Drew Detlefsen homers twice as UTSA baseball routs HCU, wins its fifth straight

UTSA's Drew Detlefsen hit a three-run homer in the bottom of the second inning against Houston Christian on Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. Detlefsen homered again in the bottom of the sixth inning. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Junior college transfer Drew Detlefsen enjoyed a breakout performance with two homers and six RBI. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Newcomer Drew Detlefsen hit two home runs to back the pitching of starter James Hubbard as the UTSA won its fifth game in a row, routing the Houston Christian University Huskies 12-1 Tuesday night at Roadrunner Field.

The game was completed in seven innings on the run rule

Detlefsen, who attended high school in Trophy Club in Denton County, finished three for three at the plate with two three-run homers. The first one highlighted a six-run second inning. The transfer from Dodge City (Kan.) College added another one in the sixth.

Outfielder Mason Lytle had another multi-hit game with three and drove in two runs.

UTSA starting pitcher James Hubbard earned his first win of the season. He went 5.0 innings, 1 run, 3 hits, 1 walk and 7 strikeouts as UTSA beat Houston Christian 12-1 at Roadrunner Field on Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA starting pitcher James Hubbard earned his first win of the season. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Hubbard, from Minden, Nev., worked six innings to earn the victory, allowing only one run on three hits. He struck out seven and walked one. The transfer from Mesa (Ariz.) Community College started fast, striking out three batters in the first inning.

Records

Houston Christian University 4-3
UTSA 6-3

Coming up

Oakland, Mich., at UTSA, Wednesday, 6 p.m.

Notable

Detlefsen and freshman Caden Miller are now tied for the team lead with three homers apiece. UTSA batting leaders are Norris McClure at .483, Lytle at .474 and Detlefsen at .419. Miller is batting .357.

Leaders in OPS — a combination of on-base percentage and slugging percentage — are Detlefsen at 1.384 and Miller at 1.335.

UTSA women play at Tulane hoping to tie school record for victories in a season

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA women will attempt to tie a 16-year-old program record for victories in a season tonight in New Orleans when they face the Tulane Green Wave. Tipoff is at 6:30 p.m. at Fogelman Arena in Devlin Fieldhouse.

With three games remaining in the regular season, the Roadrunners (23-3, 14-1) need one more win to tie the UTSA record of 24 set by the Rae Rippetoe-Blair-coached team from 2008-09.

The ’08-09 team forged a 24-9 record and played in the NCAA tournament. It was also the last one in school history to win a regular-season championship, as it finished 14-2 in the Southland Conference and tied for first with UT Arlington.

Coach Karen Aston’s Roadrunners (14-1) have a chance to win the American Athletic Conference title within the next week, and it would be the first regular-season title in Aston’s 17 years as an NCAA Division I head coach.

The Roadrunners lead the South Florida Bulls (13-2) and the North Texas Mean Green (12-3) in the AAC standings, with each having three to play.

Both of the Roadrunners’ nearest pursuers play next on Wednesday night. The Bulls, who have won nine in a row, take to the road to play the Tulsa Golden Hurricane, while the Mean Green will host the Charlotte 49ers.

A chance exists for a two-way or three-way tie for first place, and in either case, the teams tied for the lead at the end of the regular season would be considered co- or tri-champions, according to the AAC.

If there is a two-way tie for first between UTSA and South Florida, the Bulls would be the No. 1 seed in the AAC tournament, and the Roadrunners would be No. 2, based on a head-to-head tiebreaker.

If there is a three-way tie between UTSA, South Florida and North Texas, the Bulls would be seeded first, followed by the Roadrunners in second and the Mean Green third, an AAC spokesman said.

Records

UTSA 23-3, 14-1
Tulane 16-10, 9-6

Coming up

UTSA at Tulane, tonight, 6:30
FAU at UTSA, Saturday, noon
UTSA at East Carolina, Tuesday, March 4, 5 p.m.
(end of regular season)

Notable

The Green Wave, in their last game, defeated the Wichita State Shockers to snap a three-game losing streak. The Wave won 68-64 at home on Saturday to keep hope alive for a top-four finish in the standings.

Amira Mabry, a Tulane junior from Judson, starts and averages 11.6 points and 6.7 rebounds. She is a 52 percent shooter from the field but has slumped lately, hitting only nine of 29 shots in her last four games.

UTSA scores 41 runs to back solid pitching in four-game sweep

Caden Miller (34) hit a second-inning home run in UTSA's second game on Sunday.

Caden Miller (34) hit a second-inning home run in UTSA’s second game on Sunday afternoon. The homer was his second in two days and his team-leading third on the season. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

After losing three out of four on the road to start the season, the UTSA baseball team rebounded with a focused effort in its first weekend series at home, sweeping four straight games from the Long Island University Sharks.

UTSA started the weekend by beating the Sharks twice on a cold day Saturday and then followed up in warmer conditions Sunday by registering 15-0 and 7-1 victories at Roadrunner Field.

Hitting was the story of the weekend as the home team scored 41 runs, averaged .436 at the plate and smashed five homers.

