing point guard, she had two assists and a turnover in eight minutes. Proctor, a starter at shooting guard last season, took two shots and missed both. Before the start of the season, she stepped away from the team to deal with what Coach Karen Aston described as “off-court challenges.”

UTSA coaches applaud groundbreaking on basketball-volleyball training center

Karen Aston. UTSA beat Northern Colorado 80-62 in the first round of the WNIT on Thursday, March 21, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA women’s basketball coach Karen Aston likes the idea that her players will be able to work out at any time in the school’s new basketball-volleyball training center. Officials say the facility is expected to be completed by mid- to late-2026. – File photo by Joe Alexander

Editor’s note: The UTSA men’s basketball team will take on the Southwestern Adventist Knights Thursday at noon in the first of two games at the Convocation Center. The women will host UT Arlington at 4.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Seated behind her desk last July, UTSA women’s basketball coach Karen Aston welcomed a reporter into her office and waited for the interview to begin. Right off the bat, she was asked if she had been talking to her players and recruits about the prospects of a new, on-campus training base.

After all, the final details on construction of a proposed practice facility for men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball seemed all but certain to come together by the end of the year. Aston, however, delivered a carefully measured reply.

“In the business we’re in now, you’re living in the moment,” UTSA’s fourth-year coach told The JB Replay at the time. “What you have (in terms of infrastructure), is what you have to focus on, just because of the ever-changing climate. So I think that as much as I want to sell the (new) practice facility to the recruits and all of that, the reality is, we’re just living in the moment.

“What we have, is what we need to do the best with. So, that’s kind of been my mindset. You want to stay in the moment and make the most of it. When that ground breaks, I think that’s when you can really start getting excited with your current players.”

That magical day for Aston arrived Wednesday when school officials, boosters and civic leaders gathered on the west end of the UTSA campus to cheer the start of construction on a complex that could very well alter the trajectory of basketball and volleyball at the school.

UTSA’s newest major facility for athletics is a $35 million project.

By the time it’s completed in 2026, men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball will have a new home base, a structure measuring 53,000 square feet, complete with two practice courts, locker rooms, a team lounge for each of the three programs, a weight room, athletic training with hydrotherapy, meeting rooms and coaches’ offices.

Teams will continue to play games in the Convocation Center, but coaches are thrilled with the prospect of a more expansive setup for practices, with all the amenities on the premises.

“I think we’ve been waiting a long time for this,” Aston told reporters, “so it’s something I knew when I came here, and everybody that’s part of our athletic program knows, that this is a long time coming, and if you want the game to change for the basketball and volleyball programs, this has to be a piece of that.”

“I’m excited, for sure, but also appreciative of the people that gave the donations that allowed us to get this off the ground, (of) the commitment from the president (of the university, Taylor Eighmy) and (athletic director) Lisa (Campos). I think, all around, it’s a great day.”

A trio of coaches — Aston, men’s basketball coach Austin Claunch and volleyball coach Carol Price-Torok — met with the media after the groundbreaking and offered their views on how the facility could impact their programs and day-to-day operations.

Basketball and volleyball games will continue to be played at the Convocation Center, just as they have since the 1981-82 season, but the lives of the athletes wearing UTSA jerseys will be changed. Coaches believe that their daily routines will be more conducive to high-level performance.

“I think it’s just gym time, to be honest with you,” Aston said. “If you’re trying to play at a high level, you recruit players that want to play at a high level, and the ones that (do) will be in the gym. They want 24-hour access. They’re different than we are. They want to take a nap, wake up at midnight and go shoot.”

With the new facility, it’ll all be possible for young and restless athletes willing to put in the time.

“(Athletes) want to be able to get in the gym any time, get in the weight room,” Aston said. “I just think amenities are fantastic. They make you feel like you’re headed in the right direction as far as having a respected basketball program. But, bottom line, it’s the gym time.”

Claunch said on a zoom call earlier this week that the facility promises to affect the athletes’ daily lives in many ways. Having a weight room in the same building as the practice court. Having a team room to watch film.

The practice facility, he said, “is something that’s going to affect our student athletes every single day. Daily deposits to help them improve physically, mentally, and that’s … obviously, it’s a game changer.”

Claunch signed two players in the early period last month, guard Dorian Hayes from the Houston area and forward Kaidon Rayfield from Oklahoma City. He said he talked to both of them about the benefits that they would get from the new facility during their careers at UTSA.

“Absolutely,” Claunch said. “Obviously Dorian and Kaidon are fired up about what we’re doing, but also, when you’re talking about what they’re going to have in their sophomore year, I mean, that’s going to help their player development, it just makes their entire experience here easier and better and help them win more games.

“Quite, frankly it’s going to help us. It’s going to translate to more wins, you know, just in a lot of different ways.”

For the past 40-something years, all three UTSA teams have played and practiced in the Convocation Center. Currently, volleyball season starts in the late August and runs through mid-November. Basketball season starts the first week of November and runs through the first of March, generally.

Practices for all three sports are ongoing for most of the year, restricting teams to certain times of day without much wiggle room to re-schedule.

