Author Archives | Starns Leland

Houston OT Patrick Paul drafted in second round by Miami Dolphins

Patrick Paul became UH’s highest-drafted offensive player in 15 years. | Sean Thomas/The Cougar

Standout offensive tackle Patrick Paul became the first UH player selected in the 2024 NFL Draft after being selected 55th overall by the Miami Dolphins Saturday night.

Paul is the highest-drafted offensive player from Houston since wide receiver Donnie Avery was picked 33rd overall in 2008 as well as the highest-drafted offensive player from the Dana Holgorsen era.

The local Jersey Village product saw little action in his first two years but became a full-time starter in 2021 and did not miss a start for his final three seasons, allowing five sacks his entire career. Paul earned back-to-back All-AAC honors in 2021 and 2022 and helped UH to a 12-2 record in the latter season. In UH’s first Big 12 season in 2023, Paul was a bright spot in Houston’s 4-8 campaign, winning first-team All-Big 12 and second-team All-American honors in a season that saw him allow just one sack in 469 dropbacks as a team captain.

Having begun his college career in 2019, Paul is one of four players to have played in all five of Holgorsen’s seasons as UH head coach along with fellow offensive lineman Jack Freeman IV, defensive end Nelson Ceaser and running back Kelan Walker.

Paul’s selection marks the ninth consecutive draft in which a UH player was selected. He is also the highest-drafted Houston offensive lineman since 1995.

sports@thedailycougar.com


Houston OT Patrick Paul drafted in second round by Miami Dolphins” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Houston OT Patrick Paul drafted in second round by Miami Dolphins

Sam Brown, several other UH players enter transfer portal following spring practices

Sam Brown was UH’s leading receiver last season. | Anh Le/The Cougar

Shortly after Houston’s spring football season ended, 11 players entered the transfer portal since its opening Tuesday, including senior wideout Samuel Brown, UH’s top receiver in 2023.

This comes as the second wave of UH transfers since the end of the 2023 season after Willie Fritz was hired following the firing of former head coach Dana Holgorsen.

Brown led the Cougars with 62 catches and 815 yards last season, largely taking targets from injured star receiver Matthew Golden, who transferred to Texas last December. Three other UH receivers entered the portal, including senior Joshua Cobbs, junior CJ Nelson and redshirt freshman Mikal Harrison-Pilot, a former four-star recruit from the class of 2023.

Sophomore linebacker Treylin Payne, who played in all 12 games and made two starts last season, also entered the portal along with linebacker Aubrey Smith, safety Jalyn Stanford and corner Michael Patterson.

Backup quarterback Lucas Coley along with offensive lineman Karson Jones and Tevin Shaw and tight ends Bryan Henry and Darson Herman all will be looking for new homes for the 2024 season. 

sports@thedailycougar.com


Sam Brown, several other UH players enter transfer portal following spring practices” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Sam Brown, several other UH players enter transfer portal following spring practices

UH tennis ends season 2-19 after loss in Big 12 Championships

Houston’s first Big 12 season ended unceremoniously in a sweep at the hands of OU. | Oscar Herrera/The Cougar

UH tennis lost 4-0 to three-seed Oklahoma in the Big 12 Championships Wednesday, ending its season 2-19 overall and a winless 0-13 in the Big 12 play.

14-seed Houston fell behind early in doubles play before sophomores Sonya Kovalenko and Sophie Schouten defeated 20th-ranked duo Dana Guzman and Roisin Gilheany to tie things up. However, senior Blanca Cortijo Parreno and junior Elena Trencheva were unable to come back from a 5-1 deficit and OU took the doubles point.

In singles play, the Cougars failed to capture a single set as Schouten and sophomore Gabriela Cortes both fell 6-1, 6-2. Shortly after, Trencheva squandered a 4-3 second-set lead to give Oklahoma the match-clinching point and send UH home.

Houston’s first Big 12 ended with a loss, and the Cougar will look to win its first Big 12 match next season.

sports@thedailycougar.com


UH tennis ends season 2-19 after loss in Big 12 Championships” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on UH tennis ends season 2-19 after loss in Big 12 Championships

Running with a purpose: Meet the South African Olympian representing UH on the track

Shaun Maswanganyi has fought through loss and injuries to become Houston’s star sprinter. | Courtesy of UH Athletics

UH sprinter Shaun Maswanganyi was a forearm’s length away from winning the 100-meter NCAA national title in 2023.

