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HoustonChronicle.com -- http://www.HoustonChronicle.com | Section: Sports
Jan. 29, 2004, 12:51AM
Rice tops Hawaii 76-73 for share of first place
By NEIL HOHLFELD
Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle
With the Super Bowl in town, there's an influx of pickpockets hoping to prey on out-of-town visitors.
The Rice Owls got into the pilfering act Wednesday night at Autry Court. They stole the ball a season-high 16 times from Hawaii and beat the Rainbow Warriors 76-73.
With the win, the Owls (14-5, 6-2) went into a three-way tie for first place in the Western Athletic Conference with Hawaii (14-4, 6-2) and Fresno State (10-7, 6-2). Rice was led by Jason McKrieth, who had 19 points on 7-of-11 shooting and five steals.
McKrieth had the final steal and likely the most important, picking off a pass from Hawaii point guard Logan Lee with the Owls ahead 72-68 and 1:15 remaining.
"I was just trying to be aggressive," McKrieth said. "A few of them (steals) I anticipated because I recognized Hawaii's offense, but a lot of it was being aggressive."
Even after McKrieth's last steal, Rice wasn't home free. Center Yamar Diene hit two free throws after an intentional foul with 18.4 seconds left to make it 74-68, but he missed two with 17.1 seconds remaining.
Hawaii's Michael Kuebler, who led all scorers with 24 points, nailed a 3-pointer with 7.1 seconds left to pull the Warriors within 74-71. Owls point guard Rashid Smith, who was 8-of-8 from the line, nailed down the win with two free throws with 4.6 seconds left.
"That was a hard-fought game," Rice coach Willis Wilson said. "You look at games this time of year, and teams like to bump and grind and play with a lot of intensity. I really liked our defense. That's one of the things about this year; when our defense is good, our offensive tends to take care of itself."
The upside of the Rice defense was that the Owls forced 24 Hawaii turnovers that led to 35 points. But the Rainbow Warriors shot a season-high 62.5 percent from the field. Kuebler was 10-of-16 overall and 6-of-7 on shots inside the 3-point line.
The Owls snapped Hawaii's six-game WAC winning streak despite missing leading scorer Michael Harris for most of the second half. Harris had 18 points but played only two of the final 15 minutes due to cramps.
"He had leg cramps, stomach cramps, all kind of cramps," Wilson said. "It's a credit to our guys to play the way they did without him. He's a guy we count for rebounds and points, especially late in the game. To pick it up with him out was critical."
In the first half, a defensive switch by Wilson led to steals by Rice on four straight trips down the court by Hawaii. The Owls turned the steals into eight points, turning a 23-16 deficit into a 24-23 lead.
During the opening half, the Owls had 11 steals and scored 25 points off 13 Hawaii turnovers. At halftime, Rice had a 43-34 lead.
"You have to give them credit for playing good defense," Hawaii coach Riley Wallace said. "They played harder than I expected on defense. We took them for granted, and our timing was off.
"Our guys came back in the second half, but defensively we were pitiful, especially on the post defense. Harris and McKrieth had their big nights tonight and carried their ballclub."
The Owls were ahead 58-47 and appeared to be on their way to an easy win when Harris left the game for the first time with 15:17 left. Harris tried to come back with 12:42 left but he lasted only one minute before limping off again.
Led by Kuebler and Julian Sensley, who added 20 points, Hawaii went on a 9-0 run to cut the lead to 60-56 with 9:55 left. Twice the Warriors cut the Rice to lead to two points, but the Owls secured the win by making 13 of 18 free throws over the final 5:18.
One of the misses was by McKrieth, who had made a school record 37 straight free throws before missing with 8:49 left. It was about the only thing the junior forward didn't do right Wednesday. His rash of steals and 5-of-6 shooting in the first half set the tone.
With the three-team logjam at the top of the conference and Nevada one game behind the leaders at 5-3, Riley believes the second half of the WAC season will be one to remember.
"A lot of people can win this thing," Riley said. "It's whoever holds court at home and picks up the road wins. I'm thinking 13-5 might do it."
Often, teams talk about stealing a win on the road. Wednesday night, the Owls stole one -- literally -- at Autry Court by flicking the ball away from Hawaii 16 times.
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HoustonChronicle.com -- http://www.HoustonChronicle.com | Section: Sports
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