“Right now, we’re practicing in the morning, which is great, and we can make it work,” Price-Torok said. “But if we want to sleep in until 9 and then go from 9 to 12 (noon), we can’t. Because you’re in somebody else’s practice time. So, I think it gives us the freedom to make some of those changes … and give those players the time that they need.”

Price-Torok also talked about how the move should ease some of the burden of trainers, who currently move between the RACE building and the Convocation Center, which is about a five-minute walk across campus.

“For them to be housed in one location … it’s just going to be game-changing for them,” the coach said. “The time that our trainers spend every single day, to spread people out, because we’re all sharing this big training room … to be able to go in here (into the new facility) and make her time demand and her job a little bit easier, (it) will help us keep trainers longer (and improve) their quality of life.”

Milestone achievement: UTSA breaks ground on a basketball-volleyball training center

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Calling it “an awesome, celebratory day,” UTSA officials realized another goal in facilities development Wednesday morning with a groundbreaking ceremony for a $35 million basketball and volleyball training center.

UTSA president Taylor Eighmy, addressing a gathering in the foyer of the Roadrunner Athletics Center of Excellence, thanked university staff, boosters and civic leaders for their help in kicking off construction of a 53,000-square foot complex that is expected to be completed in 2026.

“Today is one of those important milestones (for) how we’re going to get where we want to be” in athletics, Eighmy told the group.

For Dr. Lisa Campos, the UTSA vice president for intercollegiate athletics, the groundbreaking represented a starting point for the third major construction project the department has undertaken since she was hired in 2017.

Under her watch, UTSA has built the RACE facility, which is considered the hub of the department, and also the Park West Fieldhouse, the training home for the track and field and soccer teams.

Campos said her excitement is “through the roof” in getting started on what will be the first major facilities investment in basketball and volleyball since UTSA started playing intercollegiate sports in 1981.

The complex is expected to include two full-sized NCAA practice courts, locker rooms, a team lounge for each program, a weight room, athletic training with hydrotherapy, meeting rooms and coaches’ offices.

“We hear from our student-athletes all the time,” Campos said. “They want to be honing their skills, and this is going to give them the opportunity. And from the recruitment standpoint, facilities do still matter. We know NIL matters, but facilities still matter.”

Campos said the construction timeline is about two years.

“We’re projecting that it will be done sometime mid- to late-2026,” she said.

Once the new facility opens, both basketball teams and the volleyball team will continue to play in the Convocation Center, which has been in use for more than 40 years.

The athletic department has prioritized upgrades to baseball and softball facilities, as well as adding a covered football practice field.

But, Campos said, in the long-term, she wants to see a basketball competition site on campus.

“Obviously, we are constantly looking at the Convocation Center,” she said. “We know that’s probably going to take a public-private partnership to get that done. So it is on our radar, but we do have some other projects ahead of that.”

UTSA men show improvement in two-game sweep of North Dakota

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

While the UTSA Roadrunners made progress last weekend with two victories over North Dakota, giving them four wins in their last six games, room for improvement remains before conference play starts on Jan. 4, Coach Austin Claunch said in a Monday afternoon zoom call.

Austin Claunch. UTSA beat North Dakota 80-76 in non-conference men's basketball on Friday, Dec. 13, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Austin Claunch’s UTSA Roadrunners improved to 5-5 on the season after two wins last weekend against North Dakota. – File photo by Joe Alexander

The Roadrunners downed the Fighting Hawks 80-76 on Friday night in San Antonio, and then traveled to Grand Forks, N.D. to complete the sweep with an 95-85 victory on Sunday afternoon. They’re 5-5 on the season going into a Thursday matinee (with a noon tipoff) at home against the Southwestern Adventist Knights.

“We played OK Friday night, and so on your day off you’re sort of thinking you want to make some adjustments, but you also don’t want to do too much. So you try to .. focus on yourselves and things that you can do better. Clearly, we shot it better up there than we did at home, which is good.”

UTSA hit 51.8 percent from the field and 62.5 percent from three on Sunday afternoon. Broken down, the Roadrunners knocked down a season-high 15 threes in 24 attempts.

“I think we’re starting to understand the shots that we want to key to offensively and how we want to flow on offense and what that needs to look like,” Claunch said.

The Roadrunners’ travel plan, utilizing a late-night charter out of San Antonio on Friday, allowing them to get to their hotel in Grand Forks by 2:30 a.m., was an added boost. Traditionally, UTSA has traveled on commercial airlines over the years. The charter to North Dakota was the first for the Roadrunners this season.

Claunch said it “makes a difference” to charter and avoid what would have been a long day of commercial travel on Saturday. “We got to the hotel at 2, maybe 2:30 (in the morning),” Claunch said. “You sleep in, maybe have some breakfast, and you can go ahead and get that film done in the early afternoon. Give them a few more hours off and then come back in the evening, and you can go shoot or watch some more film, or whatever.”

Given the cost factor, it’s likely not feasible for the Roadrunners to charter more than a handful of times this season.

“It makes a huge difference to sort of be able to get on that plane, get there, put that one to bed earlier in the day maybe earlier than you would if you didn’t charter,” the coach said. “It’s little things. It’s the little details. We’ve done it the other way. We’re not going to make an excuse either way. But when you do it, it certainly in my opinion is a competitive advantage. And so we’re really blessed to be able to do that.”

