UTSA guard Vasean Allette is out for the season

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

After two months of uncertainty, the UTSA Roadrunners have announced through the American Conference that guard Vasean Allette won’t play this season.

The news was unveiled on Wednesday morning on the conference’s website before UTSA was scheduled to open play in the American on the road at Florida Atlantic.

His status was listed as ‘out (season).’

Allette, a 6-foot-2 junior from Ontario, Canada, had 51 games of experience in NCAA Division I, including 19 at Old Dominion in 2023-24 and 32 at TCU in ’24-25.

He led Old Dominion in scoring at 17.4 points per game on 45 percent shooting from the field, including 35 percent from three.

After transferring into the Big 12 Conference at TCU, he became one of the Horned Frogs’ key players. He started 25 games while averaging 11.4 points, 4.1 rebounds and 3.5 assists. Allette also contributed on the defensive end with 1.3 steals.

Allette was considered UTSA’s top offseason pickup out of the transfer portal. Before even playing a game for the Roadrunners, he was picked second team preseason all conference.

Potential notwithstanding, Allette never played a regular-season game for the Roadrunners, sitting out all 12 to this point.

His only appearance came on Oct. 25 at home in an exhibition against the University of the Incarnate Word. He finished with two points and six assists in 16 minutes.

When the regular season started a week later against the College of Biblical Studies, however, Allette didn’t play and wasn’t in pregame warmups or on the bench.

Initially, his absence was attributed to injury. But by November, Coach Austin Claunch acknowledged that there were “other things” keeping him from playing.

“We’ll keep most of that in house,” Claunch said on Nov. 18. “He’s obviously been injured. But there’s a few different things that, we’re getting him all the way back and making sure. I’m not bringing him back until he’s 100 percent.”

A spokesman said last week that Allette was not playing for “personal reasons.” His status for next season and beyond is unclear.

Other UTSA players mentioned in the conference’s availability report were guard Pierce Spencer, who is out for the season with a shoulder injury, and forward Stanley Borden.

Claunch said earlier this week that Borden has a hand injury and is two weeks away from returning to practice.

Records

FAU 8-5
UTSA 4-8

Coming up

UTSA at Florida Atlantic, Wednesday, noon
UTSA at Temple, Saturday, 11 a.m.

UTSA men aim for success with a bigger, more physical team

Daniel Akitoby. UTSA basketball Rowdy Jam on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, at the Convocation Center. - photo by Joe Alexander

Daniel Akitoby, a 6-foot-9, 245-pound forward, comes to UTSA from Morgan State University. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

UTSA coach Austin Claunch is hardly one to dwell on old news, but evidence exists that his first season as head coach of the UTSA Roadrunners wasn’t as disheartening as the record would indicate.

The Roadrunners finished 12-19 overall, and they tied for ninth among 13 teams in the American Conference at 6-12.

But for context, consider that two of his players were lost for the season due to injury and three others left the program prior to the final game for non-injury related reasons.

For most of the last few months, the Roadrunners played with post players that were 6-feet-10 and 6-9.

In the end, they traveled to Frisco for the conference tournament as the 11th seed — with eight on scholarship — and nearly knocked off the sixth-seeded East Carolina Pirates before falling, 70-65.

It was a painful end, though almost fitting, as UTSA was 1-8 in games decided by single digits since the first week of February.

“I think any time you play through the league one time, it’s important,” Claunch said in his office Friday afternoon. “Every league is different. I think this is a physical league. It’s a strong league.

“It’s a relatively athletic league.

“So, with us (recruiting) more size and athleticism (this season), hopefully that can manufacture more wins, by way of getting to the free-throw line more, offensive rebounding better and defensive rebounding better.

“We just need to be a more physical group.”

As anyone who attended the Rowdy Jam event for fans on Thursday night can attest, UTSA is a much bigger team than last year, with taller and longer athletes at every position.

The Roadrunners are set to play their one and only closed scrimmage of the fall on Saturday and then will host Incarnate Word on Oct. 25 in an exhibition.

UTSA’s season opener is Nov. 5 at home against the College of Biblical Studies, a third-year program based in Houston coached by former University of Houston star Michael Young.

Claunch seems pleased with his team’s progress since he welcomed most of the new players to campus in June.

“We’re building our identity on both sides of the ball, what we want to do, how we want to play,” Claunch said. “I think we’re starting to see it a little more. Just getting the shots we want to get offensively, the pace that we want to play, you know, how we want to execute.”

A focus for the Roadrunners during summer workouts centered around defense after last year’s squad finished 12th in the American in points allowed and field goal shooting and 11th in three-point percentage.

“Defensively we’re looking at, obviously, improving from where we were last year, (working on) how we’re going to guard the ball screen,” the coach said. “I just think we got to use our collective length better than we did last year.”

Guard Vasean Allette, a junior transfer from TCU, appears to be the player to watch this season.

“I still really don’t know who’s going to start,” Claunch said. “We’ll look at some different things tomorrow (in the scrimmage). I think we have a really deep team. I think we have to lean into that.

“I think we got to embrace the fact that we’re really deep and understand that that’s going to be a big part of our success.”

UTSA roster

Dorian Hayes 6-5 freshman guard
Kaidon Rayfield 6-8 freshman forward
Austin Nunez 6-2 senior guard
Vasean Allette 6-2 junior point guard
Brent Moss 6-6 junior guard/forward
Pierce Spencer 6-3 graduate guard
Macaleab Rich 6-7 junior guard/forward
Jamir Simpson 6-5 graduate guard
x-LJ Brown 6-2 redshirt senior guard
x-Mo Njie 6-11 graduate center
Daniel Akitoby 6-9 graduate forward
Stanley Borden 7-0 graduate center
Matheo Coffi 6-8 freshman forward
x-Baboucarr Njie 6-6 sophomore forward/guard
x-Jackson Fazande 6-3 redshirt sophomore forward

UTSA men are pegged for an 11th-place finish in the American

The UTSA Roadrunners will have something to prove this season in the American Conference men’s basketball race. UTSA was picked 11th out of 13 teams in the American preseason coaches’ poll. Roadrunners guard Vasean Allette, a newcomer at UTSA and a transfer from TCU, is a second-team choice in projections for individual honors.

Memphis, South Florida, Tulane and UAB are the favorites, in that order, according to the poll released Thursday morning.

American preseason coaches’ poll

1. Memphis (11) 143
2. South Florida (2) 128
3. Tulane 122
4. UAB 98
5. Wichita State 93
6. Florida Atlantic 80
7. North Texas 77
8. Tulsa 74
9. Temple 65
10. East Carolina 53
11. UTSA 32
12. Rice 27
13. Charlotte 22

Individual honors/projections

Player of the Year – Rowan Brumbaugh, G, Tulane
Freshman of the Year – Josiah Parker, G, Florida Atlantic

First team – Jordan Riley, Sr., G, East Carolina; Aaron Bradshaw, Jr., F, Memphis; Dug McDaniel, Sr., G, Memphis; Rowan Brumbaugh, R-Jr., G, Tulane*; Kenyon Giles, Sr., G, Wichita State.

Second team – Daimion Collins, R-Sr., F, South Florida; Izaiyah Nelson, Sr., F, South Florida; Vasean Allette, Jr., G, UTSA; Asher Woods, Sr., G, Tulane; David Green, Gr., F, Tulsa.