UTSA's Drew Detlefsen (12) hit a two-run homer in the first inning in Sunday's second game.

UTSA’s Drew Detlefsen (12) hit a two-run homer in the first inning in Sunday’s second game. -Photo by Joe Alexander

Two of the homers came off the bat of freshman Caden Miller, who leads the Roadrunners with three on the season.

It was a relief for the Roadrunners to see all the base runners cross the plate, after being shut out twice, once by UT Arlington and once by Baylor, in the opening four games.

In another good sign, the Roadrunners also enjoyed strong performances from its pitching, particularly from its starters.

Zach Royse, Braylon Owens, Conor Myles and newcomer Mike DeBattista yielded only two runs between them in 22 innings combined (for an ERA of 0.82).

Royse struck out seven and allowed two runs in six innings in Saturday’s opener, when the Roadrunners rallied to win, 6-5.

Owens followed by fanning eight in six frames in Saturday’s second game, which was called a 13-0 victory for UTSA after seven innings on the run rule.

Both of Sunday’s games also went seven innings to allow for the visiting team’s travel schedule. Even with a 9 a.m. first pitch Sunday morning, Myles answered the bell and pitched scoreless six frames.

UTSA starting pitcher Mike DeBattista got the win in Sunday's second game.

UTSA starting pitcher Mike DeBattista got the win in Sunday’s second game.

He steadied himself after one shaky moment after hitting a batter and went on to keep his earned run average for the season at 0.00.

In the second game of the day, DeBattisa worked four scoreless innings and gave up five hits.

Records

Long Island 2-6
UTSA 5-3

First game

Myles pitched six scoreless and Christian Okerholm worked the seventh on Sunday morning, as UTSA routed the Long Island Sharks, 15-0.

The senior southpaw from Melbourne, Australia, struck out seven as he ran his season-opening scoreless string to 10 and 1/3 innings.

In getting credit for his first victory, Myles (1-0) allowed only five hits — all singles — walked one and hit a couple of batters.

With warmer weather moving in after Saturday’s competition was played in 30-degree temperatures, Tye Odom led the Roadrunners offensively with four of the team’s 19 hits. Odom also matched his career high with five RBI.

Houston Christian transfer Ty Hodge continued his hot streak with three hits and a home run.

Senior Mason Lytle produced a hit in four chances, extending his season-opening batting streak to seven games. In all, UTSA went 19 for 36 at the plate against five Long Island pitchers.

Second game

Drew Detlefsen hit a two-run homer in a four-run first inning and Caden Miller added a solo shot in the second as the Roadrunners won, 7-1, in seven innings to complete the weekend sweep.

For Miller, a freshman from Madisonville, it was the second home run in as many days and his third of the season.

Lorenzo Morresi went two for three, stroked a double and recorded an RBI. Lytle went zero for two at the plate as his season-opening, seven-game hitting streak came to an end.

Katy native Mike Battista (1-0) earned the victory in four scoreless innings. Battista pitched in high school at Katy Tompkins and later at Dodge City Community College.

UTSA season in review

UTSA at UT Arlington, L, 5-0
UTSA at UT Arlington, L, 7-4
UTSA at UT Arlington, W, 6-3
UTSA at Baylor, L, 5-0
Long Island at UTSA, W, 6-5
Long Island at UTSA, W, 13-0
Long Island at UTSA, W, 15-0
Long Island at UTSA, W 7-1

Coming up

Houston Christian at UTSA, Tuesday, 6 p.m.
Oakland, Mich., at UTSA, Wednesday, 6 p.m.

Ty Hodge, UTSA, shortstop.

UTSA shortstop Ty Hodge gloves a throw on a steal attempt Sunday at Roadrunner Field. The Roadrunners went 4-0 against the Long Island Sharks over the weekend and improved to 5-3 on the season. – Photo by Joe Alexander

East Carolina men survive hot-shooting UTSA to win 96-89 in overtime

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The East Carolina Pirates made four straight defensive stops, leading to eight points in a row, as they broke open a hotly-contested tie game and defeated the UTSA Roadrunners 96-89 in overtime Sunday at Greenville, N.C.

It was the sixth straight loss for UTSA going down the stretch of the regular season in the American Athletic Conference.

Records

UTSA 10-17, 4-11
East Carolina 16-12, 8-7

How it happened

The Roadrunners played and shot the ball well for most of the night. They built a nine-point lead with 13:34 left in regulation. But they couldn’t make a few plays on the offensive end to close the second half, and the game went to overtime.

Once there, the Roadrunners continued to carry the fight to the Pirates, who were playing in their home at Minges Coliseum. UTSA’s Damari Monsanto quieted the crowd by knocking down a three-point shot with 3:08 remaining, tying the score, 86-86.

From there, East Carolina ratcheted up its defense behind Jayshayne Woodard, turning away UTSA without points on four possessions in a row.

On the other end, the Pirates converted with RJ Felton scoring on a drive to start a decisive 8-0 run. After Cam Hayes hit two free throws, Jordan Riley sank a 12 foot jumper.