Notable

Claunch said UTSA remains “very much a work in progress” on defense. “Our man to man is coming along, but it’s not near the level it needs to be by conference play,” he said.

“We’ve thrown some zone in, and that’s been good for us,” the coach continued. “So to have a couple of different things we can go to has been nice. We’ve just got to get better across the board. Certainly, rebounding has got to improve.”

Through 10 games, UTSA ranks last in the American Athletic Conference in scoring defense (79.2) and field goal percentage allowed (46.3). The Roadrunners’ three-point percentage allowed (35.9) ranks 11th out of 13 teams.

UTSA fared better against North Dakota, holding the Hawks to 38.8 percent in the first game and 44.6 percent in the second. The Hawks hit 13 triples in a fast-paced game Sunday afternoon.

“We’ve thrown some zone in, and that’s been good for us,” Claunch said. “So to have a couple of different things we can go to has been nice. We’ve just got to get better across the board. Certainly, rebounding has got to improve. But again, to ultimately go 2-0 this week after two really tough, close games (at Saint Mary’s and Arkansas), to get back to .500 before the break (is good).”

Home cooking? Stanford gets a steal and a late basket to beat UTSA, 62-57

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

After a strange sequence of events in the final 13 seconds that totally frustrated the UTSA Roadrunners, the home team Stanford Cardinal made a defensive stop at the end and scored on a breakaway layup to record a 62-57 victory Monday afternoon at Maples Pavilion.

UTSA’s seven-game winning streak came to an end in bizarre fashion. Trailing by three with 13.5 seconds remaining and hoping to tie the game in regulation, the Roadrunners inbounded the ball. But after an estimated three or four seconds, officials noticed that the clock had not started.

A lengthy discussion ensued, and officials handed the ball to UTSA to inbound on the side. Much to the dismay of Roadrunners coach Karen Aston, officials put 10.9 seconds on the clock for UTSA’s last chance.

When play resumed, UTSA worked the ball to forward Idara Udo on the left elbow, but Stanford guard Jzaniya Harriel came up with the possession. She went the other way for a layup with no time left to secure the victory.

“That’s frustrating,” Aston said on the team’s postgame radio broadcast, “because you draw something up with the allotted amount of time. We’re emotionally and mentally ready to run it. And, you know, (there is a) stoppage of play, and (they) take time off (the clock) for their error. A little bit frustrating.”

In a gritty show of resolve against a nationally-renowned opponent in the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Roadrunners fell behind by 10 in the first half and erased that deficit. In the fourth quarter, they allowed Stanford to build a 15-point lead and nearly came back to tie on the home floor of a power conference foe.

“We lost the game in the third quarter,” Aston said. “We let it get away from us, and (we) fought back … hard. We’ll learn some things (from) this loss, for sure.”

Stanford entered the game on a two-game losing streak, trying to avoid a three-game skid in one season for the first time in 23 years. It wasn’t pretty, but the Cardinal succeeded, with guard Elena Bosgana scoring 13 points, pulling down 11 rebounds and passing for three assists. Bosgana, from Greece, scored nine points in the third quarter when her team started to pull away from UTSA.

In addition, Harriel scored 12 points and hurt the Roadrunners with three of four shooting from the 3-point arc. Senior forward Brooke Demetre added eight of her 11 points in the first half. Demetre, another long-range shooting specialist, knocked down three of six from the arc.

As a team, Stanford made eight of 24 from distance after entering the game as the nation’s leader in 3-point shooting percentage. The Cardinal came in shooting 42 percent from three, which means that UTSA did a more than respectable job on some of the best perimeter players in the nation.

The Roadrunners had high hopes coming into the game at Stanford, where three national championship banners hang from the rafters. They had won seven straight and had won their last two by margins of 31 and 43 points. In the end, though, they didn’t make enough plays.

Jordyn Jenkins and Sidney Love each scored 14 to lead the team, but neither shot a high percentage. Jenkins finished five for 18 from the field and zero for two from the 3-point line. Love, who hit six of 14 shots from the floor, made two threes in the final 3:45 of the game to keep UTSA hopes alive.

Point guard Nina De Leon Negron had 12 points, 10 rebounds and three assists. Forward Cheyenne Rowe came off the bench to produce seven points and four rebounds in 19 minutes.

During UTSA’s late push, the Roadrunners battled back from a 15-point deficit with a spirited 11-0 run. First, Jenkins scored on a jumper. Next, Love drove for a layup and nailed a three. When her triple splashed with 3:45 remaining, Stanford’s lead was reduced to single digits at 57-49.

On the other end, Stanford was faltering. After Demetre misfired on a jumper, UTSA sophomore Emma Luico buried a pull up jumper. Next play, Stanford came up empty again when Agara, the team’s leading scorer, was called for traveling. De Leon Negron missed a layup on the other end, but Rowe was there for the stick back, cutting the lead to four.

Love made it a two-point game when she received a pass on the left side and buried another three. After it ripped the nets, UTSA had pulled to within 59-57. Coming back the other way, the Cardinal got the ball to Bosgana, and Udo fouled intentionally with 13.5 seconds left.