He had stepped onto the starting blocks supremely focused, and as the race progressed, he felt himself ahead of his nearby opponents. As he crossed the finish line, he looked up to the scoreboard almost sure he had just won it all.

I remember standing behind the blocks. I was in the zone, all I could hear were my thoughts and the starter,” Maswanganyi said. “I just remember running through what (UH track and field head coach Carl Lewis) would want: push, power, patience. I remember those words, and everything clicked in my head. At this stage, I’m like, It’s me and the line. I don’t care about anyone else.”

But while he painstakingly waited for the times to come up, Maswanganyi realized he made a mistake: he leaned too early.

“Ninety meters into the race, I started feeling myself naturally start to lean forward,” Maswanganyi said. “I was fighting every urge, but I leaned way too early and I could just feel it. But by the time I leaned, I thought I had it.”

The times came up, and there it stood: third place.

In one of the fastest races in NCAA history, in which seven runners broke the 10-second threshold, Maswanganyi’s school-record time of 9.91 seconds was mere inches away from immortality.

“If I had not leaned, I would have been national champion,” Maswanganyi said. “And that’s the most painful part because I had it in my head.”

Soon after the meeting ended, an accepting yet unsatisfied Maswanganyi began going through old text messages with his best friend and late older brother, Mulalo, who died tragically the previous April. He found an old audio message from May 2021 when Shaun ran a wind-assisted sub-10-second race.

It was an emotional, bittersweet moment for the young South African sprinter, but it was a reminder of just how far he had come and what he had gone through in a tumultuous 2022, as well as motivation for his ultimate goal as a world-class sprinter.

I was going through our chat and I was just listening to some of those whispers and that one voice noted resonated with me,” Maswanganyi said. “It was windy, but to him, it didn’t matter. He was like ‘Keep breaking sub-10, keep doing what you’re doing. I’m proud of you and I’ll always be there for you.’”

Born into a family of athletes — his mother and grandmother were runners and his father was a professional cyclist — Phatutshedzo “Shaun” Maswanganyi grew up in what he described as “borderline poverty” in the Johannesburg township of Soweto with his two brothers before relocating to Pretoria.

He excelled in just about any sport he tried and exhibited a fierce competitive streak that he credits to spending his days with Mulalo, a standout rugby player himself. By the time he was 13 years old, he was a star soccer and cricket player but had zeroed in on following his brother’s footsteps in rugby or working towards playing college basketball.

However, his grandmother was sure he was destined for much more and told him as much in a phone call just days before she unexpectedly passed away.

“She had a vision that I would represent our family name on the highest stage of the world,” Maswanganyi, now an Olympian who currently ranks 33rd in the world in men’s 200-meter race, said. “She was talking on the phone and she was saying all these things, and I was just like, ‘You’re talking about the future, and I’m just worried about tomorrow.’ It didn’t click with me then that she was going to leave us forever. But she knew something we didn’t. She saw the things I never saw myself when I was 13.”

But Maswanganyi never planned on track being his platform to stardom, though. He was hesitant to even run at all.

At the urging of St. Alban’s track coaches, Maswanganyi reluctantly entered an intra-school track meet where he won first place and broke the school’s senior record while still just 13 years old. Soon after, he was thrust into lining up against the South African U15 national champion in a race that changed the course of his life.

I was winning the first 60 meters, but in the last 40 meters, he just blew past me and then I was like, ‘What?’ I couldn’t do anything,” Maswanganyi said. “And after that, I went up to my coach and was like, ‘Yeah, you’ll see me on Monday. I can’t let that happen.’”

With his competitive energy now fully focused and with the guidance of his coaches and his brother, it didn’t take long for Maswanganyi to compete for national titles. By the end of his high school career, he was the South African U20 60- and 100-meter record holder and earned a gold medal in the 200-meter at the 2019 African Junior Championships.

With the help of a scholarship agency, Maswanganyi was contacted by then-UH track and field head coach Leroy Burrell while on vacation with friends. The two had a lengthy call before Burrell handed the phone to assistant coach and Olympic legend Carl Lewis, where he was fully sold. Once he arrived in 202, he quickly built a strong relationship with Lewis, helping him adjust to his new training environment and more importantly becoming his “eyes” on the track.

