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.

Saint Mary’s survives scare and holds off UTSA in overtime, 82-74

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA Roadrunners lost a basketball game but likely gained a significant amount of confidence on Tuesday night in Moraga, Calif.

Down by 23 points in the first half against one of the best teams on the West Coast, the Roadrunners rallied to tie it at the end of regulation, only to see guard Augustas Marciulionis and the Saint Mary’s Gaels pull away in the extra period for an 82-74 victory.

Marciulionis, who led the Gaels had 23 points and eight assists, scored the first basket of overtime and then knocked down two free throws with eight seconds remaining to clinch the victory for the heavily-favored home team.

Primo Spears led the Roadrunners with 24 points, including 19 after intermission. The fifth-leading scorer in NCAA Division I scored eight points in the last five and a half minutes of regulation and five in overtime. Guard Marcus Millender added 21.

UTSA coach Austin Claunch, whose decision to switch from man-to-man to zone defense likely turned the game around, agreed that the Roadrunners could build on the performance against a team that is expected to play in the NCAA tournament.

“That’s why I’m on their butt about a lot of little things, the things we can get better at, because we showed tonight (that we can compete) and now it’s undeniable to them,” Claunch told Andy Everett on the team’s radio broadcast.

“You know,” the coach added, “I think they really turned a corner together (tonight). I thought our staff did a great job, staying poised and making the right adjustments, and I thought our guys just kept getting on to the next play. (Just) really, really proud.”

Who could question that? While UTSA is a program coming off three straight 20-plus loss seasons, Saint Mary’s has strung together 26-plus victories in each of those three years, with NCAA tournament appearances in each of them.

Moreover, the NCAA released its official NET rankings for the first time this week, and on Tuesday morning, Saint Mary’s was 24th among 364 Division I teams, while UTSA was 295th. After the final horn, however, the two teams looked pretty even.

“This is one we can watch and say, ‘We got something here, it’s coming,’ ” said the 35-year-old Claunch, who is working in his first season with the Roadrunners. “You know, whether it’s next game or down the line or three months, UTSA is coming.”

If his players need motivation leading into a road game set for Saturday against the Arkansas Razorbacks, Claunch could show some film of his team’s effort in the second half against Saint Mary’s.

In outscoring the defending West Coast Conference champions 42-28 over a 20-minute period, the Roadrunners forced 10 turnovers and won the rebounding battle, 27-16. On the offensive glass, UTSA held a surprising 13-8 edge.

If the Roadrunners could have cut down on their eight second-half turnovers by just one or two, they might have won the game in regulation. It was a pretty entertaining finish, regardless. Saint Mary’s led by 19 with 11 minutes remaining and by 10 with 8:54 left.

In the final 11 minutes, Millender scored 11 points, while Spears chipped in late with eight. The 6-foot-3 guard from Hartford, Conn., tied the game with six seconds left when he created space on the dribble and hit a pull-up jumper. Saint Mary’s guard Jordan Ross misfired from three at the buzzer to send it to overtime.

In the extra period, the Gaels attacked the Roadrunners’ zone and scored buckets on their first two possessions, one on a right-side drive by Marciulionis and another on a slashing move by Ross. Mitchell Saxen made it a 6-0 run when he hit a couple of free throws, pushing the home team in front, 73-67.

UTSA never got closer than three the rest of the way.

Records

UTSA 3-4
Saint Mary’s 8-1

Coming up

UTSA at Arkansas, Saturday, 1 p.m.

First half

At one point midway through the first half, the Roadrunners seemingly were on the verge of getting blown out. The Gaels executed defensively to perfection in the first 12 minutes and built a 30-7 lead. In response, the Roadrunners kept playing and climbed back into contention.

At the end of the half, they misfired on two opportunities to cut the lead to 10, and the Gaels capitalized, getting a dunk from Mitchell Saxen for a 39-25 edge going into intermission.

Marciulionis led the Gaels in the half with 11 points and three assists. The Gaels hurt the Roadrunners in the paint with Saxen producing eight points and six boards. Also, Luke Barrett had six points and eight boards.

For UTSA, Spears was quiet on the offensive end. He hit only two of nine shots and scored five. Millender led the Roadrunners with 10 points on four of seven shooting. Millender connected on two of two from 3-point territory.

In a horrendous start, UTSA hit only three of its first 19 from the field. But, by intermission, the Roadrunners started to find the range, finishing nine of 30.

Notable

Freshman Boogie Fland produced 18 points and six rebounds Tuesday night as the Arkansas Razorbacks rallied to beat the Miami Hurricanes, 76-73, for their first road win of the season. The Razorbacks (6-2) will host UTSA Saturday in Fayetteville, Ark. John Calipari is coaching Arkansas this season after 15 seasons at Kentucky.

UTSA men to play the 7-1 Saint Mary’s Gaels tonight in California

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Boosted by the nation’s fourth-leading scorer and winners of two straight games, the UTSA Roadrunners will take on the Saint Mary’s Gaels in Moraga, Calif., tonight in men’s college basketball.

Tipoff is at 9 p.m. in a game that will be aired on ESPN+.

UTSA has won two straight for the first time this season, with a neutral-site victory against the Merrimack College Warriors and a win at home against Houston Christian Huskies.

Guard Primo Spears led the Roadrunners in both games by averaging 30 points. Spears, who scored a season-high 31 against the Huskies on Saturday in San Antonio, is fourth in scoring in NCAA Division I with 23.7 points per game.

After taking down Houston Christian 78-71, first-year UTSA coach Austin Claunch made it clear that the Roadrunners remained a work in progress and that they’d need improvement to compete against two national brands this week — the Gaels tonight and the Arkansas Razorbacks on Saturday in Fayetteville, Ark.

Saint Mary’s, a rival to Gonzaga in the West Coast Conference, is one of the premier mid-major programs in the nation. Coach Randy Bennett is in his 24th season at the school and has won 540 games, taking the Gaels to 10 NCAA tournaments along the way.

Receiving votes in both the AP coaches Top 25 polls, the Gaels opened the season with seven straight victories before losing to Arizona State Friday at Palm Desert, Calif.

Records

UTSA 3-3
Saint Mary’s 7-1

Coming up

UTSA at Saint Mary’s, Calif., tonight at 9.
UTSA at Arkansas, Saturday at 1 p.m.

Notable

The NCAA released its official NET rankings this week, and on Tuesday morning, Saint Mary’s was 24th among 364 Division I teams, while UTSA was 295th.

Lithuanian-born Augustas Marciulionis, the Gaels’ leading scorer and the Player of the Year in the WCC last season, is the son of Naismith and FIBA Hall of Fame player Sarunas Marciulionis. A 6-4 guard, Augustas Marciulionis averages 14 points and 5.5 assists to lead Saint Mary’s in both categories.

Sarunas Marciulionis won three Olympic medals, including a gold in 1988 for the Soviet Union, and bronzes in 1992 and 1996 for Lithuania. He played seven years in the NBA, notably in 1991 helping the seventh-seeded Golden State Warriors upset the No. 2 San Antonio Spurs in a first-round playoff series.

Former Spurs players Patty Mills and Jock Landale played at Saint Mary’s.