She missed the first free throw and made the second, creating a three-point game going into the fateful final sequence.

Third quarter

Bosgana, a senior from Greece, took charge late in the third quarter for Stanford. The 6-foot-2 senior scored seven points in a spree that lifted the Cardinal into a 14-point lead. When Courtney Ogden hit a runner with 1:23 remaining, the Cardinal held a 47-33 advantage. Nina De Leon Negron sank a layup in the last minute, leaving UTSA down by 12 entering the fourth. Stanford led, 47-35

First half

Using their length and athleticism, the Cardinal stifled the Roadrunners’ offense in the early going, forcing them to miss their first four shots of the game and 11 out of their first 13. The Roadrunners had another long drought, misfiring on seven in a row, in the second quarter.

The Cardinal took advantage of the opportunity, building a 23-13 lead with 5:22 remaining on a three by Harriel. But in the end, the Roadrunners scored the last seven points of the half to pull within one. Stanford took a 26-25 lead into the dressing room at halftime.

Records

UTSA 7-2
Stanford 8-3

Coming up

UT Arlington at UTSA, Thursday, 4 p.m.
UTSA at Texas State, Saturday, noon

Notable

The Roadrunners had a chance to end a long losing streak against power conference opponents and played hard, but they didn’t execute well enough to get it done. As a result, they have now dropped 25 in a row to teams from major conferences in NCAA Division I that generate the most revenue.

Aston is 0-9 against the power elite in a little more than three seasons at UTSA, including a 55-51 loss on Nov. 7 at Texas A&M. UTSA’s last win against a power opponent came on Dec. 16, 2010, when they defeated the Kansas State Wildcats, 72-55, at the Convocation Center. That win was 14 years ago to the day of the game at Stanford.

The Cardinal came into the game receiving votes in the latest Associated Press Top 25. They were ranked 38th in the NCAA’s NET computer rankings. UTSA entered ranked 50th, the highest NET ranking of any team in the American Athletic Conference.

Stanford is entering its first season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference, considered one of the four majors after the latest realignment. Previously, Stanford had been aligned with an amalgam of universities on the West Coast since 1918. Most recently, they were in the Pac-12, which has effectively dissolved. From the old Pac 12, Stanford and Cal started play this season in the ACC; Washington, Oregon, USC and UCLA moved into the Big 10 and Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Utah linked with the Big 12.

Stanford is also in transition with its coaching staff. Kate Paye is the head coach, replacing retired legend Tara VanDerveer.

UTSA’s Aston says an opportunity to play at Stanford is ‘a gift for our players’

Karen Aston. UTSA women's basketball at the Convocation Center on Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. - photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA coach Karen Aston leads her team into its toughest game of the season Monday afternoon at Stanford. – File photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Tara VanDerveer will not be coaching the Stanford Cardinal on Monday afternoon, but her name will be on the court at Maples Pavilion, and that alone likely will be enough to light the competitive fires inside each and every member of the upstart UTSA women’s basketball team.

“Even though Tara’s not there, she built that program,” UTSA coach Karen Aston said. “To be able to play on a court that has her name on it, first of all, and to play a team that has such a rich tradition and footprint on our game, is a gift for our players.

“You know, we don’t take that lightly,” the coach added. “We appreciate the opportunity, and we’ll try to make the most of it. I expect our team to be competitive. I’ll be surprised if we’re not.”

The 2023-24 season was the last at Stanford for VanDerveer, who retired after 38 years as the school’s head coach. In the wake of her departure, the school put her name on the court, to honor a woman who led the program to 15 Pac-12 tournament championships, 14 Final Fours and three national titles.

Stepping into the job this fall was Kate Paye, one of VanDerveer’s former players, who was also one of the legend’s longtime former assistants.

Under Paye, the Cardinal (7-3) won seven of their first eight games before dropping the last two. Stanford had fourth-ranked LSU beat a week ago before giving up a lead in the final minutes and then losing in overtime in Baton Rouge, La.

On Friday night, they opened play in the Atlantic Coast Conference on the road against the Cal Bears. Surprisingly, the Bears walloped the Cardinal, 83-63. As a result, Stanford will be trying to avoid a three-game losing streak in the same season for the first time since January 2001.

Despite back-to-back losses, the Cardinal remain heavily favored to win on their homecourt. Yes, the Roadrunners (7-1) have forged a seven-game winning streak, the longest at the school in 11 years. But Aston, who faced the top teams in the country regularly as the head coach at the University of Texas, knows what she is up against.

Stanford is 7-0 this season on Tara VanDerveer Court and can light up the scoreboard with anyone.

Led by forward Nunu Agara and a fleet of talented perimeter players, the Cardinal have one of the most explosive offenses in the nation, averaging 83.2 points per game on 48.6 percent shooting from the field. In three-point accuracy, they lead NCAA Division I with a percentage of 42.8.

“It starts with the players,” Aston said. “They are able to recruit … players who can shoot and come into their (college) careers already having that skillset. And what they do offensively lends to that.

