Little Rock clamps down defensively in an 81-64 victory over short-handed UTSA

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

Marcus ‘Smurf’ Millender had 12 points and three steals Saturday against the Little Rock Trojans. — Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The Little Rock Trojans entered the UTSA Convocation Center Saturday coming off two straight unsightly road losses.

They made sure it didn’t happen again, rolling to second-half leads as large as 20 and 22 points, before holding off the Roadrunners 81-64.

Arguably, Little Rock won the game on the defensive end, limiting UTSA to 30 percent shooting, blocking nine shots and forcing 17 turnovers.

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 Roadrunners played Saturday without starters Raekwon Horton and Damari Monsanto. Without explaining why they didn’t play, Claunch said the team has ‘a standard’ to uphold. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Forward Ante Beljan led Little Rock with a career-high 21 points and guard Mwani Wilkinson scored 19. Also, guards Isaiah Lewis scored 16 and Johnathan Lawson had 15.

Primo Spears finished with 15 to lead the Roadrunners. Marcus Millender added 12, while Naz Mahmoud and Sky Wicks contributed 10 each. The Roadrunners played without forward Raekwon Horton and guards Damari Monsanto and Tai’Reon Joseph.

Joseph is ineligible at the moment, having sat out all three of the Roadrunners’ games. It’s believed he might be out at least another four games before he can return. But the absence of Horton and Monsanto, two starters, came as a surprise.

“We had a couple of guys out,” first-year UTSA coach Austin Claunch said. “Listen, at the end of the day, they’ll be back. We expect all of them back, come Monday. You know, it is what it is. There’s things we want to uphold. There’s a standard we want to uphold.

“Those guys have done it, and at the end of the day, when you don’t do it, there’s certain things (that will happen). You know, it’s a privilege to play at UTSA.”

Claunch didn’t go into detail on why he apparently took actions that left his team short-handed. Instead of specifics, he spoke in his postgame news conference in generalities about how his players “are trying to do something that’s hard … and it gets so frustrating.”

Seated in the interview room flanked by Millender and Mahmoud, Claunch continued, “Sometimes, (players) want to win so bad. These guys sitting next to me and all those guys in the locker room, it takes time, to get to where they want to (go and to realize) the dreams they want to talk about. We talk about winning and cutting down these nets and all that.

“(But) it’s hard to win one game. It’s hard to win one college basketball game.

“And then when you get used to it and you start to get a feel, it becomes a little bit easier each time. But we just got to keep chipping, man. It’s the stone cutter. Right? You don’t ever know. You don’t ever know when the last blow, the last hit, (when) you’re going to find gold over there.”

Records

Little Rock 2-2
UTSA 1-2

Coming up

UTSA at Troy, Ala., Nov. 25
UTSA vs. Merrimack, at Troy, Nov. 27

Halftime

Little Rock entered the game with UTSA coming off losses at Winthrop, S.C., 82-67, and at Arkansas State, 80-63. Sparked by Wilkinson and Beljan, the Trojans surged on a 16-0 run late in the first half to take charge against the Roadrunners.

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

Primo Spears led the Roadrunners with 15 points. He’s averaging 20.7 points to lead the team through three games. – Photo by Joe Alexander

After giving up five points to the Roadrunners in the closing few minutes, the Trojans went into the dressing room with a 36-26 intermission lead.

Beljan started the streak, innocently enough, with a free throw. But after that, Little Rock started to roll.

First, Wilkinson hit a three and then Beljan sank a layup. Wilkinson knocked in another three and Beljan followed with another inside move.

Lewis broke loose for a fast break layup and was fouled, and then he hit the free throw. Creed Williamson, the son of former NBA player Corliss Williamson, added a layup with 2:40 remaining for a 36-21 advantage.

Little Rock’s defense limited UTSA to 19 percent shooting (5 of 26) in the first half. UTSA hit 2 of 12 from three. At that juncture, Millender led the Roadrunners with seven points.

For the Trojans, who shot 45 percent from the floor in the half, Lewis had nine points and Lawson eight. Primo Spears, who had scored 47 points combined in the team’s first two games, finished the half with six.