Woodard, who made a steal and blocked a shot on the defensive end to kick start the rally, added a dunk with 39 seconds left to make it 94-86 with 39 seconds left.

UTSA couldn’t get any closer than five the rest of the way.

Another heartbreaker

For the Roadrunners, it was another heartbreaker in a late-season swoon that’s been marked by lost leads and lost games. This one was at least their fifth conference loss after leading by nine or more points in the second half. In their previous five setbacks, all came by five points or less.

East Carolina was responsible for one of them in an 80-79 victory at UTSA on Feb. 8. Now, the Pirates have swept the two-game series in contests that came down to only a few possessions each time.

On the offensive end, the Roadrunners played well, shooting 47 percent from the field and hitting at a 48 percent clip from three (13 of 27).

Guard Primo Spears contributed 24 points and seven assists. Marcus Millender scored 21 with five rebounds and four assists.

Monsanto and Tai’Reon Joseph both reached double figures, as well. Monsanto scored 14 and Joseph, who came out of the game momentarily in the first half with a cut near his eye, added 11.

Raekwon Horton returned after sitting out a game with an injury and worked hard at the end to slow down Felton, who led all scorers with 30 points. Riley had 17 points and Hayes 16.

For the Pirates, Felton hit 10 of 15 from the field and made all five of his attempts from the three-point line.

As a team, East Carolina shot 53 percent from the field and 56 percent from three against a UTSA defense that ranks near the bottom of the AAC in both of those categories.

For the season, the Roadrunners were allowing 46 percent field goal shooting and 35.8 percent from three leading into Sunday’s games.

Coming up

Rice at UTSA, Sunday, March 2, 5 p.m.
Memphis at UTSA, Tuesday, March 4, 6 p.m.
UTSA at Charlotte, Sunday, March 9, 3 p.m.

First half

The Roadrunners shot 59 percent from the field and withstood a scoring binge by guard RJ Felton to take a 39-38 lead on the Pirates.

In the opening 20 minutes of the game played at Minges Coliseum in Greenville, N.C., the momentum flowed back and forth with 11 lead changes and seven ties.

The Roadrunners trailed by as many as five at one juncture but always stayed competitive with a sweet flow on offense. They made 16 of 27 shots from the field and six of 11 from three.

UTSA women stoke conference title hopes with a 57-55 road victory at Rice

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Limited to only one point in the last five minutes and 48 seconds, the first-place UTSA Roadrunners women held on until the end of a dramatic finish, stoking their American Athletic Conference championship hopes with a 57-55 road victory Saturday over the Rice Owls.

Karen Aston. UTSA beat North Texas 54-52 in American Athletic Conference women's basketball on Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA coach Karen Aston traced her team’s struggle to score at the end against Rice to emotions associated with being in the thick of a race for a conference title. – File photo by Joe Alexander

Rice’s Dominique Ennis misfired on an open-look, three-point attempt at the buzzer, which sent UTSA players into celebration on the court with their sixth straight win and their 23rd overall, which ties for second most in a season in the program’s 44-year history.

By hanging on, UTSA (23-3, 14-1) also maintained a one-game lead on the South Florida Bulls (20-8, 13-2) in the AAC’s regular-season title race. South Florida played at home in Tampa and won its ninth straight by beating Memphis, 80-70. Sammie Puisis led the Bulls with 34 points.

The Roadrunners have three games remaining, including a road game Tuesday in New Orleans against the Tulane Green Wave, before the start of the AAC tournament. After beating Rice, the Roadrunners moved into a tie with the 2007-08 UTSA team with 23 wins.

If they can beat the Green Wave, they would tie the 2008-09 team for the school record of 24. Both of those squads, coached by the late Rae Rippetoe-Blair and led by point guard Monica Gibbs, won Southland Conference postseason titles and played in the NCAA tournament.

After the Rice game, UTSA coach Karen Aston put on the headset at press row and talked to radio voice Neal Raphael. She sounded relieved. “It’s hard to win on the road, that’s the first thing I’ll say,” Aston said.

With Jordyn Jenkins hitting five of her first six shots, the Roadrunners started fast, storming to a 22-6 lead near the end of the first quarter.

But as the game went on, Rice defended Jenkins better, and both Jenkins and Idara Udo played their way into foul trouble. To make matters more troubling, Ennis started to play well, hitting shots from all angles and distances.

In the last six minutes, the Owls kept grinding away and nearly knocked off off the conference leaders. With 5:48 remaining, Roadrunners guard Nina De Leon Negron hit a three-point basket. The shot went down and gave UTSA a 56-49 lead.

From there, by unofficial count, UTSA missed five field goal attempts and committed two turnovers. The Owls, meanwhile, called on Victoria Flores for a layup. Ennis followed with a three with 2:45 remaining, pulling Rice to within 56-53.

Going into the last half minute, the Owls looked to be the aggressor. With Ennis floating on the perimeter, a danger to score from anywhere, the ball went inside to forward Sussy Ngulefac, who hit from close range. UTSA’s lead was down to one.