“They run a lot of motion, a lot of movement, a lot of actions, is what I would call it, and it puts a lot of pressure on your defense to not make … minor mistakes that get one of them open for a clear 3-point shot. So I think their system is really good, and the concepts they run, they’re really comfortable with.”

The Stanford offense will be a good test for UTSA, which has held its last four opponents to an average of 43 points on 29.7 percent shooting. Aston said she hopes her players are ready for Stanford 3-point artists Elena Bosgana, Brooke Demetre and Jzaniya Harriel.

“I think it will be a huge challenge for us on Monday to make sure they don’t have a hey-day on the 3-point line,” Aston said.

Records

UTSA 7-1
Stanford 7-3

Coming up

UTSA at Stanford, Monday, 2 p.m.
UT Arlington at UTSA, Thursday, 4 p.m.
UTSA at Texas State, Saturday, noon

Notable

Dating back to the 2010-11 season, UTSA women’s basketball has lost 24 games in a row to teams from power conferences. In other words, to teams that come from conferences bringing in the most revenue. Aston is 0-8 against the power elite in a little more than three seasons at UTSA, including a 55-51 loss on Nov. 7 at Texas A&M in this year’s opener. The Roadrunners’ last win against a power conference opponent came on Dec. 16, 2010, when they defeated the Kansas State Wildcats, 72-55, at the Convocation Center.

UTSA claims first road win of the season, 95-85, at North Dakota

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Guard Tai’Reon Joseph poured in 28 points, and the UTSA Roadrunners claimed their first road victory of the season by holding off the North Dakota Fighting Hawks 95-85 Sunday afternoon.

After the Roadrunners defeated the Hawks 80-76 on Friday night in San Antonio, the second game between the teams in three days started to look like a blowout in the second half, with UTSA building a 17-point lead in Grand Forks, N.D.

In the end, though, the Hawks battled from behind and pulled within three with 1:28 remaining.

Down the stretch, UTSA guard Marcus Millender scored on a driving layup off a set play. After that, Damari Monsanto, Raekwon Horton and Joseph, a transfer from Southern University playing in only his third game at UTSA, hit two free throws apiece to secure the 2-0 sweep of the Hawks.

The story of the day centered on Joseph, who had to sit out the first seven games of the season to regain his eligibility. Playing in his first two, he showed off elite defensive skills but scored only six points at Arkansas and six more Friday at home against North Dakota.

But because of an errant jump shot, he hit only four of 14 from the field in the two games combined. On Sunday, coming off the bench for UTSA at the Betty Engelstad Sioux Center in Grand Forks, Joseph started to round into the form that made him the leading scorer last year in the Southwestern Athletic Conference.

He hit eight of 11 from the field and six of eight from the 3-point arc. Joseph also hit six of seven at the line as UTSA, the third-best free-throw shooting team in the nation, knocked down 22 of 24 for 91.7 percent.

Afterward, Joseph told the UTSA radio broadcast that vocal support from his coaches and teammates helped him stay confident with his offensive game.

“I just got back (in the lineup), and they told me, ‘Shot (is) going (to) fall. Keep shooting,’ ” Joseph said. “They kept giving me the ball, and I just kept taking shots, and they started falling.”

In an interview with broadcaster Andy Everett, Joseph said coaches told him during the game to drive the ball if the defense kept pressuring him at the 3-point line. He did just that with a drive and a jam that lifted the Roadrunners into an 80-66 lead with 4:36 left.

“Coach telling me, ‘Hey, (if) they flying out there … you can go get you a dunk. Next play, I got the dunk,” he said.

The Roadrunners’ offense was at its best, as they hit 52 percent from the field for the game and 63 percent at the 3-point arc. From the arc, they made 15 of its shots on 24 attempts. Moving the ball well, the Roadrunners had 29 field goals on 16 assists.

“It’s just sharing the ball,” Joseph said. “Like coach said, when you share the ball, we all going to have fun and we all going to win.”

Guard Primo Spears scored 16 points and Damari Monsanto 15 for the Roadrunners. Millender had 11 points and seven assists, while Horton contributed 11 points and 10 rebounds.

Guard Treysen Eaglestaff led North Dakota with 24 points, including 13 in the second half. Dariyus Woodson added 23. Combined, the two of them made nine three pointers. For the Fighting Hawks, who play in the Summit League, it was their third game in five days in three different cities.

On their sojourn, they traveled to Orem, Utah, last Tuesday and lost to Utah Valley on Wednesday night. Afterward, they flew to San Antonio on Thursday and lost to UTSA Friday night in the makeup of a game that had been re-scheduled from a Nov. 9 postponement.

First half

The Roadrunners shot 50 percent from the field and made seven 3-pointers in the first half en route to a 39-34 lead against the North Dakota Fighting Hawks. Horton and Primo Spears hit from beyond the arc in the final 61 seconds in a late 6-1 run for UTSA.

Records

UTSA 5-5
North Dakota 4-8

Coming up

Southwestern Adventist at UTSA, Thursday, noon

Notable

The Roadrunners were looking a little lost after starting the season with a 1-3 record, including three straight losses by double figures.

