Saturday, December 31, 2022

VCU tops La Salle to win its fifth in a row

Final Score: VCU 80, La Salle 67

Location: Siegel Center in Richmond 

Current Records: VCU 10-4, 1-0 in A-10. La Salle 6-8, 0-1 in A-10. 

 

In a nutshell: VCU junior guard Ace Baldwin led all Rams in scoring with 19 points. He added six assists and four steals; plus he sank a career-high five treys. Sophomore forward Jalen DeLoach contributed the first double-double of his career with 14 points and 13 rebounds. 
 
After falling behind the Explorers by nine points in the first half, the Rams topped off that stanza with a Zeb Jackson three-pointer, to seize the lead by two points, 38-to-36. In the second half, VCU played with confidence and outscored La Salle, 42-to-31, to launch its A-10 play with a victory. The surging Rams have now won five consecutive games.


NOTES
  (Info provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D.)

  • DeLoach’s 14 points came on 6-of-8 shooting from the floor. His 13 rebounds topped his previous career-high of 11 last season against Rhode Island.
  • Junior guard Zeb Jackson had a good day to ring out 2022 for the Rams. He scored 14 points on 6-of-10 shooting. 
  • Graduate student Brandon Johns was the other Ram in double figures, putting up 10 points on 4-of-8 from the field. He also snared six rebounds. 
  • La Salle’s Josh Nickelberry led all scorers with 21 points, 13 of which came in the first half. Jhamir Brickus and Khali Brantley also recorded double figures with 16 and 14 points, respectively. 
  • After a Brantley pull-up jumper brought La Salle within two with 9:22 left, the Rams outscored the Explorers 27-18 the rest of the way in.
  • In the first half, the Explorers navigated their way to a 7-0 lead in the opening 2:57 of the game, courtesy of two Nickelberry field goals and layup by Brantley. La Salle would lead for most of the opening 20 minutes before the Rams took their first lead at 25 seconds before halftime with a Johns dunk.  
  • The two teams went back and forth for the first ten minutes of second half, with La Salle staying within arm’s length and not allowing VCU a lead bigger than seven points prior to the Rams’ final flurry to put the game out of reach.  
  • The Rams’ eight 3-pointers tied their highest mark of the season, which also happened in the season opener against Manhattan
  • The Rams' bench came up big, outscoring La Salle’s bench players 27-8. 
  • With the victory, the Rams continue their dominance of La Salle, winning their eighth straight against the Explorers.

BOX SCORE

 

UP NEXT

 

The Rams will hit the road on Wed., Jan. 4, when they will face the Duquesne Dukes (11-4, 1-1 A-10). It will be the Rams' first road game since Dec. 3. Tip-off will be at 7 p.m. The game will be streamed live on ESPN+.

 -- 30 --

BIOGRAPH TIMES: Time Warping, Again

Comment by Rebus: 

Regarding whether parts of these Biograph stories have been fabricated from whole cloth or generously embellished, there's this: Several times I've heard Rea tell people that he's learned the best way to be credible, when recounting some stories set in the '70s, is to tone them down. And, naturally, some stories are best left on the cutting room floor.

Maybe cartoonist Robert Ripley said it best: "Believe it or not!"

 *

Intro: In 1955 RKO, which had just changed hands, became the first major Hollywood studio to sell the exhibition rights of its library of feature films to television interests. Consequently, many in the baby boomer generation grew up watching that studio's well-crafted black and white movies on TV. 

Twenty years later, the familiar old RKO logo played a cameo role in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (1975), which is a campy send-up of old science fiction and monster flicks. That movie eventually became the most significant midnight show attraction of all-time. As such, it merits its own chapter in this collection of Biograph stories. Read on...


 This photo of Larry Rohr riding up the aisle during a 
midnight screening of the "The Rocky Horror 
Picture Show" was shot on Mar. 1, 1980

At Midnight Only: Time Warping, Again 
by F.T. Rea

"The Rocky Horror Picture Show" was adapted from the British kitsch-celebrating, gender-bending stage musical, “The Rocky Horror Show.” The film version was released by 20th Century Fox in September of 1975.

The play was written in the early-1970s; it opened in London in 1973. Its thin plot cashed in on the time's freedom to pursue pleasure, expressed plainly by the hippies' liberating trope – “if it feels good, do it.”