“He always told me that the best athletes know what they did wrong,” Maswanganyi said. “I’ve gotten to a point where I can make a diagnosis of myself before the doctor diagnoses me, and the doctor can confirm, ‘Oh yeah, you did that or you could have done this or did that.’”

The 6-foot-1 sprinter hit his stride in the outdoor season, eventually winning the AAC title in the 100-, 200- and 4×100-meter and bursting onto the national scene by just missing out on gold in the 100-meter NCAA title. Months later, Maswanganyi made his grandmother’s words ring true when he represented his country on the world stage in the Tokyo Olympics, reaching the semifinals in the 100- and 200m.

“That was one of my most special moments,” Maswanganyi said. “Because my family was so proud of me.”

The 20-year-old phenom elected to return to college for the 2022 season to continue developing under Lewis’ tutelage and look to earn the 100-meter national title, a feat he had never achieved as a teenager in South Africa. But a day before Maswanganyi was set to compete in the LSU Joe May Invitational, he received terrible news.

On April 8, 2022, Shaun’s brother Mulalo was shot and killed at age 29. Unable to fly back to South Africa to mourn with family or even attend his brother’s funeral, an inconsolable Maswanganyi was stuck in a Baton Rouge hotel room, unsure of what to do next with a relay race as the anchor leg less than 24 hours away.

I remember just hearing the news, I was devastated. I was in my room, Coach Burrell was with me, and Coach Carl was with me. They asked me what I wanted to do. They were like, ‘You don’t even have to run. We can fly you back,’” Maswanganyi said. “And in my mind, I’m like, I know how my brother was, I know his energy, I know what he would have wanted of me. And he would have wanted me to go out and compete.”

Despite his heavy heart, Maswnaganyi led the Cougars to a first-place finish in the 4x100m to knock off the Tigers on their home soil, finding solace in words from his mentor.

“Coach Carl told me the story about how he had lost his father and he went to the funeral and flew to LA the next day to go compete because he didn’t want to take time off,” Maswnaganyi said. “He knew what it meant to be the best and to compete at the best and he knew the stakes, so I definitely looked up to that.”

Still, the rest of the year remained a brutal struggle for the sophomore. Injuries derailed what was a promising start to the outdoor season and Burrell resigned after the season, having stepped away earlier in the year due to his son Cameron’s untimely death in August of 2021, and was replaced by Lewis.

Through all of it, Maswanganyi grieved the loss of the brother who helped shape him into a world-class athlete.

“It was definitely tough for me. Still today I think about it. I still feel like calling. It’s just a battle every day,” Maswnaganyi said. “But I understand that things happen in life, and you can never really prepare for it. But how you bounce back is the biggest thing for me.”

He did just that the next year en route to his record-breaking national title race. Maswanganyi blew through the 2023 AAC Indoor Championships with gold in the 60- and 200m and won three more conference titles in the outdoor season. But yet again, the 22-year-old was struck by tragedy when he learned of the passing of his grandmother on his mother’s side.

“It was tough missing both the funerals in back-to-back years,” Maswanganyi said. “But just that motivation that they gave me, that extra push just to keep doing what I do. And to remember that every day, I’m running for a bigger purpose.”

That purpose now drives the sprinter in his final year in college as he looks to finally make things right at the NCAAs before he enters the Paris Olympics. Food poisoning prevented Maswanganyi from running at top form in the World University Games and World Championships in the summer of 2023, and a virus kept him from making the final in the Indoor NCAAs. But since the outdoor season began, the senior has shown out with back-to-back 100-meter first-place finishes in the Tom Jones Invitational and Texas Relays, two of the largest track meets in the country.

Even as he’s entered a crucial stretch of his young career, Maswanganyi’s mind has gone back to that old voice message from his brother. The one that told him to keep going.

“I don’t even need to listen to it because it keeps playing in my mind,” Maswnaganyi said. “Every day when I step on the track, when I just need motivation to get through a rep, I think about how much it would mean to me to make him proud.”

sports@thedailycougar.com


Running with a purpose: Meet the South African Olympian representing UH on the track” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Running with a purpose: Meet the South African Olympian representing UH on the track

Beckford sets school record, six Cougars set personal bests in Florida, Arizona meets

Shaun Maswanganyi won his second straight 100-meter race in the Tom Jones Invitational. | Courtesy of UH Athletics

Houston track and field found plenty of success over the weekend in three different meets as six Cougars set personal bests. At the Tom Jones Invitational in Gainesville, Florida graduate runner Kelly-Ann Beckford broke the school record in the 800-meter race for the second time this season with a time of 2:00.70 in a third-place finish that landed her at No. 2 in the nation.