Notable

Little Rock has been without injured star guard Khaleen “KK” Robinson since mid-October and another starter, Jordan Jefferson, sat out against UTSA.

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

Skylar Wicks produced 10 points and seven rebounds against the Trojans. – Photo by Joe Alexander

The loss of Robinson, a first-team, all-conference player in the Ohio Valley last year, will hurt the Trojans moving forward. He is out indefinitely with a knee injury.

“It happened about two weeks before the season started, we lost our best player,” Trojans coach Darrell Walker said. “We’re still trying to figure our team out, but this was a good road win for us tonight. It really was.”

Walker, in his seventh season at Little Rock, recently received a three-year contract extension. “It’s good to have it, starting off a new season,” he said. “I’m happy that the athletic director had enough belief in me to get it done.”

The Roadrunners started the season on Nov. 4 with a 103-77 victory at home over Division III Trinity University. Their next game, another home date set originally for Nov. 9, was postponed when the visiting the North Dakota Fighting Hawks encountered weather- and travel-related issues.

The two sides have agreed to try and play the makeup on Dec. 13 in San Antonio, but it’s not on the UTSA schedule yet because a contract hasn’t been formalized.

Earlier this week, on Tuesday night, the Roadrunners played their first road game of the season and lost 85-72 to the Bradley Braves. Now, after the loss to the Trojans, UTSA remains winless against NCAA Division I competition at 0-2.

Quotable

“Give Little Rock a lot of credit,” Claunch said. “They out-played us. Out-toughed us. You know, we did some good things early on, again, similar to the Bradley game. And then at some point, they went on that run. We got to be able to withstand those a little bit better.”

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

Nazar Mahmoud scored a career-high 10 points and pulled down six rebounds, including five off the offensive glass. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Once again, shooting woes plagued the Roadrunners, who are hitting 38 percent from the field through their first three games.

“I just thought in the first half we missed some shots that we normally make, and that sort of got us out of rhythm. I mean, we were 10 of 31 from two(-point range). We probably made a couple late. At one point, we had nine field goals with like 15 minutes left in the game. They’re a good shot-blocking team. You look, percentage-wise, they’re top 20 in the country. I just thought we missed a couple of chippies that we normally make.”

In addition, the Trojans hit 52.7 percent from the field, meaning that UTSA is now yielding 51.1 percent per game for the season.

“I was really proud of these guys, coming out today short-handed and battling the way that they did,” Claunch said. “We had to battle through some things today, and when you’re trying to build and work on things, that’s part of it. You know, you got to go through tough days. There’s going to be high days. You don’t get there without the low days. This is certainly not how we wanted to perform at home, in front of our fans.

“Now, the good news is, we have some time, and we get a little over a week to go to Troy and play two really good teams. We didn’t do ourselves any favors (today). It’s not going to get any easier. Troy obviously is picked top two in the Sun Belt (Conference). Merrimack (transitioning into its first season in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference) has won that (Northeast) league a couple of years. So, we got to be ready to go.”

Little Rock rallies to beat UTSA 93-84 with 59 percent shooting in the second half

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

If the Little Rock (Ark.) Trojans were rattled by the UTSA Roadrunners’ 3-point shooting early in the game, they shook it off in due course, coming alive in the second half on their home court to register a 93-84 victory on Wednesday night.

In the end, the Little Rock guard duo of Jamir Chaplin and Bradley Douglas took down UTSA and its three-game winning streak.

Chaplin, a 6-foot-5 transfer from South Florida, led the Trojans with 22 points. The 6-1 Douglas sizzled at the end of the game, scoring 11 of his 20 in the final five minutes.

Guard Christian Tucker led UTSA with 23 points. Adante’ Holiman, Tucker’s backcourt mate, sat out his second straight game as he recovers from concussion symptoms.

Once again, the Roadrunners shot it well from the perimeter. After making a school-record 19 three-point shots at home on Sunday against Division II Arkansas-Fort Smith, the Roadrunners knocked down 14 of 34 from the arc.

