Energy boost: Guard Tai’Reon Joseph available to play for UTSA today

Tai'Reon. The UTSA men's basketball team on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Explosive UTSA guard Tai’Reon Joseph will be available to play today at Arkansas after sitting out the team’s first seven games. – File photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Guard Tai’Reon Joseph is available to play for the UTSA Roadrunners today in a road game at the University of Arkansas.

Joseph, the leading scorer in the Southwestern Athletic Conference last season at Southern (La.), would be making his UTSA debut if he gets into the game against the John Calipari-coached Arkansas Razorbacks.

To this point, he has been ineligible, sitting out the team’s first seven games for what is believed to be academic reasons.

Joseph’s addition to the active roster is expected to supply UTSA with a boost of offensive firepower and another long-armed, perimeter defender.

The 6-foot-3 shooting guard from Baton Rouge rated as a four-star transfer prospect when he committed to the Roadrunners last spring.

Playing for Southern in 2023-24, he led the SWAC in scoring at 20.5 points per game, with 43.8 percent shooting. He also averaged 3.1 rebounds, 1.7 assists and 1.6 steals.

In 19 games, he scored in double figures 18 times, including 11 games with 20 or more.

During the summer and fall workouts with the Roadrunners, Joseph flashed his potential at open practices by using a quick step to get to the basket. He can dunk with authority.

Records

UTSA 3-4
Arkansas 6-2

Coming up

UTSA at Arkansas, today, 1 p.m.
North Dakota at UTSA, Dec. 13, 7 p.m.
UTSA at North Dakota, Dec. 15, 2 p.m.

Notable

In the opener of a two-game set against their toughest opponents to date, the Roadrunners rallied from a 23-point deficit to tie at the end of regulation before losing 82-74 Tuesday night at Saint Mary’s (Calif.)

Primo Spears scored 24 points, and Marcus Millender had 21 for the Roadrunners. Spears, a Florida State transfer, averages 23.7 points to rank fifth nationally.

The Razorbacks have wins over Lipscomb, Troy, Pacific, Little Rock, Maryland-Eastern Shore and Miami. Arkansas beat Miami 76-73 on Tuesday in Florida for its first win over a Power 4 team this season. Losses have come against Baylor and Illinois.

Roadrunners haven’t spent much time worrying about an AAC preseason slight

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA Roadrunners didn’t get much love from coaches in the American Athletic Conference during the league’s media days a few weeks ago. The coaches picked UTSA in a tie for 11th place in the 13-team AAC.

UTSA center Mo Njie says that players haven’t spent much time discussing it.

“People don’t really believe in us,” said Njie, a 6-foot-11 SMU transfer. “They don’t think we have the talent or the skill to come out and perform. But, I mean, I think that’s the beauty of it, honestly. Now we have the chance to come together and really show what UTSA basketball is all about.”

The Roadrunners will conduct an intra-squad scrimmage on Wednesday and then will make final preparations over the weekend in advance of the season opener against Trinity University on Monday, with game time set for 6:30 p.m. at the Convocation Center.

“It’s time to get out here and see where we are, see where we need to get better,” first-year coach Austin Claunch said . “I expect us to play well (in the opener), but I also don’t expect that to be the team you see in March, either.

“We’re going to have to make strides throughout the course of the year on both sides of the ball and really lean into know who we are and figure out our identity as we go. But, no, we’re excited to get out here and compete.”

Notable

Guard Tai’Reon Joseph’s playing status for the season opener remains in question because of a waiver request to the NCAA that remains unsettled. Joseph, a 20-point scorer at Southern University last season, is believed to be sidelined for the first seven games unless UTSA gets a reprieve.

“He’ll play at some point for UTSA,” Claunch said. “You’ll certainly see him in the AAC (games) and hopefully sooner than that.”

Joseph, one of the team’s most explosive offensive players, was held out of UTSA’s 21-point exhibition setback at Southern Cal because of the eligibility question. In a scrimmage against McNeese 10 days ago, he scored 11 points, knocking down a couple of three-pointers.

UTSA’s Claunch sees a ‘positive light’ in lessons learned at USC

Austin Claunch. UTSA men's and women's basketball teams at Rowdy Jam at the Convocation Center on Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2024. - photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA coach Austin Claunch, encouraged by his team’s competitive spirit in a 21-point loss at USC on Tuesday night, nevertheless said he wants his team to learn from their mistakes. – File photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Competing with a fiery purpose against a Power 4 team and playing their first exhibition game on the road, the UTSA Roadrunners finally started to unravel in the last 12 minutes Tuesday night.