Yet, to Fox's distribution department in 1975, the movie was weird in a way that made it difficult to pigeonhole, marketing-wise. Which couldn't have helped in the promotion for its early first-run engagements, which were disappointing at the box office. That eventually prompted Fox to simply give up and take it out of release.

While “Rocky Horror,” the film, became popular during what might now be seen as the punk era, it wasn't really connected to the aesthetic of punk's defiant nonchalance. Style-wise, its music, written by the play's author, Richard O'Brien, was sort of a bubble-gum knockoff of early rock 'n' roll, updated with a measure of glam rock.

Overall, as pop music goes, the songs probably didn't expand any boundaries. Nonetheless, in the context of the movie the music had it own charm.

As a movie musical, "Rocky Horror" was surely no worse than a good deal of the Hollywood musicals of the 1950s and '60s. Anyway, it didn't please critics all that much, either. So when Fox put it on the shelf, no one could have anticipated the one-of-a-kind cult following it would eventually gather as a midnight show.

Note: “The Rocky Horror Picture Show”: 100 minutes. Color. Directed by Jim Sharman (who had also directed the play). Cast: Tim Curry (as Dr. Frank-N-Furter), Susan Sarandon (as Janet), Barry Bostwick (as Brad), Richard O'Brien (as Riff Raff), Patricia Quinn (as Magenta), Nell Campbell (as Columbia), Meat Loaf (as Eddie), Peter Hinwood (as Rocky).

About a year after its original release, the second life for “Rocky Horror” is said to have begun at the legendary Waverly Theater (now the IFC Center) in Greenwich Village. At midnight screenings, it seems a few audience members began calling out sarcastic comeback lines to the film's action and dialogue. The funniest remarks were appreciated, imitated, then eventually topped by an attendee at a subsequent screening.

Thus, it wasn't originally some adman's brainchild. It just happened.

It should also be noted that as an institution, midnight shows had been popular in New York City since the late-'60s. As well, they had been running at cinemas in other cities and some college towns for a good five years or more. Basically, if a midnight screening went well, it would be held over to the next weekend, which was a departure from calendar house programming. 

Thus, the midnight show format had already been developed and was well established when “Rocky Horror” came along. In the Richmond Biograph's first couple of years of operation midnight show screenings frequently did much to help pay the electric bill. 

During 1977 at the Waverly, the role the audience played in the midnight shows enlarged to make the screenings into events with costumes and choreography, as the traditional wall between the screen and the viewers continued dissolving. When that unprecedented interaction phenomenon jumped from Manhattan to other markets where “Rocky Horror” was playing as a midnight show, such as Austin and Los Angeles, it became even more puzzling.

By the winter of 1977/78 “Rocky Horror” was playing to enthusiastic crowds in several cities. Yet, curiously, it had not caught on at others. What would eventually become a popular culture marvel was still flying below the radar for most of America.

As the spring of '78 approached, Alan Rubin 
asked Fox once again about booking it for Richmond's Biograph. It was already playing at the Key Theatre in Georgetown, because Rubin's ex-partner, David Levy, had beaten him to the punch. But Alan was told there still weren't any prints available. 

Then, during a trip to Los Angles in May, I heard about what were the elaborate goings-on at the Tiffany Theatre, to do with “Rocky Horror.” Upon my return to Richmond I told Alan and his partner, Lenny Poryles, what I'd learned about its growing popularity in LA. Subsequently, during a conference call with one of the guys at Fox, Alan, Lenny and I were told there was just no enthusiasm at his end for the picture’s prospects in Richmond. 

To be fair, in those days Richmond was generally seen by most movie distributors as a weak market – not a place to waste resources. Besides, no one at Fox seemed to understand why the audience participation following for the picture had blossomed in the first place, or more importantly – what was making the movie's cult following catch on in some cities, but not at all in others. So they were holding off on ordering any new prints. 

Which meant there was no telling how long we might have to wait. It does seem funny now to recall how unconvinced the Fox folks were that they actually had something that was new in the cinema world. Old strategies just didn't necessarily apply to "Rocky Horror."