On the ensuing inbounds with 15 seconds left, De Leon Negron caught the pass but was tied up, with the possession going to Rice. Ennis, however, misfired from about 13 feet with Maya Linton and Udo coming out to contest.

The defensive stop gave UTSA a last chance with the ball, and the Roadrunners eked one point out of it on a De Leon Negron free throw. She hit it with a second left for the 57-55 lead.

After Rice rebounded De Leon Negron’s next free throw, a miss, the home team had a chance, with the Owls getting to advance the ball to its own end of the court. On an inbounds play, Ennis popped open and had a look at the basket, but she missed off the rim.

“It was Senior Day for these guys (the Owls) and they were jockeying for position as are we, and I thought that Rice played their hearts out. I thought we did, too,” Aston said in an interview on The Bull, on the postgame radio show. “We just … you know, maybe we played not to lose there toward the end of the game.”

Aston had more to say:

“We made a lot of mistakes — defensively, offensively — just uncharacteristic (of our team). Just not being able to listen (was a factor). It was loud in here. We just couldn’t process some of the things we were talking about in timeouts.

“(It was) emotional.

“That’s just where this team is right now,” the coach said. “They want to win so bad that they’re having trouble just relaxing. You know, that’s what happens when you’ve never won anything before, and you’re trying really hard to do it. You’re just trying to find ways to get through it, and we did that.”

UTSA is 16-1 in its last 17 games, with the only loss coming on Jan. 29 at South Florida, 75-63. Jenkins sat out against South Florida with an injury, the only game she hasn’t played this season.

Records

UTSA 23-3, 14-1
Rice 13-14, 6-9

Coming up

UTSA at Tulane (16-10, 9-6), Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.
FAU at UTSA, Saturday, March 1, noon
UTSA at East Carolina, Tuesday, March 4, 5 p.m.

AAC leaders

UTSA 14-1, 23-3
South Florida 13-2, 20-8
North Texas 12-3, 20-7

Notable

UTSA — The Roadrunners are trying to win their first regular-season title since Rae Rippetoe-Blair’s 2008-09 team tied UT Arlington for the Southland Conference crown at 14-2. UTSA went on to win the SLC postseason championship and lost to No. 2-seed Baylor in the NCAA first round, finishing 24-9.

Coach Karen Aston, in her 17th year as an NCAA Division I head coach, has won 346 games. She has a winning percentage of almost 63 percent and has led her teams to seven NCAA tournaments, including four trips to the Sweet 16 and one to the Elite Eight. But she is still looking for her first regular-season title.

Forward Jordyn Jenkins led UTSA with 19 points on six of 13 shooting. Idara Udo, who has had three double doubles recently, finished with eight points and four rebounds in 28 minutes. Both Jenkins and Udo were limited with four fouls. Forward Cheyenne Rowe came off the bench for 10 points on four of seven. Nina De Leon Negron had four points, five rebounds and seven assists. She also contributed four steals.

Rice — Dominique Ennis had 21 points, five rebounds and four assists. She went nine of 23 from the field and made three three-point shots. Forward Sussy Ngulefac, who scored 16 against the Roadrunners in San Antonio in January, didn’t touch the ball much in the first half and was held to 11. Malia Fisher, Rice’s other major scoring threat, scored only four. Hailey Adams, a Rice sophomore from San Antonio’s Clark High School, had seven points and 12 rebounds.

First half

UTSA surged behind the hot shooting of forward Jordyn Jenkins into a 16-point lead in the first quarter, only to see the Rice Owls rally with a focused defensive effort. In the end, the Roadrunners took a 36-27 lead into intermission.

Both teams entered the game in Houston at Tudor Fieldhouse with different motivations. The Roadrunners were looking to protect a one-game lead in the American Athletic Conference, while the Owls wanted to win on Senior Day.

The Owls entered the game with a 10-3 record at home this season.

Tulane update

The Green Wave (16-10 on the season and to 9-6 in the AAC) celebrated Senior Night on Saturday with a 68-64 home victory over Wichita State.

Sherese Pittman recorded her sixth double-double with 17 points and 16 rebounds and Victoria Keenan added 16 on four 3-pointers. Kyren Whittington contributed 12 points.

Amira Mabry, a Tulane junior from San Antonio area Converse Judson High School, was the team’s top rebounder with 11. Freshman Kendall Sneed posted six assists and four steals.

UTSA baseball braves cold weather to beat Long Island twice

UTSA starting pitcher Zach Royse.

UTSA’s Zach Royse started and struck out seven in six innings Saturday against Long Island. He allowed two runs on two hits and two walks. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Caden Miller and Mason Lytle homered to back starter Braylon Owens, who pitched six shutout innings Saturday as the UTSA Roadrunners beat Long Island, 13-0, in seven innings on the run rule for a doubleheader sweep.

On opening day at Roadrunner Field, UTSA rallied for two runs in the seventh and one in the eighth to tame the Sharks, 6-5, in the first home game of the season. The teams are expected to play two more games on Sunday starting at 9 a.m.