They trailed by only three points at halftime and by four when floor leader Primo Spears popped in a 13-foot jumper with 12:13 remaining. From there, the USC Trojans kicked it into gear, obviously intent on winning big for first-year coach Eric Musselman on their home court at the Galen Center in Los Angeles.

The Trojans took advantage of a few poor possessions by the Roadrunners and ignited a 31-14 run to the end of the game, en route to an 84-63 victory.

On Wednesday night, first-year UTSA coach Austin Claunch sat in his office, trying to unpack all the emotions emanating from his debut game with the Roadrunners.

His team, playing without guard Tai’Reon Joseph, one of its top athletes, stayed within striking distance for almost three fourths of the game.

“Overall, I thought the experience was great,” Claunch said. “I thought there were more things to take away in a positive light than not.”

Before the team left the arena, the coach told his players a story. He told them how the Alabama Crimson Tide failed to win in the preseason last year.

“And we made the Final Four,” said Claunch, who worked as an assistant last year in Tuscaloosa. “So these games, win or lose, you got to learn to get better.”

More than anything, he stressed that if a team wants to be good in March, it needs to learn how to handle pressure situations.

“We got to learn to be tougher in those moments and not break down and not give them easy baskets,” he said. “They didn’t give us anything easy. Everything that we got in that game was earned. They made us work.

“And on the flip side, there were just moments where we didn’t make them work for baskets. At the highest level of basketball, you can’t do that.”

Claunch said he held Joseph out as UTSA awaits word from the NCAA on a waiver.

“There’s a waiver process that we’re waiting on,” the coach said. “I’m not going to dig into the details of it. A lot (happened) over the last couple of months, and we realized we needed to file this waiver for him. He’s going to get it, is what it looks like. He hasn’t gotten it yet. We were expecting to hear at the end of last week (and) we didn’t. We were hoping to hear Monday. By the time the game started (Tuesday), we didn’t.”

Joseph is a transfer from Southern University in Baton Rouge, La. A jet-quick, 6-foot-3 guard, he has played extremely well in preseason practices at UTSA. Last year, Joseph led the Southwestern Athletic Conference in scoring, averaging 20.5 points per game.

Claunch said he hopes to be able to play Joseph on Saturday in Houston against the Will Wade-coached McNeese State University Cowboys. The contest is a closed scrimmage, and no fans are allowed to watch. It is the final scrimmage of preseason for the Roadrunners, who open at home on Nov. 4 against Trinity University.

The coach said he planned to start Joseph against the Trojans in Los Angeles. “He’s been playing great in practice, obviously,” Claunch said. “You’ve seen it, and how he plays.”

Even without Joseph, the Roadrunners held their own for the first half, trailing only 35-32 at the intermission break. After reviewing the game tape twice, Claunch described the team’s defense on USC as “pretty elite” for the first 20 minutes of the game.

“To go into their place in the first half and to keep it close, we felt good,” Claunch said.

Offensively, it was another story. The Roadrunners misfired on eight of their first 11 shots from the field against the switching style of the Trojans defensively.

“We felt like the lid was going to come off that rim (for us) at some point,” the coach said. “But you know, they actually did a great job. They made it hard on us. They were switching one through five., which was tough, especially with their length and their athleticism.”

Spears, unofficially, was 0 for 6 from the field in the first half. Heating up after halftime, he finished 5 of 16 for 14 points. He also had two assists and two steals. Marcus “Smurf” Millender finished with 12 points and four assists. As a team, the Roadrunners shot 38 percent from the field and 24 percent from three (7 of 29).

On Monday, Spears was in the Dallas area speaking with reporters at an American Athletic Conference media event, so he didn’t get to practice the day before the game. The only chance he had to shoot in the arena was at shootaround on Tuesday morning, which could have affected his rhythm, Claunch said.

Near the end of the first half, when he was on the bench in foul trouble, coaches noticed that he seemed engaged and into the game.

“When I took him out, I told him, “We’ll see how the half goes’ ” Claunch said. ” ‘Maybe I’ll put you back in. Maybe I won’t.’ And he was great. I think he showed leadership over there on the bench, keeping guys positive. Good energy. That, to me, is good for just the long-term success for this program, with guys understanding that some moments are their (moments) and some are their teammates.

“I think Primo is doing a fantastic job at being a leader and a pillar of this program.”

Re-arranging the furniture: UTSA men’s hoops practice gets rowdy

Tai'Reon. The UTSA men's basketball team on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - File photo by Joe Alexander

Guard Tai’Reon Joseph and the UTSA Roadrunners will get tested in an exhibition game Tuesday in Los Angeles against the Southern California Trojans. – File photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Coach Austin Claunch has conducted some rigorous, bump-and-grind type of practices in his first preseason camp with the UTSA Roadrunners.