After the distributor's representative got off the line, Alan, Lenny and I continued our telephone conversation. That led us to agreeing to a plan: We would offer to front the cost of a new 35mm print, some $5,000, as I remember it, which would stand as an advance against standard film rental fees. There were two provisos to the deal: 1. The Biograph would continue hold the exclusive rights to exhibit “Rocky Horror” in the Richmond market as long as we held onto that print. 2. That I would promote it as I saw fit, creating my own materials, rather than relying on Fox's standard press kit stuff. That was something I was accustomed to doing when situations called for it.

When we called the Fox distributor's office back, it went smoothly. With nothing to lose, they went for the deal. After all, if anything, the Biograph had earned a reputation for being a good venue for midnight shows. 

Next, for research, I questioned a couple of publicity people at Fox a little more about how it had been promoted in various situations. Curiously, there was no consensus about what had prompted the successes or failures. 

However, Fox had encouraged a few exhibitors to call for attendees who would recite certain lines and dance in the aisles at set times, etc. But when they tried to prime the pump in that way, it generally hadn't worked.

After viewing the film, I decided it would probably be better not to over-promote it. That way there would be less risk of drawing the sort of general audience which might include too many unsatisfied customers – folks who might leave the theater bad-mouthing it. Instead, my strategy called for getting the attention of the kids who had already been seeing “Rocky Horror” screenings at the Waverly or the Key. I also wanted to alert a few of the most determined of local taste-makers -- the sort who must see anything edgy first, so they can opine about it.

Accordingly, at WGOE's studio I produced a radio commercial using about 20 seconds of the film's signature song, “Time Warp.” The only ad copy came at the very end with a tag line. The listener heard my voice say, “Get in the act … midnight at the Biograph.” There was no explanation of what the music was, or what the 30-second spot was even about. 

At that time, the soundtrack for “Rocky Horror” still hadn't become all that well known. The hook was that the spot didn't offer listeners as much information as they expected, which hopefully added somewhat to its underground allure. The same less-is-more approach was used in the handbill. 

The Floor Show

“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” opened in Richmond on June 30, 1978. It drew a decent crowd, but it wasn't a sell-out. Some of those who attended did occasionally call out wisecrack lines. Most did not. As I recall, a handful of people dressed up in costumes. As hoped, over the next few weeks a following for “Rocky Horror” steadily grew, as did the audience participation.

At the center of that following was a troupe that became the regulars who turned midnight screenings into performance-art adventures. John Porter, a VCU theater major, emerged as the leader of that group; they called themselves the Floor Show. Outfitted in his Frank-N-Furter get-up, Porter missed few, if any, midnight screenings for the next couple of years.

Plenty of crazy things happened in dealing with the “Rocky Horror” audience twice a week. There was the Saturday night an entire full house was thrown out, because some bare-chested roughnecks ran amuck. They were hosing down the crowd, using our fire extinguishers. Fights were underway. So after a stern warning from me to the crowd, to stop-or-else did no good, I pulled the plug. One by one, they all got their money back.

Interestingly, after that night we never had much trouble with violence to do with “Rocky Horror” again. From then on the Floor Show kids helped to monitor the situation, to make it uncool to go too far. Porter’s leadership was a key to keeping it loose and fun, but not out of control. For his part, John was given a lifetime pass to the Biograph.

There was no stranger episode than the night a man breathed his last, as he sat in the small auditorium (Theatre No. 2) watching “F.I.S.T” (1978). Yes, that lame Sylvester Stallone vehicle was hard to watch, but who knew it could be lethal?

Sitting upright in an aisle seat the dead man’s expressionless face offered no clues to his final thoughts. His eyes were open. He was about 30, which was my age at that time. 

The rescue squad guys jerked him out of his seat and threw him onto the floor. As jolts of electricity shot through the dead man’s body, down in Theater No. 1 “Rocky Horror” was on the Biograph’s larger screen delighting the audience. Walking back and forth between the two auditoriums, absorbing the bizarre juxtaposition of those two scenes in the same building, was a strange trip, to say the least.

A brief item about the death appeared in the newspaper. It said he had been in bad health. Don't remember his name.

Looking on the bright side, after six-and-a-half years of showing screwball comedies, French New Wave films, rock 'n' roll movies, film noirs, and so forth, the Biograph had earned the chance to have what any theater needs to become fully-fledged – a ghost.

Chasing Dignity

On one of those busy nights early in the run of “Rocky Horror a battle broke out in the middle of West Grace Street in front of the theater. Rocks, bottles and whatnot were flying back and forth between two factions of young men. Both squads consisted of four or five active participants.