UTSA evened its win-loss record on the season to 3-3 by shutting down the Sharks in Saturday’s second game. Owens did the job, striking out eight and walking none while allowing only two hits. The Sharks fell to 2-4 on the season in the wake of a 16-hit attack by the Roadrunners.

Miller, a freshman from Madisonville, went three for five with two doubles and his second home run of the season. Lytle, the preseason Player of the Year in the American Athletic Conference, had a four-for-four game with a double and a homer.

Lytle has hit safely in all six of UTSA’s games this season. He had three hits in the first game and four in the second on Saturday.

Game One

In a game played under cloudy skies with temperatures in the 30s, the Roadrunners took an early lead, fell behind and then pulled together late to win. Andrew Stucky went three for four with two RBI to lead the Roadrunners.

Records

Long Island 2-4
UTSA 3-3

Coming up

Long Island at UTSA, second game of a doubleheader, Saturday, 3:30 p.m.
Long Island at UTSA, doubleheader, starting at 9 a.m.

Mason Lytle had UTSA's first hit and scored later in the bottom of the first inning.

Mason Lytle produced three hits in four at bats, scoring twice and driving in one, in the first game of a doubleheader. Lytle added four more hits and a home run in the second game to extend his hitting streak to six. – Photo by Joe Alexander

First-place UTSA women hit ‘the final stretch’ in American Athletic Conference title race

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

In long-distance races in track and field, an official rings a bell with one lap to go as runners churn for the finish.

The leader of the pack has an advantage, but everyone with a competitive heart believes they can still win.

Jordyn Jenkins. UTSA beat East Carolina 60-46 at the Convocation Center on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, in American Athletic Conference women's basketball. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Jordyn Jenkins leads the AAC in scoring at 18.5 points per game. She also ranks fourth in field goal percentage at 47.2. – File photo by Joe Alexander

Well, the bell is ringing, so to speak, for the UTSA women’s basketball team and everyone chasing them in the race for the American Athletic Conference regular-season title.

The first-place Roadrunners (22-3 overall, 13-1 AAC) lead in the standings by one game over the South Florida Bulls and by two over the North Texas Mean Green with four to play.

Of UTSA’s last remaining games, three are on the road, including one this afternoon in Houston against the Rice Owls.

Even though a regular-season title doesn’t guarantee a coveted NCAA berth, UTSA forward Idara Udo says it’s “really important” for the Roadrunners to win it.

“That was one of our goals for the season,” she said. “So I think that with four games left, it’s kind of like the final stretch, like, the last lap in the race.”

Both South Florida (19-8, 12-2) and North Texas (19-7, 11-3) have two at home and two on the road remaining.

South Florida has won eight in a row leading into today’s home game against Memphis, while North Texas has won three straight going into a road test today at East Carolina.

UTSA coach Karen Aston was asked during her weekly session with the media on Monday how she liked her team’s chances to finish first.

Hailey Adams. UTSA women's basketball beat Rice 67-58 in American Athletic Conference action at the Convocation Center on Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Hailey Adams, a Rice sophomore from San Antonio Clark High School wearing No. 22, averages 7.0 points and 7.2 rebounds for the Owls. – File photo by Joe Alexander

“Well, we control our own destiny at this point, as far as the fact that we are one game up right now,” Aston said. “But there’s just a lot of basketball to play. Take the road games that are never easy. So we just have to take the standard approach that we’ve made since Day 1, which is one game at a time.

“Rice is the next opponent and there’s really not much to worry about other than Rice right now.”

The Roadrunners had a tough time with the Owls before beating them 67-58 in San Antonio on Jan. 8. Rice led by nine in the second quarter and by six with 7:54 remaining, only to see UTSA explode past them in the final minutes.

Records

UTSA 22-3, 13-1
Rice 13-13, 6-8

Coming up

UTSA at Rice, Saturday, 4 p.m.
UTSA at Tulane, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.
FAU at UTSA, Saturday, March 1, noon
UTSA at East Carolina, Tuesday, March 4, 5 p.m.

Updated list: San Antonio-area baseball players in NCAA Division I

Editor’s note: Please see The JB Replay’s updated list of athletes from San Antonio-area high schools on NCAA Division I baseball rosters. The list, an annual research project of this news outlet, is likely not inclusive of all San Antonio area players. It will be updated when new information comes to light.