But from the four or five workouts that I’ve seen since the start of the fall semester, Friday’s may have been the most physical yet.

Damari Monsanto. The UTSA men's basketball team on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Wake Forest transfer Damari Monsanto heated up and hit four long-range shots — three from 3-point territory — toward the end of practice. – Photo by Joe Alexander

The get-after-it tone may have been set in the opening minutes as a few of the coaches took the challenge and ran wind sprints with the players. Even the 34-year-old Claunch put his head down and churned out a couple.

Hey, nobody wants to get beat by the old coach, right?

As the basketball phase of the workout commenced, I noticed the noise level in the Convocation Center. It was loud and getting louder. I swear, by the time they started the four-on-four, followed by five-on-five, the players’ voices — the barking of encouragement to one another — echoed into the rafters.

When the halfcourt scrimmaging started, bodies started flying. Once or twice, they tumbled into chairs on the side. One was flattened, others knocked askew. On one play, a loose ball resulted in players diving on the floor, out of bounds, behind the baseline.

On another, two players — Raekwon Horton and Jonnivius Smith — chased down a long rebound and seemed to careen off one another, off the end of the court and nearly out into the north concourse.

Defense definitely was the order of the day, but moments of offensive artistry also emerged. Tai’Reon Joseph, with a quick first step, slashed for layups. Primo Spears darted into the paint and popped some mid-range jumpers. Naz Mahmoud and Damari Monsanto rained threes.

For Mahmoud, it was one of the better workouts I’ve seen from him in a little more than a year. Not only did the sophomore from Leander consistently make triples out of the corner, he also scored off the bounce a few times, taking it all the way to the rim in traffic on one move.

The 6-foot-6 Monsanto was as good as I’ve seen him since I started attending drills early last month. Getting more and more fit as the fall practices have progressed, the Wake Forest transfer had a big day, raining in four straight jumpers at one point. Three were from beyond the three-point arc. Another came from about 17 feet out of the corner.

“Today, we really needed to get after it,” Claunch said. “Just be physical. Guard each other. Put these guys in some adversity, and I thought they responded.”

AAC media days

The Roadrunners’ men’s and women’s basketball teams will attend media days in the Dallas area this weekend. Representing the men will be Claunch, Primo Spears and Raekwon Horton. For the women, Coach Karen Aston will be joined by Jordyn Jenkins and Sidney Love.

Preseason polls

With the Roadrunners women picked to finish fifth in the AAC regular season, Jenkins was honored as a preseason all-conference first team selection. The UTSA men have been picked to finish tied for 11th out of 13.

California dreaming

Next up for the UTSA men is an exhibition game set for Tuesday night at Southern California, a power conference opponent previously from the Pac-12, now in the Big Ten. The game will be aired on Big Ten Network and streamed via B1G+. Tipoff at the Galen Center is at 9 p.m. central.

“It’s going to be awesome,” Claunch said. “We have a group that wants those matchups and those expectations, to go in and win those games. Obviously we’re a long way away from where we need to be. But, at the end of the day, we want to play the best in the country, and, like you say, USC has a great brand.”

The Trojans are coached by Eric Musselman, in his first year with the program after spending the past five seasons with the Arkansas Razorbacks.

Though the game is an exhibition and won’t count on either team’s record, it’s a fact that UTSA hasn’t had much success against power conference programs. The Roadrunners haven’t won a game against a team from one of the major revenue-producing conferences since they beat the Iowa Hawkeyes in 2009.

Coming together

Despite the results of the AAC polls, UTSA guard Marcus Millender expressed optimism that the Roadrunners could have a “breakout” season.

“I feel like this team is one of a kind,” Millender said. “I feel like this is going to be one of them breakout years, and everybody after this year is going to remember UTSA. We’re going to put UTSA on the map this year. From Day 1, I just feel like all the guys have bought in.

“Getting everyone together, trying to get everyone on the right page, I just feel like this is going to be one of those years, for sure.”

Millender said he didn’t think his teammates paid much attention to the AAC poll.

“That’s the good thing about our group of guys,” he said. “I mean, me personally, I’ve been an underdog my whole life. I’m just going to put my head down and keep working. I’m pretty sure all the other guys will, too.”

Austin Claunch’s lesson for the day: ‘Separate yourself with effort’

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

One play during a halfcourt defensive drill Friday afternoon pretty much underscored the Austin Claunch way of playing basketball.

Guard Tai’Reon Joseph came out to contest the dribble on the wing. Forward David Hermes also switched out to stop the ball, forcing a pass to the top of the key. A driver put his head down and tried to maneuver into the lane, only to run into heavy traffic.