Since then, they’ve won four of their last six, with the only two losses coming on the road at Saint Mary’s and Arkansas, both of them NCAA tournament contenders. After they play host to Southwestern Adventist — a non-Division I private school from Keene, in the Fort Worth area — they’ll have a break before they travel to meet Army on Dec. 29.

Conference play starts on Jan. 4 at Tulane.

UTSA forward David Hermes played for the first time since a Nov. 25 game against Troy. He scored four points and had a blocked shot in four minutes. Born in Syria, Hermes is a 6-10 forward from Stockholm, Sweden. He attended high school in Florida and played in junior college at Indian Hills Community College.

Forward Jaquan Scott missed his second game in a row. After Friday’s game in San Antonio, UTSA coach Austin Claunch said Scott “isn’t with us right now.” He said that there’s no timetable for his return.

UTSA will host a basketball doubleheader on Thursday at the Convocation Center. After the men host Southwest Adventist, the women will take on the UT Arlington Mavericks at 4 p.m.

Spears-led UTSA claims ‘the first round’ against North Dakota

Primo Spears. UTSA beat North Dakota 80-76 in non-conference men's basketball on Friday, Dec. 13, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Connecticut native Primo Spears punctuated UTSA’s 80-76 victory over North Dakota Friday night by knocking down three straight field goals in the final two minutes. He scored a game-high 28 points. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Guard Primo Spears scored 10 of his 28 points in the final two minutes and 11 seconds as the UTSA Roadrunners held off the North Dakota Fighting Hawks 80-76 Friday night at the Convocation Center. The teams will play again on Sunday at 2 p.m. in Grand Forks, N.D.

“The first round is important,” Spears said of the two-game series. “Now we got to go up there and face a little adversity with the traveling and try to get us another one.”

Spears entered Friday’s contest as the nation’s fourth leading scorer, and with the game on the line, he showed how he has elevated himself into that position. The native of Hartford, Conn., made two acrobatic moves down the stretch and converted each into three-point plays.

Damari Monsanto. UTSA beat North Dakota 80-76 in non-conference men's basketball on Friday, Dec. 13, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Damari Monsanto scored 12 points as he made four shots from 3-point distance. He also passed for four assists. – Photo by Joe Alexander

On one of them, he cut across the lane and laid out for a driving, right-handed scoop shot. After the foul, he got up off the floor and hit the free throw. On another, he split a pair of defenders for a layup, drew contact, and ended up at the line for another freebie.

Spears was hardly the only show in an entertaining basketball game.

Forward Dariyus Woodson led five North Dakota players in double figures with 21 points, including a 3-point shot that he banked in with 20 seconds left. His shot trimmed UTSA’s lead to four and gave North Dakota some hope for a miracle finish, but Spears knocked down two free throws with 16 seconds left to all but seal it.

“Wins are always good,” UTSA coach Austin Claunch said. “I think the most encouraging thing about this is, offensively, we score 80 and we left some meat on that bone. We missed some open threes, some shots we normally make.”

Dominating on the boards throughout, the Hawks had their moments in the game.

In the first half, they forged a 14-3 run to build a 31-23 lead with more than seven minutes left. In the second half, even when they fell behind by 13 with 10 minutes remaining, they responded with runs that pulled them to within five three times down the stretch.

Each time, the Roadrunners made enough plays to pull it out. Afterward, Claunch praised his players’ “collective fight” in winning their second straight at home and their third in their last five overall.

“This was encouraging, to get up by 13 with 10 minutes left against a quality team,” Claunch said. “Now we just got to continue to grow and learn how to finish, which is part of becoming a good program and a good team.”

Records

North Dakota 4-7
UTSA 4-5

Coming up

UTSA at North Dakota, Sunday, 2 p.m.

Individual leaders

North Dakota — Small forward Dariyus Woodson hit six of 14 from the field and five of 12 from three to score 21 points. Guard Treysen Eaglestaff scored 14, more than four below his team-leading average of 18.5, and Brian Mathews added 13. Forwards Deng Mayar and Amar Kuljuhovic each scored 10 and dominated the boards, with both pulling down 11 rebounds. The two combined for 13 offensive rebounds, with Kuljuhovic grabbing nine.

Marcus Millender. UTSA beat North Dakota 80-76 in non-conference men's basketball on Friday, Dec. 13, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Marcus Millender produced 10 points, four rebounds and three steals .as UTSA won its second straight game at home. – Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA — Spears knocked down 11 of 17 shots from the field and was three for three in the last 2 minutes and 11 seconds. He scored 28 points, his seventh game with 20 or more this season. Damari Monsanto scored 12, including four 3-point baskets. Marcus Millender was good across the board. Millender had 10 points and four rebounds, and he also had four assists and three steals. Forward Jonnivius Smith contributed eight points, 11 rebounds and two blocks.

Notable

The Roadrunners were scheduled to take a charter flight to Grand Forks, N.D., late Friday night, the team’s first charter flight of the season Over the years, UTSA men’s basketball traditionally has traveled on commercial airlines. But it is expected that UTSA will charter on a limited basis through this season. The team is expected to return home from North Dakota on a commercial flight.