Baylor

Andrew Petrowski, redshirt senior from Clark High School and San Jacinto College
Brytton Clements, freshman infielder from Laredo Alexander

Duke

Edward Hart, junior pitcher from Alamo Heights High School

Houston

David Stich, redshirt junior pitcher from Boerne, San Antonio Cornerstone Christian

Houston Christian

Levin Castilleja, junior catcher from Churchill High School, Wharton County College

Incarnate Word

Isaiah Zavala, grad student pitcher from Southwest High School
EJ Garcia, sophomore pitcher from New Braunfels Canyon
AJ Herrera, freshman catcher from Central Catholic
Edward Mendoza, senior pitcher from Eagle Pass
Rey Mendoza, grad student outfielder from Eagle Pass
Julio Riggs, grad student infielder from Boerne High School

Lamar

Coleson Abel, junior pitcher from Kerrville Tivy, Lubbock Christian
Aiden Baumann, junior outfielder from New Braunfels High School, UTSA

Prairie View A&M

Michael Burroughs, junior outfielder from Judson High School

Sam Houston State

Connor Zaruba, sophomore pitcher from Yoakum High School; McLennan College

Stephen F. Austin

Dylan Hummel, junior infielder from Madison High School and Coastal Bend Community College

Tarleton State

Jack Burcham, senior pitcher from Reagan High School
Ryan Beaird, senior pitcher from Reagan High School, UTSA

Texas

Jalin Flores, junior infielder from Brandeis High School
Ruger Riojas, junior pitcher from Wimberley High School and UTSA

TCU

Anthony Silva, junior infielder from Clark High School
Cohen Feser, redshirt junior pitcher from Reagan High School
Mason Bixby, sophomore pitcher from Johnson High School
Jacob Silva, freshman catcher from Clark High School

Texas A&M-Corpus Christi

Chad Pantuso, freshman utility player from Johnson High School
Chance Reisdorph, senior catcher from New Braunfels Canyon High School
Zach Garcia, senior pitcher from New Braunfels High School
Alberto Santos IV, freshman pitcher from San Marcos High School

Texas Southern

Jason Lazo, infielder from Veterans Memorial High School, Johnson County Community College
Jesse Herrera III, senior utility player from Churchill High School, New Mexico Junior College

Texas State

Cole Tabor, junior infielder from Reagan, transfer from Temple JC
Ryne Farber, sophomore infielder from Johnson High School
Matthew Tippie, senior pitcher from Wimberley, Angelina College
Rocco Garza-Gongora, junior outfielder-infielder from Laredo Alexander, Oklahoma
Jackson Teer, redshirt senior pitcher from Johnson
Carson Laws, junior pitcher from Clark High School, Midland College
Rashawn Galloway, junior catcher from Boerne High School
Zachary Gingrich, freshman outfielder from Smithson Valley High School
Tyler Walton, freshman pitcher from San Antonio Johnson High School
Kutter Webb, freshman infielder from San Marcos High School

UTSA

Jordan Ballin, freshman infielder from Boerne Champion High School
Josh Vaughn, junior infielder from Clark High School
Whitt Joyce, sophomore catcher from Lytle, Medina Valley High School
Ryan Jester, redshirt freshman pitcher from Bracken Christian

UT Rio Grande Valley

Austin Stracener, redshirt junior infielder from New Braunfels Canyon; Texas A&M, Baylor and Texas State
Evan Janner, sophomore outfielder from New Braunfels Canyon
Francisco Hernandez, redshirt senior pitcher from Laredo Alexander
Arturo Garcia, freshman pitcher from Laredo United South High School
Emir Encalada, junior pitcher from Laredo Alexander High School

Vanderbilt

Tristan Bristow, freshman pitcher from Harlan High School

Virginia

Will Broderick, freshman catcher/outfielder from Alamo Heights

Wichita State

Camden Johnson, sophomore infielder from Boerne High School

South Florida stages huge second-half rally to down UTSA, 78-73

Damari Monsanto. South Florida beat UTSA 78-73 in American Athletic Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Guard Damari Monsanto scored 22 points and made seven 3-pointers for UTSA, but it wasn’t enough as South Florida rallied from 20 points down to win 78-73. — Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Trailing by 20 points with nine minutes remaining, the South Florida Bulls staged a dramatic rally to beat the UTSA Roadrunners 78-73 Wednesday night at the Convocation Center.

The Bulls found themselves down 65-45 with 9:05 remaining when things started to unravel for the Roadrunners.

Austin Claunch. South Florida beat UTSA 78-73 in American Athletic Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Austin Claunch’s UTSA Roadrunners fell to 10-16 on the season and 4-10 in the American Athletic Conference. UTSA leads Rice and Charlotte, both 3-11 in the AAC and tied for last in the 13-team league. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Guard Jimmie Williams hit two consecutive three-point baskets to start the comeback, and it didn’t end until South Florida had outscored UTSA 33-8 in the last 8:49 of the game.

With the win, the Bulls (13-14, 6-8) snapped a three-game losing streak and handed the Roadrunners their season-high fifth straight loss.

The setback may prove costly for the Roadrunners (10-16, 4-10) as they now face the possibility of finishing 12th or 13th in the American Athletic Conference, which would force them to play on opening day of the AAC tournament.

If that is the case, UTSA would need to win five games in five days to win the title.

Such a streak of success seems almost unimaginable at the moment, with the Roadrunners having lost four home games in AAC play since early January after holding leads of nine or more points in the second half.

The Roadrunners’ four-game trail of tears started on Jan. 7 with an 82-77 setback to Tulsa. Their frustrations continued with one-point losses to Tulane on Feb. 5 and to East Carolina on Feb. 8.