Also at the Tom Jones Invite, senior Shaun Maswanganyi took gold in the 100-meter race with a 10.12-second showing, his second win in as many appearances in the event.

Freshman Michaela Mouton recorded the second-best time in school history in the women’s 400-meter, running a time of 51.41 seconds. Iman Babineaux set a personal best in the same event with a time of 52.77.

In the Bryan Clay Invitational in Azusa, Calif., senior Ayomide Ogunbunmi competed in his first career decathlon, reaching the podium and setting four personal bests in the process. Freshman distance runner Aaron Crittenden placed seventh out of 132 runners in the 1,500-meter race with a time of 3:49.94.

Finally, at the Leopard Distance Carnival in La Verne, California, ran the 5,000-meter race in under 15 minutes for the first time in his career en route to placing 32nd out of 113.

UH will split competition again next week at Mt. SAC Relays in Walnut, Calif. and the Alumni Muster in College Station, Texas.

sports@thedailycougar.com


Beckford sets school record, six Cougars set personal bests in Florida, Arizona meets” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Beckford sets school record, six Cougars set personal bests in Florida, Arizona meets

UH lands former OU point guard Milos Uzan in transfer portal

UH added an experienced point guard through transfer portal in OU’s Milos Uzan. | Anh Le/The Cougar

The Cougars have seemingly found their next starting point guard as former Oklahoma guard Milos Uzan committed to UH via social media Saturday night. Uzan’s addition comes days after First Team All-American point guard Jamal announced his decision to enter the NBA Draft.

Uzan played his freshman and sophomore seasons for the Sooners, appearing in all 64 games and making 56 starts.

In 2023-24, the 6-foot-4 guard from Las Vegas, was the only OU player to start all 32 games, averaging nine points and 4.4 assists to go with 1.2 steals and 3.4 rebounds in 31.7 minutes per game. Uzan shot 39.2% from the floor and 29.2% from three for the season, a sharp dip from freshman season splits of 47.0% and 40.7% respectively. Against Houston on March 2, Uzan logged six points and four assists in 35 minutes in a loss.

Uzan entered the starting lineup nine games into his freshman season and went on to score 7.6 points per game and 2.7 assists.

Uzan joins a UH squad that returns four starters, including seniors L.J. Cryer and J’Wan Roberts.

sports@thedailycougar.com


UH lands former OU point guard Milos Uzan in transfer portal” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on UH lands former OU point guard Milos Uzan in transfer portal

Cougars dominate in second-annual Cameron Burrell Alumni Invitational

Sydni Townsend runs the hurdles at the Texas Relays last week. | Joe Buvid/The Cougar

Houst0n track and field grabbed 26 podiums including 10 first-place finishes at the second-annual Cameron Burrell Alumni Invitational Saturday.

Senior hurdler De’Vion Wilson earned first place in the 110-meter hurdles with a time of 13.62 seconds in his first action of the outdoor season while freshman Logan Lyght placed third.

Freshman Michaela Mouton and senior Iman Babineaux went one-two in the women’s 400-meter race. Meanwhile, sophomore Paris Baker and junior Nakoah Witt each captured the top spot in women’s and men’s 400-meter hurdles, respectively. UH then swept the 4×400-meter relays with first place in both races.

In the field, a trio of seniors David Ajama in the triple jump, Christyan Sampy in the pole vault and Caleb Malbrough in the long jump picked up UH’s final three wins. Another trio, this time of freshmen Cordell Nwokeji, Laney Kucera and Genesis Griffin picked up podium finishes in the men’s shot put, women’s pole vault and women’s losing jump, respectively.

Senior Shaun Maswanganyi made his first home outdoor appearance in the 200-meter race with a second-place time of 20.55 seconds. Maswanganyi and freshman Cayden Broadnax, who placed second in the men’s 100-meter, helped the men’s 4×100-meter relay place second.

Next weekend, UH will travel to compete in the Bryan Clay Invitational in Arizona and the Tom Jones Memorial Invitational in Florida.

sports@thedailycougar.com


Cougars dominate in second-annual Cameron Burrell Alumni Invitational” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Cougars dominate in second-annual Cameron Burrell Alumni Invitational

Jamal Shead wins Naismith Defensive Player of the Year

Jamal Shead led the nation’s best defense this season for UH. | Oscar Herrera/The Cougar

UH senior point guard Jamal Shead won the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Sunday, adding to a long list of accolades for the Cougars’ leader and becoming the first UH player to win the award since its creation in the 2017-18 season.