UTSA forward Jaquan Scott, one of the Roadrunners’ best athletes, did not play and apparently wasn’t in the arena. Asked about Scott’s status on the team, Claunch said: “He’s not with us right now.” He described it as “a personal matter that we’re dealing with internally.” There is no timetable for Scott’s return, the coach said.

Spears is shooting the basketball better at UTSA than in any of his three previous stops in college basketball. As player at Duquesne, Georgetown and Florida State in the past three years, respectively, he never posted a field goal percentage better than 40.8 percent. He is shooting 45.2 percent at UTSA. On his three-pointers, he was never better than 30 percent at any of his previous stops. Spears is hitting 35.3 percent from three at UTSA.

Austin Claunch. UTSA beat North Dakota 80-76 in non-conference men's basketball on Friday, Dec. 13, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Austin Claunch’s UTSA Roadrunners outscored the North Dakota Fighting Hawks 21-5 in fast break points. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Quotable

Claunch said Spears “had a great week” of practice after the team returned home from Arkansas, where they lost by 15 last Saturday. “I thought he showed incredible leadership and spirit tonight,” the coach said. “You know, when you do that, good things tend to happen.” Claunch said he didn’t really notice that Spears scored 28. “I thought he was an incredible floor general, getting everybody involved,” the coach said. “He did what great players do at the end of the game. They make shots.”

First half

The UTSA Roadrunners scored 16 points off nine North Dakota turnovers, seizing a 43-38 lead at intermission. Primo Spears and Marcus Millender led the defensive effort with three steals apiece.

They also paced the offensive attack with Spears scoring 12 points and Millender 10. Combined, the two shot nine of 17 from the field between them. Forward Jonnivius Smith came off the bench to supply a spark, producing six points and five rebounds in 14 minutes.

Treysen Eaglestaff highlighted the first-half performance by the Fighting Hawks with nine points on three of five shooting, including two of four from three.

Jonnivius Smith. UTSA beat North Dakota 80-76 in non-conference men's basketball on Friday, Dec. 13, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Jonnivius Smith rises for a one-handed dunk against North Dakota. Smith finished with eight points, 11 rebounds and two blocks. – Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA men prepare for the first of two tests against North Dakota

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Over the next 72 hours, a college basketball oddity becomes a reality for the North Dakota Fighting Hawks and the UTSA Roadrunners.

The Fighting Hawks and Roadrunners men will play Friday night in San Antonio at the Convocation Center and then will turn around and play again Sunday afternoon in Grand Forks, N.D.

For UTSA coach Austin Claunch, it’ll be an experience that brings back memories of his first year in college coaching.

A dozen years ago, he worked on Paul Hewitt’s staff at George Mason University when the Patriots made the finals of the College Basketball Invitational. For the title, they faced off against the Santa Clara Gauchos in a best-of-three series.

The Gauchos won, two games to one, in a series spread out between the West and East coasts. Santa Clara won at home in California in Game 1, before George Mason rebounded two days later to take Game 2 in Fairfax, Va. Two days after that, playing in Fairfax again, the Gauchos beat the Patriots 80-77 for the championship.

“We went to Game 3 and I remember feeling, like, ‘Man, I don’t know how NBA teams do best of seven,’ ” Claunch said earlier this week. “It’s just insane. You feel like you watched the same personnel clips. You’re trying to find new things to talk to your team about. Back to back (games this weekend) won’t feel quite like that, but it’ll be a quick turnaround.”

Originally, North Dakota and UTSA were scheduled to play the first game of a home-and-home on Nov. 9 in San Antonio. But the game was called off, postponed in the wake of weather that prevented the Fighting Hawks from traveling through a flight connection in Denver.

Last week, the teams solidified the make-up for Friday night, the 13th, in San Antonio, which would be followed two days later by the game at Grand Forks. A game that had been on the books all along. So both teams, today, are preparing to see a lot of one another this weekend.

“When you’re playing a good team, you got to be locked in,” Claunch said Monday. “It’s going to be 80 minutes of really competitive basketball. This is a really important week of preparation, and right now we’re just worried about the first (game).

“We’re not worried about Sunday. We got to take care of home court this week and hopefully go 1-0 this week as we move into Sunday and hopefully start the (new) week off the right way.”

Records

North Dakota 4-6
UTSA 3-5

Coming up

UTSA at North Dakota, 2 p.m.

Notable

Two UTSA players to watch this weekend are guard Tai’Reon Joseph and forward Jaquan Scott. Two of the better athletes in the program, Joseph and Scott could spark the Roadrunners if they can find consistency. Joseph sat out the team’s first seven games with an eligibility issue and Scott missed three recently with a leg injury.

Joseph has shown in practices that he is one of the most explosive athletes on the team. A 6-foot-3 guard, the transfer from Southern University in Baton Rouge, La., is a player capable of leading the team in scoring on certain nights.

In his first game of the season last Saturday at Arkansas, he sparked the team in the first half with a steal and a breakaway dunk. He finished with four points, two rebounds and three steals in 21 minutes. Joseph struggled with his shot, hitting only two of six from the field and zero for two on 3-pointers.