UTSA led by 16 with 17 minutes left against Tulsa. In the other two, they suffered excruciating collapses in the final few minutes.

East Carolina pulled it out in the last 48 seconds, forcing a couple of turnovers and claiming an 80-79 victory on a CJ Walker free-throw line jumper with four ticks on the clock to play.

In the latest UTSA heartbreak, Williams, a 6-5 redshirt sophomore from Solon, Ohio, led the charge for South Florida. He scored 12 of his team-high 16 points in the last nine minutes.

South Florida coach Ben Fletcher. South Florida beat UTSA 78-73 in American Athletic Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

South Florida interim head coach Ben Fletcher watched as his team rallied from 20 points down to win for the team’s biggest comeback of the season. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Capping his outburst, Williams sank an acrobatic runner from 12 feet that tied the game 71-all with 49.6 seconds left.

Roadrunners coach Austin Claunch, addressing the media afterward, expressed frustration at another game that he thought his team should have won.

Once again, his attacking offense became stagnant, tentative and mistake-prone with turnovers, and then his defense, under pressure, failed to make stops at key moments.

Another major factor that helped South Florida was an injury that sidelined senior forward Raekwon Horton, who didn’t play after averaging 17 points and shooting better than 50 percent from the field over the past five games.

“As a head coach, man, I got to find a way to help our guys finish the games,” Claunch said. “You know, that’s our fourth loss, I think, where we’ve had at least a nine-point lead or something at home. Obviously this was our biggest one.

“I haven’t watched it yet (on film). It’s still fresh. But we’ve got to find a way obviously to slow their run at the end of the game and just manufacture a few baskets.”

During Claunch’s session with the media, the 35-year-old, first-year UTSA coach paused the self-analysis for a moment and congratulated the Bulls, who have worked their way back from a real-life tragedy to find hope for success on the court leading into the last few weeks.

Marcus Millender. South Florida beat UTSA 78-73 in American Athletic Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

USA guard Marcus Millender produced 11 points, four assists and four steals for the Roadrunners. — Photo by Joe Alexander

In late October, the Bulls were stunned when their head coach, Amir Abdur-Rahim, died after suffering complications from a medical procedure. The coach of the Bulls’ 2023-24 AAC regular-season champions was 43.

“(I want to) touch on Coach Abdur-Rahim and what he’s meant to this league and this basketball community,” Claunch said. “To see them still fighting and playing the way they’re playing, certainly says a lot about the culture that he instilled — not just as a coach but as a man and as a leader.

“So, again, my condolences to their family again and their entire community. We’re thinking about them at UTSA.”

South Florida interim coach Ben Fletcher said outside the visitors’ dressing room that the comeback victory “was huge” for his coaching staff and his players.

“We’re getting closer to March,” he said. “Both teams have been struggling. They’re playing in some really close games. (This) just gives you confidence, especially when you can come on the road and get one against a really good UTSA team.”

The 20-point comeback to victory was the biggest that the Bulls have executed this season.

“You know, our guys needed some confidence,” Fletcher said. “We’d been playing in some close games and we let a few get away that we thought we should have won. So it’s always big to kind of bounce back.”

Primo Spears. South Florida beat UTSA 78-73 in American Athletic Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Primo Spears connected on three 3-point shots and scored 18 points. He finished with five of 18 shooting from the field. — Photo by Joe Alexander

Fletcher agreed with Claunch’s analysis, that the victory underscored the type of culture that had been established by Abdur-Rahim.

“Absolutely,” Fletcher said. “It’s crazy. The way it happened today, it basically happened like that last year, too. They had gotten up on us a few points in that second half. Very similar. I don’t think it was 20, but they did a really good job.

“They shot the ball well to start the second half and then we went small (with our lineup) kind of the same way (we did tonight).”

The UTSA offense and a few individuals had their moments, for sure. Guard Damari Monsanto scored a game-high 22 points. Monsanto, from Pembroke Pines, Fla., knocked down seven of the Roadrunners’ 15 three-point field goals.

In addition, guard Primo Spears had 18 points, six rebounds and four assists. He also had two steals. Marcus Millender had 11 points, four assists and four steals. Monsanto, Spears and Millender all played 38 minutes.

Tai’Reon Joseph, inserted in the starting lineup when it became known that Horton would need to sit out, also scored 11.

For South Florida, Williams led the way with 16 points on six of nine shooting, including two threes. Jamille Reynolds and Kobe Knox each scored 13 apiece. Guard Brandon Stroud scored 11 and pulled down 17 rebounds, including seven on the offensive glass. He also had four blocks and five steals.

Records

South Florida 13-14, 6-8
UTSA 10-16, 4-10

Coming up

UTSA at East Carolina, Sunday, 1 p.m.
Rice at UTSA, Sunday, March 2, 5 p.m.
Memphis at UTSA, Tuesday, March 4, 6 p.m.
UTSA at Charlotte, Sunday, March 9, 3 p.m.