UTSA was particularly effective early, making nine triples in the first half. But after surging to a 35-21 lead, the Roadrunners failed to hang on. By late in the half, the Trojans had taken the lead. UTSA got a bucket by Massal Diouf in the final minute to move back ahead by 43-42 at intermission.

In the second half, the Trojans started guarding the shooters better and began to crank their own offense. They hit 16 of 27 from the field for 59.3 percent.

Records

UTSA 5-5
Little Rock 5-6

Coming up

UTSA at Oregon State, 2 p.m.

Notable

Isaiah Wyatt tried to rally UTSA, scoring 11 of his 16 points in the second half, but it wasn’t enough. Wyatt also finished with a team-high nine rebounds. Guard PJ Carter and Dre Fuller produced 12 points apiece and Carlton Linguard Jr. had 10. With the loss, UTSA fell to 1-4 on the road.

It’s too early to tell if a federal district judge’s ruling on Wednesday will allow the Roadrunners to play some of their players sitting out as transfers in the next two weeks.

Judge John P. Bailey granted a 14-day temporary restraining order during a hearing in his West Virginia court room, giving college athletes who have transferred more than once in their careers immediate eligibility at least for the next 14 days, according to a story by Ross Dellenger in Yahoo Sports.

“As a result of today’s decision impacting Division I student-athletes, the association will not enforce the year in residency requirement for multiple-time transfers and will begin notifying member schools,” the NCAA said in a statement released to Dellenger.

Multiple-time transfers for UTSA include Jordan Ivy-Curry, Justin Thomas and Juan Reyna. Ivy-Curry and Thomas are scholarship players and Reyna is a walk-on who has been practicing well.

By the letter of the ruling, it appears that the three theoretically could be deemed eligible to play in at least two games — against Oregon State on Sunday and against Army at home on Dec. 21. The judge is expected to address the issue again on Dec. 27.

Quotable

UTSA coach Steve Henson didn’t talk about the judge’s ruling or the statement by the NCAA during his post-game radio comments.

He did say that he felt like the Roadrunners were in “pretty good shape” in the middle of the first half when the Trojans made their big run to intermission.

“Defense in the second half was disappointing,” Henson told Andy Everett, the team’s radio voice. The coach went on to say that the Trojans “just won a lot of individual battles, just kind of went right at us, scored right in our face. Got to compete to get that stop.”

UTSA is in Arkansas to play the Little Rock Trojans

Game Day report

UTSA men (5-4)
at Little Rock (4-6)
Tonight at 6:30

Coming off four wins in its last five games and three in a row, the UTSA men’s basketball team is on the road today, scheduled to play in Arkansas against the Little Rock Trojans. The Roadrunners (5-4) will take on the Darrell Walker-coached Trojans (4-6).

The game will pit former NBA guards who are now NCAA Division I coaches. Darrell Walker, in his sixth year at Little Rock, played in 720 games across 11 seasons in the NBA through 1993. Steve Henson, in his eighth year at UTSA, played 238 games in parts of seven NBA seasons through 1999.

The Roadrunners are coming off wins at home against Incarnate Word, Lamar and Division II Arkansas-Fort Smith. Despite the winning streak, they are listed at No. 300 out of 362 Division I teams in the NCAA’s latest NET computer rankings. The Roadrunners are transitioning this season into the American Athletic Conference.

Little Rock is ranked No. 251 in the NET. The Trojans of the Sun Belt Conference are 4-2 at home, including a win against Tulsa of the AAC. The Trojans beat the Golden Hurricane 84-82 in overtime on Nov. 25.

Notable

Let the record show that Darrell Walker helped to spoil the UTSA Roadrunners’ inaugural game of men’s basketball.

On Nov. 30, 1981, the University of Arkansas guard scored 14 points to tie for team-high honors in leading the Razorbacks to a 71-42 victory over the Roadrunners at HemisFair Arena. Walker was four for five from the field and six for 10 at the line in the game played in downtown San Antonio. Walker will coach the Little Rock Trojans tonight in Arkansas against UTSA.