Scott, a 6-foot-7 transfer from Mississippi State, exploded on Dec. 3 at Saint Mary’s for 14 rebounds off the bench. He had eight offensive boards against one of the best rebounding teams in the nation. Against Arkansas on Dec. 7, his playing time was limited to 16 minutes because of foul trouble, and he finished with only four rebounds.

Eye on North Dakota

North Dakota basketball dates back to the 1904-05 season. For most of their history they have played and made their name in NCAA Division II, notably in the 1960s under head coach Bill Fitch, who had an All-American center named Phil Jackson.

The program started its transition to Division I in 2008 and became a full-time member in 2012-13. Another transition came in the change of nicknames. The school elected to drop the Fighting Sioux nickname in 2011 and went without one until 2015, when they became the Fighting Hawks.

Another milestone was reached in 2017 when North Dakota reached the NCAA Division I tournament for the first time. Playing as a No. 15 seed, they played Arizona in Salt Lake City and lost 100-82. Currently the Hawks are in their seventh season in the Summit League and their sixth under Head Coach Paul Sather.

Treysen Eaglestaff (18.3 ppg), Mier Panoam (13.6, 5.4 rpg) and Amar Kuljuhovic (11.3, 6.8) rank as the Hawks’ top players. They lost 80-57 on Wednesday night at Utah Valley to open a stretch of three games in five days in three different cities.

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UTSA men won’t take credit for moral victories after losses to Saint Mary’s, Arkansas

Update: Groundbreaking for UTSA’s 53,000-square foot basketball and volleyball practice facility is scheduled for Dec. 18, according to a news release from the athletic department. The $35 million structure will be located next to the Roadrunner Athletics Center of Excellence on Barshop Blvd. It will house the daily operations of the UTSA men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball programs.

Austin Claunch. UTSA men's basketball lost to Little Rock 81-64 on Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Austin Claunch’s UTSA Roadrunners moved up about 60 places in the NCAA NET rankings over the past week. The Roadrunners were ranked at No. 234 on Monday. – File photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Last Tuesday night, UTSA men’s basketball coach Austin Claunch lamented lost chances to win on the home court of the Saint Mary’s Gaels, the defending champions in the West Coast Conference.

The Gaels won the ball game, 82-74 in overtime, but the Roadrunners made a statement, rallying from a 23-point deficit to tie the score after 40 minutes of regulation play.

“This is one we can watch and say, ‘We got something here, it’s coming,’ ” Claunch told the team’s radio broadcast. “You know, whether it’s next game or down the line or three months, UTSA is coming.”

By Saturday afternoon, the Roadrunners were doing their thing again, surging into a 32-27 intermission lead in the home arena of the Arkansas Razorbacks.

As the first half against John Calipari’s Razorbacks showed, UTSA has made substantial progress in some areas since it suffered three straight double-digit losses in November.

Then again, the second half at Arkansas was a different ball game, altogether. It was humbling. Getting walloped 48-28 after intermission in an eventual 75-60 loss exposed some of UTSA’s deficiencies that need to be addressed moving forward.

By Monday morning, Claunch made it clear that two hard-fought battles in losses against quality opponents can’t be considered a step forward for the program at this juncture of the season.

“Certainly step forward is hard to say when you go 0-2,” the coach said. “But at the same time, did we find things that we think are going to help us moving into conference? Yeah, absolutely. We’ve got to learn how to finish close games. And credit (to) Arkansas and Saint Mary’s. They’re obviously two good teams that have been there and have won a lot of games. Great programs. Two Hall of Fame coaches.

“For us to put ourselves in those situations, that’s encouraging. To be up at half against Arkansas. To take Saint Mary’s to overtime at a place they don’t lose very often, that’s really encouraging. Now we got to figure out how to win those type of games in overtime and to withstand the second-half comeback from a really good team, because we’ll be in that position again this season.”

In the wake of the losses at Saint Mary’s and Arkansas, UTSA has moved up about 60 places in the NET computer rankings. The Roadrunners have risen to No. 234 as of Monday, up from a ranking in the 290s early last week. The NET ranks 364 teams in NCAA Division I men’s college basketball on a daily basis.

UTSA’s next opponent, the North Dakota Fighting Hawks, are 294th.

Coming up

North Dakota at UTSA, Friday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at North Dakota, Sunday, 2 p.m.

Records

North Dakota 4-5
UTSA 3-5

Notable

Groundbreaking for UTSA’s basketball and volleyball practice facility is expected this month.

Claunch joked that the two-games-in-three-days situation against North Dakota is “kind of like an NBA back-to-back.” North Dakota was originally scheduled to play in San Antonio on Nov. 9. That game had to be postponed because of weather-related travel issues that the visitors faced on one of their connecting flights.

Last week, the game was re-set officially for Dec. 13. Which means, the Roadrunners will play on their home floor Friday night, and travel most of the day Saturday to Grand Forks, N.D., where they’ll meet the Hawks again on Sunday afternoon.

The new schedule will be even more challenging for the Hawks, who will play three games in five days in three different cities this week.

They will start their sojourn Wednesday night with a road game at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah. Subsequently they’ll travel to San Antonio and play UTSA Friday night. Finally, the Hawks will return home to Grand Forks for the Sunday matinee.