By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay
In a women’s college basketball game held as a salute to educators, the UTSA Roadrunners on Saturday afternoon administered a two-hour tutorial in pressure defense, dismantling the Sam Houston State Bearkats 79-36 at the Convocation Center for their seventh straight victory.
The Roadrunners controlled the action from the outset and then delivered a crushing blow in the second half, outscoring the visitors 41-17 in front of an announced 837 fans.
So much for the idea that UTSA’s travel back from Puerto Rico last Sunday and a week-long layoff would have an effect on the team’s performance.
“As a coach, I’ll nit-pick a little bit about certain things,” UTSA coach Karen Aston said. ” … We came back from Puerto Rico and I thought we had a little bit of a lag … recovering from it. And then with finals coming up, I think it was a tough week for us, practice-wise. But, again, (I’m) proud of how we started and finished (the game).”
Forward Jordyn Jenkins finished with a 22-point, 10-rebound double double for UTSA.
Idara Udo, on her birthday, produced a season-high 15 points and also eight boards as her teammates won the rebounding battle, 53-27. From the UTSA backcourt, Sidney Love scored 10 points on four of seven shooting and Nina De Leon Negron passed for eight assists.
Junior forward Cheyenne Rowe delivered off the bench, scoring eight points on four of four shooting. Rowe also contributed with six rebounds in 16 minutes.
As a team, UTSA limited Sam Houston to 21.6 percent shooting from the field. While the UTSA defensive effort produced an opponent season low in points, the team played well offensively, as well, running up a point total that represented a season high.
The Roadrunners shot 48 percent from the field as they won their second game in a row by more than 30 points, the first time that has happened in 28 years.
UTSA’s winning streak seems to have developed two phases to it. In the first three games, the Roadrunners’ offense clicked with scores in the 70s and also with high shooting percentages from the field and from the 3-point arc. But in those games, opponents also shot the ball well against them.
When they returned to San Antonio from a two-game road swing to New Mexico State and UTEP, the team’s approach to defense changed a bit, with eye-opening results for the Roadrunners. They have since held their last four opponents to an average of 43 points per game, allowing only 29.7 percent shooting from the field.
Asked what has changed with UTSA’s defense over the last four outings, Aston said, “I honestly think we just re-assessed. When we came back from UTEP, our defense was maybe a little bit too scout-based, up until that point. The coaching staff looked at that and said, ‘Ok, what’s going on here?’
“We sort of just went back to fundamentals and basics, and I think it’s paid off in a sense that, having as many young players as we do, maybe not making them think quite so much about personnel and what the play is, and all that, and just getting back to the basics and concepts.”
Early on in Saturday’s matinee, both Sam Houston and UTSA were pressing and trapping aggressively While the Roadrunners weathered the storm of pressure, the Bearkats eventually broke down against their bigger and stronger opponent. In the end, the Roadrunners outscored the visitors 26-10 on points off turnovers.
Jenkins, a power forward, was deployed to trap in the backcourt and came up with three of UTSA’s eight steals on the day.
“I think our press is getting better,” Aston said. “I think there are some things that are getting much better. But we need to take some really big steps … in the next couple of weeks. I mean, I know we have a lot of games. After we get through with finals week (next week) we have three games … in six days.
“But, to be honest, I’m more worried about what we’re doing in the next two weeks … to prepare for conference play. Whatever happens in these (next) three games (at Stanford, at home against UT Arlington and at Texas State) it just happens, because our focus needs to be on preparation for Dec. 29.”
UTSA opens play in the American Athletic Conference at Charlotte on Dec. 29.
Records
Sam Houston State 5-3
UTSA 7-1
Coming up
UTSA at Stanford, Monday, Dec. 16, 2 p.m.
First quarter
With both teams pressing and trapping, the period ended when the Roadrunners produced a 9-0 run in the final 2:20 for a 23-11 lead. Cheyenne Rowe and Maya Linton led the Roadrunners with six points apiece. Linton hit a three with 23 seconds left for the final bucket. Whitney Dunn scored nine in the period for the Bearkats. UTSA forced eight Sam Houston turnovers, while Sam Houston forced six by the home team.
Second quarter
After going scoreless for nearly five minutes, the Roadrunners finished strong, scoring nine points in the final 2:12 of the half. De Leon Negron had a couple of assists and ran for a twisting reverse layup in the last few minutes. Two 3-pointers by Dunn in the last minute kept the Bearkats close.
First half
Pressing and trapping, the UTSA Roadrunners forced 13 turnovers and turned them into 18 points as they opened a 38-23 lead on the Sam Houston State Bearkats. UTSA, playing aggressively, also outrebounded Sam Houston 25-9 and pulled down 13 boards off the offensive glass. Jordyn Jenkins finished the half with 11 points and Idara Udo had seven. Nina De Leon Negron, running the team at point guard, had five assists. Whitney Dunn had 16 points at intermission for Sam Houston.
Third quarter
UTSA’s defense was at its best after intermission, holding Sam Houston to one of 13 shooting and seven points. Playing as many as three freshmen at the end of the period, the Roadrunners outscored the Bearkats and took a 52-30 lead into the fourth.
Notable
The Roadrunners keep setting new standards for team success. Their program-best national NET ranking of 69th as of Saturday morning is destined to improve after another lopsided win. Moreover, their 7-1 start now ranks second only to an 11-1 in 1985-86.
Additionally, they have won two games in a row by more than 30 points each for the first time since 1996-97. UTSA downed Towson, 71-40, last Friday in Puerto Rico. Their 43-point margin of victory over Sam Houston was the largest since an 86-33 victory over Nicholls State on Jan. 14, 2008.
Jordyn Jenkins surpassed the 1,500-point mark in her college basketball career. She entered the day with 1,484 points over two seasons at USC and two-plus at UTSA. She now has 1,506 points in 93 games. UTSA center Idara Udo won the team’s “Cash In” award on her birthday.
UTSA played without 6-foot-4 redshirt senior forward Nyayongah Gony and junior guard Siena Guttadauro. Gony has an injury and sat out a game for the first time this season. Guttadauro won’t play again this season as she steps away for personal reasons. Guttadauro, who made the announcement Friday, has indicated she plans to return to the team for 2025-26, according to an athletics department release.
The California native had a solid summer and started the fall in UTSA’s point guard rotation behind Nina De Leon Negron and Sidney Love.
Kyleigh McGuire, a reserve forward on last year’s UTSA team that reached the WNIT, started for Sam Houston State. She finished with four points, five rebounds and two blocks. Forward Whitney Dunn finished as high scorer for the Bearkats with 16 points. She was held scoreless in the second half.