First half

After playing lackluster basketball in the first half last weekend at Tulsa, UTSA came out with a more focused performance against South Florida.

South Florida assistant coach Griffin McHone. South Florida beat UTSA 78-73 in American Athletic Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

South Florida assistant coach Griffin McHone played basketball locally at Boerne High School. He is the son of Boerne coach Kimble McHone and the grandson of former Spurs assistant and head coach Morris McHone. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Monsanto knocked down three of UTSA’s eight made three pointers before intermission as the Roadrunners took a 40-29 lead on the Bulls at intermission.

The Roadrunners hit eight of 19 from behind the arc in the half, with Spears and Millender helping out by making two apiece.

By consistently making shots from the perimeter, the Roadrunners hiked the lead to as many as 12 three times before Baboucarr Njie hit a free throw with 26 seconds left to make it 40-27.

South Florida center Jamille Reynolds followed in a shot with three seconds remaining for the final basket of the half. Reynolds led the Bulls with nine points.

For the Roadrunners, Spears scored 10 and Monsanto nine, while Joseph and Millender both had eight.

UTSA men looking for answers as they prepare to host South Florida

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

For the UTSA Roadrunners, it’s time to turn the page on a four-game losing streak. With five games left in the regular season, they know they need to start playing with more urgency as the American Athletic Conference tournament looms next month.

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

Coach Austin Claunch’s UTSA Roadrunners will host the South Florida Bulls tonight at 7 at the Convocation Center. – File photo by Joe Alexander

The Roadrunners kick off the stretch run with a home game tonight against the South Florida Bulls, and UTSA coach Austin Claunch doesn’t want a repeat of their last game, when they lost concentration and allowed the Tulsa Golden Hurricane to run up a big lead before halftime.

UTSA rallied in the second half and nearly pulled out a victory, but the effort just wasn’t enough.

It came too late to prevent an 0-2 record on the road trip through Wichita State and Tulsa. Now, the Roadrunners (4-9 in the AAC) find themselves in 11th place in the AAC standings, a game behind Tulsa and South Florida (both 5-8).

“We had guys come in this morning, worked hard, shot well,” Claunch said on his Monday media session. “Certainly we wish we had more wins. That goes without saying. I thought the first half against Tulsa was the first time we’d sleep walked through a game in a long, long time. I don’t mean to say that, we weren’t playing hard, or whatever the case may be.

“But there were just some mental mistakes and just some lapses that we haven’t made in awhile. By a few of our older, better guys that have been playing a lot of minutes for us. Guys that should know better.

“So again, just a really bad start to the game. Haven’t had one of those (since) I would say against FAU (on Jan. 29, on the road) we got off to sort of a snoozer of a start. This one was kind of similar.

“But we’re always looking forward, whether it’s win or lose. At the end of the day, if we had won both games, we (still) wouldn’t be where we want to be. There’s a lot of work to be done. There’s still a lot to play for in these last five games to try to build some momentum as we go to Fort Worth.”

Records

South Florida 12-14, 5-8
UTSA 10-15, 4-9

Coming up

South Florida at UTSA, tonight at 7
UTSA at East Carolina, Sunday, 1 p.m.
Rice at UTSA, Sunday, March 2, 5 p.m.
Memphis at UTSA, Tuesday, March 4, 6 p.m.
UTSA at Charlotte, Sunday, March 9, 3 p.m.

AAC men’s tournament

March 12 – At the Super Pit, in Denton (first round).
March 13-16 – At Dickies Arena, in Fort Worth (second round, quarterfinals, semis and finals)

Honoring Amir Abdur-Rahim

UTSA coach Austin Claunch paid tribute to the late Amir Abdur-Rahim this week, talking about the 43-year-old South Florida basketball coach who passed away last fall, a few weeks before the opening of the college basketball season.

In January, the American Athletic Conference announced that it would create a postseason sportsmanship award in the coach’s name:

“The Amir Abdur-Rahim Sportsmanship Award will be presented annually to the men’s basketball student-athlete who, as determined by the league’s head coaches, best exemplifies the qualities of sportsmanship, fair play and leadership,” according to a news release from the conference.

Claunch said he honestly hasn’t given much thought to who on the Roadrunners he might nominate for it, but supports the idea wholeheartedly.

“This season is about Amir,” Claunch said. “It’s incredible the season they had last year, right? But again, when you hear people speak about him, certainly, that’s something I hope one day people speak about me in the same light. He was clearly an incredible leader, someone that just carried himself with incredible class and dignity.

“When I think about the award, there’s plenty of guys (deserving of it). But I haven’t thought too much about that. Again, this season is to honor Amir. Whoever wins that award certainly should feel that, it’s an award you shouldn’t take lightly. Something that you should understand … is named after an incredible man, and it means something.”

McHone’s homecoming

Second-year South Florida assistant coach Griffin McHone played his high school basketball for the Boerne Greyhounds. He played at Boerne under his father, Greyhounds coach Kimble McHone. Griffin is the grandson of longtime college and pro basketball coach Morris McHone, formerly the head coach of the San Antonio Spurs.