Shead enjoyed the best season of his career with averages of 12.9 points, 6.3 assists and 2.2 steals while leading Houston to a Big 12 regular season championship and a 32-5 record in its first year in the conference. Shead won Big 12 Player and Defensive Player of the Year honors for his performance and was a unanimous choice for First-Team All-American honors.

Under Shead’s leadership, the Cougars earned a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament for the second straight year and helped UH make the Sweet 16 for the fifth consecutive year.

sports@thedailycougar.com


Jamal Shead wins Naismith Defensive Player of the Year” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Jamal Shead wins Naismith Defensive Player of the Year

Injuries dash Cougars’ title hopes once again

Houston couldn’t overcome any more injuries in its Sweet 16 loss to Duke. | Anh Le/The Cougar

The consequences of injury were everywhere in the Cougars’ locker room.

Senior guard Jamal Shead, whose sprained ankle proved UH’s undoing at the hands of Duke earlier that night, limped to embrace an inconsolable Cedric Lath, the backup center who likely wouldn’t have played at all in the game had it not been for a season-ending foot injury to freshman big man JoJo Tugler less than a month ago.

Sophomore guard Terrance Arceneaux, whose year was cut short with an Achilles tear in December, was silently leaning over the side of his locker. Could he have helped this team get over the hump in a 3-point loss that came down to the final possession?

Junior guard Ramon Walker Jr. never quit. He returned to the rotation this year after a tumultuous 2022-23 season saw him sit out the final three months due to mental health. He then returned from a meniscus tear in just a month to play in the tournament and made plays to keep UH’s hopes alive against the Blue Devils.

I didn’t quit,” Walker said. “When things got hard, I didn’t quit. That’s the thing I’m most proud of.”

Despite all of that, Walker was teary-eyed, as devastated as the rest of his teammates.

Redshirt senior forward J’Wan Roberts sat motionless in his locker, his jersey draped over his head. He had battled through a litany of injuries all year — nagging knee troubles, stitches in his right hand, a shin contusion — to get the Cougars to this point. He had fought valiantly in Shead’s absence to keep UH within arm’s reach.

But it wasn’t enough. Despite battling through it all to become Big 12 champions and a 1-seed, the Cougars just couldn’t overcome another injury, not to its First Team All-American point guard.

“It’s frustrating,” said senior guard Ryan Elvin. “Because this group really was special. I think we had a chance.”

It was even more frustrating for the team’s veterans, such as Elvin, because this wasn’t the first time UH’s NCAA title hopes were wrecked by injuries.

Season-ending surgeries to star guards Tramon Mark and Marcus Sasser in December of the 2021-22 season didn’t stop Houston from reaching the Elite Eight, but the severely shorthanded team ran out of gas against Villanova.

Last season, after climbing atop the AP Poll for the first time in nearly 40 years, Sasser, the Cougars’ All-American shooting guard and Jerry West Award winner, injured his groin during the AAC Tournament. He returned in time for the NCAA Tournament but reaggravated the injury in the Sweet 16 against Miami, while a hobbled Shead and freshman forward Jarace Walker struggled to play up to their normal standard as UH fell yet again.

It was eerily similar to this year. The All-American superstar goes out in the Sweet 16, while the walking wounded still on the court just couldn’t make up for it. Another supremely frustrating end to another equally promising year.

“It‘s just bad luck,” said guard Emanuel Sharp, whose game-tying three-pointer bounced off the front rim as time expired. “Last year with Mark and Jamal hurting. This year; a lot of guys hurting. It just sucks because we know how hard we work every day. We come out and compete every night. It just sucks.”

It hurt in ’22, it hurt in ’23 but this year’s loss particularly stung for the Cougars. Throughout the year, and again after Friday’s loss, players and coaches alike have emphasized just how close-knit this team had become.

They had been through it all together. They struggled through the famously grueling UH summer workouts in June and July together, then traveled to Australia for two weeks on an exhibition tour. They grieved the untimely death of their beloved former teammate Reggie Chaney together. They battled through numerous injuries and stayed together to conquer their gauntlet of a Big 12 schedule and become conference champs in their first year. They survived a Texas A&M comeback in the Round of 32 with four starters having fouled out to pull out an emotional win in overtime.