As I later discovered, the fight was between members of a VCU fraternity and an Oregon Hill crew. To me, the most alarming angle of the incident was that it was unfolding a perilous 30 yards from the Cinemascopic, all-glass front of the Biograph.

The box office had just closed and the cashier was in the midst of count-up duties. At the same time a small group of friends was in the lobby. Some of them were my Biograph softball teammates. A few of us were playing a pinball machine. As the manager of the theater, I felt obliged to fend off the threat. 

Accordingly, I asked the cashier to call the police and I opened one of the twin exit doors, to step onto the sidewalk and yell at the kids -- in so many words I told them to scram. As an incentive I said the cops were already on the way. 

That was good enough for the frat-boy team. They scampered off.

Meanwhile, rather than pursue their enemies, the Oregon Hill gang simply switched over to aiming their missiles at me. A rock hit the curb. A tumbling bottle shattered on the sidewalk. That prompted me to duck back inside. A second or two later an incoming piece of red brick crashed through the door's lowest glass panel. 

It struck my right shin. That particular moment of this story stands out sharply in my memory. 

My friends and I took off after the guys attacking the theater. There were seven, maybe eight men in the posse that went after the scattering hooligans. However, my focus was totally on the guy who had plunked me. I chased him as he headed west. 

Suddenly hemmed in by three of us in a public parking lot at the intersection of Shafer and Grace, he faked one way, then cut to the other. When his traction gave way in the gravel paving he stumbled to regain his balance. That was when I tackled him by the legs. The others in his group got away.

With some help from my friends – two of them held his arms – we marched the brick-thrower back toward the theater. During that trek I suppose there was some conversation. Don't recall any of what was said, but something the captured culprit said as we passed Grace Place (an excellent vegetarian restaurant) provoked one guy in our group to punch him in the jaw without warning.

One of the officers in the assembling group of cops in front of the theater sarcastically complimented the puncher for his prisoner-escorting “technique.” Shortly thereafter the punchee was hauled off in the paddy wagon. Back in the lobby I told the puncher he had overreached in hitting the kid unnecessarily, especially while he was helpless.

Caught off-guard by my reaction, my softball teammate laughed. He disagreed, saying essentially that his summary punishment would likely be the only price the guy would ever pay for his assault. Another in the group quickly agreed with him. Others saw it my way, or said nothing.

Then we probably resumed the ongoing pinball game. And, it's quite likely I went across the lobby to the theater's refrigerator in a closet and pulled out enough cans of cold beer to say, “thank you” to each member of the posse. They had helped protect the Biograph from a menace. And, yes, it was satisfying to have at least caught the one who had just bloodied my shin.

It wasn’t long after that night I found myself poring over a 1931 essay by F. Scott Fitzgerald, “Echoes of the Jazz Age.” Here is the last paragraph of that evocative piece:

“…Now once more the belt is tight and we summon the proper expression of horror as we look back at our wasted youth. Sometimes, though, there is a ghostly rumble among the drums, an asthmatic whisper in the trombones that swings me back into the early twenties when we drank wood alcohol and every day in every way grew better and better, and there was a first abortive shortening of the skirts, and girls all looked alike in sweater dresses, and people you didn’t want to know said ‘Yes, we have no bananas,’ and it seemed only a question of a few years before the older people would step aside and let the world be run by those who saw things as they were — and it all seems rosy and romantic to us who were young then, because we will never feel quite so intensely about our surroundings any more.”

During that reading, seated at my desk in the theater's office, it hit me that the shattering of the Biograph's glass door had been the sound to accompany the hippie era ending. Its trends, causes and distinctive styles had arrived in the late-'60s. Soon it all would be seen as nostalgia. In some ways the hippie decade had been similar to the Roaring ’20s.

Moreover, the peace-loving, pot-smoking, anti-establishment elements of my generation hadn't changed the world all that much, at least not in enduring ways. Ending the Vietnam War and getting rid of Nixon just hadn't solved as many problems as our slogans had promised.

In the summer of '78, it was also time for me to admit to myself the neighborhood surrounding the Biograph was getting meaner. Which made little sense, even at the time, since it was adjacent to VCU's burgeoning academic campus. Still, for whatever reason the university didn't appear to be worried about that.  