Bodies collided. Guard Marcus Millender, who cut off the driver, tumbled to the court. Falling on top of another body, he somehow managed to find the ball on the floor, and Millender gained possession. Overseeing the action, Claunch obviously liked what he saw.

“Separate yourself with effort,” the coach said to the group.

And so it went on Day 2 of UTSA’s official fall camp practices under Claunch, a first-year head coach.

“I’m pleased,’ the coach said. “I love how hard we practice. That’s obviously going to be a staple of what we want to be and the identity that we want to play with. We’re really deep. Everybody. I think the level of competition is great the way we’re pushing each other.

“To me it’s not pushing guys down. It’s raising everybody up. That’s an exciting thing for a coach. Two days in, I’m really excited. We got a lot of work to do like everybody, but I like where we are so far.”

Only a week ago, Claunch told The JB Replay that the team had made good progress and that it actually was — in some ways —
close to being ready to play a game.

“We’re in decent shape,” he said Friday afternoon. “I think we’re still getting to where we need to be. I think we’re in good shape. Now there’s just some things we need to tidy up on both sides of the ball.”

A couple of scrimmages against Division I competition loom in coming weeks, so the coach will know more as he sees how players respond to outside forces.

“That’ll be a good bench mark for us,” he said. “I think we’re building a good foundation for what we want this program to be, and I’m really excited for these guys.”

UTSA’s season opener is Nov. 4 at home against Trinity University.

One thing is clear after my first view of the team in a full practice. The backcourt will be a strong suit. Joseph, Millender and Primo Spears all have potential to match up with most of the guards in the American Athletic Conference.

Joseph, shown in the video above setting up a corner three with a look-away pass, seemed to have an excellent practice on Friday.

Not only did he guard the ball well, he showed creativity in distributing, along with a lightning stop-and-start move that allowed him to get past defenders.

“He’s as fast a player as I’ve ever coached,” Claunch said. “End to end, it’s impressive to see. I tell you what, he has grown so much over these last few months. Physically tough. Mentally tough.”

Claunch encourages Joseph to take the catch-and-shoot three pointer, but his move to the basket seems major league, at least from first glance.

“You start to see some of that downhill thrust that he has attacking the rim,” the coach said. “And defensively, he’s just a menace, man. He can really disrupt flow. Gets his hands on a ton of balls. Deflections, things like that. Excited for him. He’s really just scratching the surface. He doesn’t really know how good he can be.

“We’ve had him for three months. I’m excited to see where he’ll be in another three months.”

Joseph, from Baton Rouge, La., has played in NCAA Division I at Austin Peay, Radford and Southern University. Last season at Southern, a Baton Rouge-based team in the Southwestern Athletic Conference, he led the league in scoring. Joseph averaged 20.5 points on 43.8 percent shooting.

Sparking the defense

Primo Spears, a Florida State transfer, continued to showcase a two-way game. Speedy on the dribble. Dangerous with an array of pull-up jumpers and floaters. But just as important to UTSA coaches, tenacious on the defensive end.

“Some guys have natural ability,” Claunch said. “But on top of that, they have a mentality that they’re going to get stops. For our point guard to pick up and take that upon himself … And you know, Smurf (Millender) is that same way … all of them, really (including Tai’Reon) Joseph, Raekwon Horton and Jaquan (Scott), along with Jonnivius Smith and Mo (Njie), being rim protectors, we can be a really good defensive team.

“Sky (Wicks) is athletic. Naz (Mahmoud) has good hands. We’ve got good personnel to be a good defensive team. But certainly I think it starts with Primo on the ball.”

Following a UTSA legend

UTSA has recently added three walk-ons, bringing the roster total to 16.

The three include guards LJ Brown and Baboucarr Njie and forward Jackson Fazenda. Baboucarr Njie is the younger brother of UTSA center Mo Njie. Brown is the son of former Spurs guard Devin Brown, who also happens to be the Roadrunners’ No. 3 all-time leading scorer.

Claunch said it takes some courage for LJ Brown to play for the same program that his father helped lead to the 1999 NCAA tournament.

“He’s about everything that we’re about as a program,” the coach said. “Toughness. Hard work. Fight … Obviously he’s got the pedigree, right? LJ is competing. He’s competing for minutes just like everybody else. Doesn’t matter if you’re a walk-on or not.

“He’s got to continue to handle (the ball) and make better decisions offensively. But he is about everything that we’re about, and I value that. Taking care of the ball. Being a good teammate. Rebounding and being tough. He’ll have a chance to play.”