Even senior guard L.J. Cryer, who climbed the NCAA mountaintop with Baylor in 2021 before transferring to Houston last offseason, said this team was easily the favorite he’s ever been a part of.

“I’ve been a part of teams that care and I’ve been a part of teams that don’t get reactions out of a locker room like this,” Cryer said. “But this team is special. We all care about one another. The love is real.”

And now it was all over. No more practices. No more scouting reports. No more games.

“The team has been through so much together; so much adversity throughout the year,” Elvin said. “I’ve been on a lot of close-knit teams, but this was probably the closest I’ve ever been on. It sucks now that it’s over”

Head coach Kelvin Sampson has dealt with these kinds of losses before in his four decades of coaching, but it all still hurts.

He knows that injuries don’t make exceptions. After all, only one team each year gets to go home truly happy. One moment, you’re leading Duke and in control in the first half. The next, you’re scratching and clawing to stay in the game without your star before a magical season ends unceremoniously.

He knows that everyone on this year’s team could theoretically return for at least one more season, but Shead will very likely enter the NBA Draft to pursue his dream, and seniors like Cryer and Roberts’ futures are unknown.

He knows that players will leave and new ones will come in, just as they do every year. But even if one of Sampson’s future teams finally does it and wins an NCAA title, he will never get to spend his days coaching this particular group again. The one that went through so much yet achieved so much.

My disappointment came not just in losing this game,” Sampson said. “But in not being able to coach this team anymore. I loved coaching this team.”

After the game, Sampson said he didn’t give his team a speech. A speech wouldn’t do any good now. He had built this Houston program to be one of the toughest and most successful in the nation, and what they had done this season was another large feather in their cap. But as his team sat in disbelief and sorrow, he knew none of that would make it hurt any less.

He simply told his players how proud he was and how much he loved them. He left them with a statement that rings true for 350 of the 351 NCAA Division-I basketball programs: “It just wasn’t our time.” Maybe one day, it will be, but just not today.

sports@thedailycougar.com


Injuries dash Cougars’ title hopes once again” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Injuries dash Cougars’ title hopes once again

Shead exits with injury, Cougars finish tourney in Sweet 16 loss to Duke

 

Houston’s season came to end at the hand of Duke after Jamal Shead’s injury. | Anh Le/The Cougar

The Cougars, without senior point guard and star player Jamal Shead, who left the game with a severe ankle sprain in the first half, stuck around in the second half and had a chance.

After Emanuel Sharp brought UH to within three in the final minute with an and-one layup, Houston had one final shot to tie the game with 8.9 seconds remaining.

Sharp caught the inbounds pass, stepped back for a three, and missed it off front-iron.

And the season was over. UH fell in the Sweet 16 for the second straight year after falling to the Duke Blue Devils 54-51 Friday night.

“It’s just not our time,” said head coach Kelvin Sampson after the game. “You don’t have to agree with it, but you have to understand it.”

After UH started the game with an early lead, Shead landed awkwardly on his right ankle on a drive to the basket and was helped to the locker room with seven minutes to go in the first half. Forced to play without its star player and leader, Houston relinquished its 16-10 lead as Duke took its first lead of the game minutes later.

“It was swollen on both sides,” Shead said after the game. “I tried to run on it, but I couldn’t put any weight on it.”

The Cougars remained within striking distance for the start of the second half but struggled to muster up enough offense or stops to regain the lead from the Blue Devils. UH did not hit its first three-pointer until an L.J. Cryer jumper at the 12:15 mark of the second half brought UH’s deficit to 39-37. Houston shot 2-for-8 from downtown for the game.

“As tough as losing Jamal was,” Sampson said. “I was equally proud of our toughness, our resiliency. The way those kids fought.”

Duke shot 50% (10-20) from the floor in the second half compared to a 4-for-18 (22.2%) start in the 13 minutes Shead played.

Cryer finished as UH’s leading scorer with 15 points while redshirt senior forward J’Wan Roberts followed with 13 points and eight boards.

UH’s 2023-24 season record will stand at 32-5.

sports@thedailycougar.com


Shead exits with injury, Cougars finish tourney in Sweet 16 loss to Duke” was originally posted on The Cougar

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off on Shead exits with injury, Cougars finish tourney in Sweet 16 loss to Duke