A month later, in the General District Court I agreed to a proposal to drop the assault charge, provided the brick-thrower was convicted of a misdemeanor for breaking the glass, and that he would reimburse us for the cost of the repairs. A payment schedule was set up.

As we spoke several times after that day in court I came to see the 19-year-old “hooligan” wasn’t really such a bad guy. His payments were made on a timely basis. With his last payment he asked for the name of the man who’d punched him.

While withholding the name, I agreed with him that regardless of my friend's intentions his adrenaline-fueled punch had mostly been a cheap shot. With the money aspect of the debt paid, we shook hands.

Debt and Irony

About a year later, during a Wednesday matinee, the Biograph cashier, Gussie Armeniox, was counting a stack of one dollar bills when an opportunistic thief snatched them from her hands. Although I was only a few feet away, behind the candy counter in the lobby, my back was turned. When I looked around, it was alarming to see the robber bolting out the front door. Gussie's wide-eyed, frightened look was unforgettable. 

It surely boosted the intensity of the sense of violation. As I got to the sidewalk the thief was already a half-a-block away. Nevertheless, in spite of his foot speed it turned out he wasn't so good at avoiding capture. Instead of just running to the west -- to put plenty of distance between us -- he ducked between the buildings, trying to hide. He did it a couple of times, then, when I would find him and get close, he'd take off again.

During the chasing and searching I received some unexpected help from a total stranger. A young man slammed on his brakes and jumped out of his pickup truck. After that reinforcement it took less than five minutes to corner the thief in the men's room of a fast food restaurant. By then a policeman in a cruiser had showed up. 

Fortunately, that meant I didn't have to go into that men's room to drag the perpetrator out. The cops did it for me.

Of course, I thanked the volunteer and asked him why he’d stopped to help out. He told me he already knew I was the Biograph’s manager, because a buddy of his had pointed me out to him. His friend?

It was the same Oregon Hill street-fighter I had tackled a year before. My assistant thief-chaser said his friend told him the story about the broken glass door and the assault charge being dropped. Then he said I'd dealt fairly with him. Consequently, a favor was owed to me.

Before he got back in his truck, my collaborator said that in his neighborhood the guys tend to stick together. Thus, he had supported me in my time of need, because of his friend’s debt. I was grateful and flabbergasted.

It now seems to me the sort of obligation he felt and acted upon has been evaporating out of the culture for some time, maybe since the time of this chase scene. The thief turned out to be a repeat offender, so the judge gave him six months for stealing 37 dollar bills.

Remembering the worthy connection between those two chase scenes has become increasingly more satisfying over the years. No doubt, that’s partly because in my dealings with bad luck and other ordinary tests of character, too many times I’ve done nothing to brag about – even the wrong thing. 

Maybe in this two-part adventure I came close to getting it right. In essence, I think both chases had something to do with pursuing justice and preserving something. Dignity perhaps.

The Exploding Motorcycle

On Friday, March 1, 1980, with its 88th consecutive week, “Rocky Horror” established a new record for longevity in Richmond. It broke the record of 87 weeks, established by “The Sound of Music” (1965), during its first-run engagement at the Willow Lawn Theater.

To celebrate Porter and I dressed in tuxedos to stand before the full house. He held up a “Sound of Music” soundtrack album and I smashed it with a hammer. It went over quite well.

The record-breaking ceremony prior to the screening.

In a nice touch to underline the special night‘s theme, a couple of the regulars came dressed as Julie Andrews. The late Carole Kass, the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s sweetheart of a entertainment writer/movie critic, wrote up a nice feature on what was basically hokum.

That same night, Larry Rohr rode his motorcycle through the auditorium’s aisles at the point in the movie when Meat Loaf’s character in the film, Eddie, rides his motorcycle. Rohr’s careful but noisy rides happened only on a few special occasions, such as the record-breaking night. Fortunately, nothing bad ever happened.

A few weeks later, I had a dream that the motorcycle exploded. The nightmare scared me so much the motorcycle rides were discontinued. Anyway, that's what I told people about why we stopped. 

Yes, now it seems crazy as hell that I ever facilitated such risky shenanigans. Maybe I was somewhat carried away by the aforementioned wide-open permission that went along with the '70s. With no more motorcycle rides, various Floor Show members sometimes rode a tricycle up and down the aisles. The way members of that group adapted playfully to whatever was said or done in previous weeks was an integral aspect of the fun. They were like players in a story that had new chapters being written for it, on the fly, each weekend.

