UTSA coaches applaud groundbreaking on basketball-volleyball training center

Karen Aston. UTSA beat Northern Colorado 80-62 in the first round of the WNIT on Thursday, March 21, 2024, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA women’s basketball coach Karen Aston likes the idea that her players will be able to work out at any time in the school’s new basketball-volleyball training center. Officials say the facility is expected to be completed by mid- to late-2026. – File photo by Joe Alexander

Editor’s note: The UTSA men’s basketball team will take on the Southwestern Adventist Knights Thursday at noon in the first of two games at the Convocation Center. The women will host UT Arlington at 4.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Seated behind her desk last July, UTSA women’s basketball coach Karen Aston welcomed a reporter into her office and waited for the interview to begin. Right off the bat, she was asked if she had been talking to her players and recruits about the prospects of a new, on-campus training base.

After all, the final details on construction of a proposed practice facility for men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball seemed all but certain to come together by the end of the year. Aston, however, delivered a carefully measured reply.

“In the business we’re in now, you’re living in the moment,” UTSA’s fourth-year coach told The JB Replay at the time. “What you have (in terms of infrastructure), is what you have to focus on, just because of the ever-changing climate. So I think that as much as I want to sell the (new) practice facility to the recruits and all of that, the reality is, we’re just living in the moment.

“What we have, is what we need to do the best with. So, that’s kind of been my mindset. You want to stay in the moment and make the most of it. When that ground breaks, I think that’s when you can really start getting excited with your current players.”

That magical day for Aston arrived Wednesday when school officials, boosters and civic leaders gathered on the west end of the UTSA campus to cheer the start of construction on a complex that could very well alter the trajectory of basketball and volleyball at the school.

UTSA’s newest major facility for athletics is a $35 million project.

By the time it’s completed in 2026, men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball will have a new home base, a structure measuring 53,000 square feet, complete with two practice courts, locker rooms, a team lounge for each of the three programs, a weight room, athletic training with hydrotherapy, meeting rooms and coaches’ offices.

Teams will continue to play games in the Convocation Center, but coaches are thrilled with the prospect of a more expansive setup for practices, with all the amenities on the premises.

“I think we’ve been waiting a long time for this,” Aston told reporters, “so it’s something I knew when I came here, and everybody that’s part of our athletic program knows, that this is a long time coming, and if you want the game to change for the basketball and volleyball programs, this has to be a piece of that.”

“I’m excited, for sure, but also appreciative of the people that gave the donations that allowed us to get this off the ground, (of) the commitment from the president (of the university, Taylor Eighmy) and (athletic director) Lisa (Campos). I think, all around, it’s a great day.”

A trio of coaches — Aston, men’s basketball coach Austin Claunch and volleyball coach Carol Price-Torok — met with the media after the groundbreaking and offered their views on how the facility could impact their programs and day-to-day operations.

Basketball and volleyball games will continue to be played at the Convocation Center, just as they have since the 1981-82 season, but the lives of the athletes wearing UTSA jerseys will be changed. Coaches believe that their daily routines will be more conducive to high-level performance.

“I think it’s just gym time, to be honest with you,” Aston said. “If you’re trying to play at a high level, you recruit players that want to play at a high level, and the ones that (do) will be in the gym. They want 24-hour access. They’re different than we are. They want to take a nap, wake up at midnight and go shoot.”

With the new facility, it’ll all be possible for young and restless athletes willing to put in the time.

“(Athletes) want to be able to get in the gym any time, get in the weight room,” Aston said. “I just think amenities are fantastic. They make you feel like you’re headed in the right direction as far as having a respected basketball program. But, bottom line, it’s the gym time.”

Claunch said on a zoom call earlier this week that the facility promises to affect the athletes’ daily lives in many ways. Having a weight room in the same building as the practice court. Having a team room to watch film.

The practice facility, he said, “is something that’s going to affect our student athletes every single day. Daily deposits to help them improve physically, mentally, and that’s … obviously, it’s a game changer.”

Claunch signed two players in the early period last month, guard Dorian Hayes from the Houston area and forward Kaidon Rayfield from Oklahoma City. He said he talked to both of them about the benefits that they would get from the new facility during their careers at UTSA.

“Absolutely,” Claunch said. “Obviously Dorian and Kaidon are fired up about what we’re doing, but also, when you’re talking about what they’re going to have in their sophomore year, I mean, that’s going to help their player development, it just makes their entire experience here easier and better and help them win more games.

“Quite, frankly it’s going to help us. It’s going to translate to more wins, you know, just in a lot of different ways.”

For the past 40-something years, all three UTSA teams have played and practiced in the Convocation Center. Currently, volleyball season starts in the late August and runs through mid-November. Basketball season starts the first week of November and runs through the first of March, generally.

Practices for all three sports are ongoing for most of the year, restricting teams to certain times of day without much wiggle room to re-schedule.

“Right now, we’re practicing in the morning, which is great, and we can make it work,” Price-Torok said. “But if we want to sleep in until 9 and then go from 9 to 12 (noon), we can’t. Because you’re in somebody else’s practice time. So, I think it gives us the freedom to make some of those changes … and give those players the time that they need.”

Price-Torok also talked about how the move should ease some of the burden of trainers, who currently move between the RACE building and the Convocation Center, which is about a five-minute walk across campus.

“For them to be housed in one location … it’s just going to be game-changing for them,” the coach said. “The time that our trainers spend every single day, to spread people out, because we’re all sharing this big training room … to be able to go in here (into the new facility) and make her time demand and her job a little bit easier, (it) will help us keep trainers longer (and improve) their quality of life.”

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