However, while “Rocky Horror” had an underground cachet in the first year, even the second, eventually its cool status began to go sour. That was especially so in the eyes of the staff and Biograph regulars who hung out there. The rice, toast and all sorts of other stuff that got tossed around had to be cleaned up each and every time by the grumbling janitors, who naturally grew to detest the movie. To keep the peace they got “Rocky Horror” bonuses — a few extra bucks for their weekend shifts.

Once into the winter of 1980/81 the turnout for the screenings of “Rocky Horror” began a gradual withering. By then many of the originals had stopped coming every weekend. Much of the audience seemed to be made up of sightseers from the suburbs. The fast crowd in the artsy, black leather jacket scene was ignoring it, although the movie was still doing enough business to justify holding onto that original print.

In the summer of 1982 “Rocky Horror” celebrated its fourth anniversary at the Biograph. That same summer, for Program No. 60, I booked a six-week festival offering 12 RKO double features.

The Biograph's record-setting midnight show run of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” ended on June 25, 1983. Although it had helped pay the rent, no one was happier to see that well-used 35mm print shipped out than those of us who had lived warped by the “Rocky Horror” experience for five whole years. 

*

Note: In the Biograph lobby I always got a kick out of listening to enthusiastic new film buffs tell me why the old movie he or she had just watched was still a favorite. 

Of course, in agreeing with them I was just doing my job. Anywhere, any time, stimulating a greater appreciation of good films, made in previous times, was an integral aspect of the manager's duties, and I've never gotten over it.

Speaking of time warps, here are the titles for that 1982 RKO fest, listed in the order in which they played: 

“Top Hat” (1935) and “Damsel in Distress” (1936); “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” (1939) and “The Informer” (1935); “King Kong” (1933) and “Mighty Joe Young” (1949); “Suspicion” (1941) and “They Live By Night” (1948); “Sylvia Scarlett” (1936) and “Mister Blandings Builds His Dream House” (1948); “Murder My Sweet” (1945) and “Macao” (1952); “The Mexican Spitfire” (1939) and “Room Service” (1938); “Journey Into Fear” (1942) and “This Land Is Mine” (1943); “The Thing” (1951) and “Cat People” (1942); “The Boy With Green Hair” (1948) and “Woman on the Beach” (1947); “Citizen Kane” (1941) and “Fort Apache” (1948); “The Curse of the Cat People” (1944) and “The Body Snatcher” (1945).


 --  All rights reserved by the writer, F.T. Rea. Photos by Ernie Brooks

– 30 –

Thursday, December 22, 2022

VCU coasts past Navy

Final Score:
VCU 74, Navy 52
Location: 
Siegel Center in Richmond 
Current Records: VCU 9-4, Navy 7-5

In a nutshell: In the first half Jalen DeLoach led the Rams to a seven-point lead with his 12-point effort. 
DeLoach finished the game with a career-high 18 points on 7-of-9 shooting, to go along with six rebounds, three assists, two blocks and two steals. Then Jamir Watkins erupted for 18 points, all in the second half. In total, Watkins hit 7-of-13 of his shots from the field, including a perfect 3-of-3 from the free throw line. 

One key to this rather easy victory was that VCU gave up only nine turnovers. That was just the second game this season with single-digit turnovers.

NOTES
(Info provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D.)

  • Early on, it looked like it would be smooth sailing for the Midshipmen, as Navy got out to a 11-0 run in the first 3:48 of the game. Then the Rams roared back with a 20-4 run over the course of 6:14, capped by back-to-back three-pointers by sophomore guard Jayden Nunn.
  • Once again, Ace Baldwin Jr. did a good job of dishing the ball out to his teammates, leading the team with eight assists.
  • Zeb Jackson, David Shriver, and Nick Kern added nine, eight, and seven points respectively to the Rams’ total. 
  • After the Midshipmen put up the first five points of the second half to draw within two, the Rams went on a 10-0 run for 3:08. Shriver got the ball rolling with a three-pointer. Then Watkins and DeLoach combined for the next seven Rams points.
  • VCU’s dominance inside was another important factor to its success, outscoring Navy in the paint 46-24. The home team also had a good night shooting the ball, connecting on 29-of-56 (52 percent) from the field compared to the visitors' 20-of-55 (36 percent).
  • Bench points: Rams 27. Midshipmen 14.  
  • Navy’s 52 points were the fewest scored by a VCU opponent this season. Tyler Nelson paced the Midshipmen effort with 17 points and eight rebounds.

BOX SCORE


UP NEXT

The Rams will begin their Atlantic 10 Conference play on Saturday, Dec. 31, when they will host the La Salle Explorers at 2 p.m. It will be broadcast on MASN and streamed on ESPN+.

-- 30 --

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Rams clobber Huskies: VCU 90, NIU 63

Final Score: VCU 90, Northern Illinois 63
Location: Siegel Center in Richmond
Current Records: VCU 8-4, Northern Illinois 3-8


In a nutshell: The Rams, who scored at will, pulled away early and coasted to victory before a grateful home crowd. The points parade was led by redshirt sophomore forward Jamir Watkins, who scored a career-high 22 points.
In all, eleven different Rams scored.

VCU led by 23 at halftime and its biggest second-half lead was 37 points. Although today's tilt didn't feature VCU's best defense in the second 20-minutes of play, well, it didn't exactly need to be the best. 

NOTES (Info provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D.

  • Watkins shot 8-of-12 from the field and a perfect 4-of-4 from the free throw line on the way to his new career-high of 22 points, topping his previous high of 15 against Western Carolina in 2020. Watkins also crashed the glass to the tune of seven rebounds.
  • Sophomore forward Jalen DeLoach scored 16 points, tying the career-high he set earlier this month at Temple. He also grabbed nine rebounds.
  • Senior forward David Shriver got his first start of the season in place of graduate student Brandon Johns Jr. (who was a late scratch due to a back injury). Shriver made the most of his turn in the starting five, notching a season-high 14 points and shooting 4-of-7 from the field, including 3-of-4 from beyond the arc. He sank three treys  in the game's first five minutes.
  • Junior forward Ace Baldwin Jr. was the fourth Ram in double figures with 10 points. Baldwin dished for eight assists.
  • Keshawn Williams and Zarique Nutter were bright spots on an otherwise dim night for Northern Illinois, scoring 16 and 11 points respectively for the visiting Huskies.
  • The Rams wasted no time taking control from the opening tip, taking a 9-2 lead in the first 1:17 of the game. Then the Rams poured it on with a 15-4 run over the next 4:19, which included three straight treys by Shriver, to stretch it out to an 18-point lead at 24-6 with 14:24 left on the first half clock.
  • VCU’s lead swelled to 26 with a 10-1 run over the course of 4:08 late in the first half. The Rams took a comfortable 49-26 lead into halftime.
  • VCU continued their strong play to start the second half, going on a 9-2 run through the first 2:04, putting the game well out of reach with a thirty-point cushion over the Huskies at 58-28. Northern Illinois never got closer than 25 points the rest of the way.
  • The Rams shot well on all fronts, hitting 53 percent (29-of 55) from the field, including, 44 percent (7-of-16) 3-point land. VCU also connected on 25-of-30 from the free throw line (83 percent).
  • The 90 points scored is the Rams’ highest output this season by 16 points, and their highest point total since their first round NIT victory over Princeton last season, when they also put up 90 points on the Tigers.
  • VCU never trailed in the game, leading for all but 29 seconds out of the 40 minutes.

QUOTES

  • “We had offensive success today. Consistent offensive success. That's more important than 90 points, we played the right way for most of the game. We executed the right way for most of the game. We made extra passes, I thought driving the ball today, we were playing off two feet, we weren’t out of control. We had a couple of turnovers but we didn’t have two, three, four in a row and got shots at the rim. We had 18 assists on 29 baskets because guys were making the right plays so that creates points” – Head Coach Mike Rhoades on the team’s offensive success.
  • “Seeing those first three go in is just a huge confidence booster. It got the momentum going just for the rest of the game. Just kept the foot on the pedal and just kept going.” – Shriver on starting the game strong .
  • “When we see shots go in, I think that's better for us on the defense and it gets us going. We had a lot of turnovers in the backcourt and with the shots going in, that's a big thing.” – Baldwin on the team seeing shots go in.

BOX SCORE

UP NEXT

The Rams will wrap up non-conference play on Wednesday, Dec. 21, when they play host to the Navy Midshipmen. The game will tip-off at 7 p.m., and it will be televised on MASN and streamed on ESPN+.

-- 30 --

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Rams second half surge tops Highlanders

Final Score:
VCU 70, Radford 62

Location: Siegel Center in Richmond

Current Records: VCU 7-4, Radford 6-5

In a nutshell: After playing a nonchalant first half that featured a mess of turnovers, VCU looked like a different team in the second stanza. 
Brandon Johns, Jalen DeLoach and Jamir Watkins played key roles in a 23-5 second-half run that established a working margin lead over Radford. 

In all, the sloppy Rams turned the ball over 25 times! VCU will not be a contender in the A-10 if the Rams don't fix their ballhandling problem. 

NOTES (Info provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D.)
● Brandon Johns was 6-of-9 from the floor and 6-of-7 from the free throw line to lead VCU.
● Sophomore forward Jalen Deloach notched 15 points, one shy of tying his career-high. He’s reached double figures in three straight games.
● Junior guard Ace Baldwin Jr. followed closely behind in his first game back from a wrist injury with 10 points and six assists help round out VCU’s offense.
● Redshirt-sophomore Jamir Watkins controlled the boards for VCU with a career-high 11 rebounds.
● The Rams used their strong defense to help propel them to victory. VCU held Radford to a season-worst 39 percent (22-of-57) shooting effort from the field.
● The Highlanders were led by Ken Giles who scored 13 points and Daquan Smith, who scored 11.
● VCU trailed by as many as eight points in the second half, at 40-32 with 15:10 remaining. But the Rams used a 23-5 blitz over a six-minute span to take command. DeLoach converted a go-ahead layup at the 9:52 mark, and Baldwin buried a pull-up 3-pointer on the ensuing possession to give the Rams a 49-45 edge with 9:20 remaining. Johns followed with four straight points to make it 53-45 with 7:20 showing.
● VCU led by as many as five points in the first half but Radford managed to take a 28-26 lead into intermission.
● VCU shot 49 percent (22-of-45) from the floor in the game, including 67 percent (12-of-18) in the second half.
● Radford cut the lead down to six points with 30 seconds remaining thanks to a Ken Giles 3-pointer but VCU managed to convert all four of its free throw opportunities down the stretch to shore up the victory.
QUOTES
"We just played harder than them the whole second half. We just wanted it more.” – Jalen DeLoach on VCU’s second-half play.

“Proud of our guys in the second half down the stretch. I just thought we played harder and tougher at the 10-minute mark. I think at one point, we had nine straight stops, so I’m really proud of our approach on the defensive end. If we didn’t have some bonehead fouls at the end, we probably would have kept them in the low fifties, but just thought a lot of different guys contributed and so I was really proud of our resolve, especially in the second half. Credit to Radford. They’re a good team, and this game is going to make us better. Happy we won the game, and we got a lot of work to do. Onward.” – VCU Head Coach Mike Rhoades
BOX SCORE

UP NEXT


Northern Illinois at VCU on Saturday, Dec. 17 at 4 p.m. That game will air on MASN and ESPN+.

-- 30 --

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Anxiety-wise, 2022 was an improvement

As December's crisp days grow shorter, once again it's the time of year for reflection and summing up: Like, what about the year that was? And, going into 2023, is the overall trend this country is riding headed toward improvement, or toward the opposite?

Well, in 20 years, maybe a historian would answer, "Hey, 2022 could have been worse."

And, my ghost would agree with that historian. Speaking of worse, 2017 gave us that infamous praising of fascists quote, "very fine people on both sides." Or, look at 2020, with its monstrous pandemic and its launching of the Big Lie. Yes, some years are worse than others. 

In spite of its many vexing troubles, I'm saying that anxiety-wise, 2022 was quite an improvement over any of Donald Trump's four years in the White House. And, because I believe the corner has been turned, when it comes to Trumpism's momentum, my thinking is that in 2023 we will see the process of recovering from the damage Trump has done to the USA to continue to build. 

Flashback: During Trump's presidency dread routinely overshadowed hope. We watched helplessly, as Trump took his whims to the bully pulpit. He relished encouraging the most angry and soulless of his followers to terrorize people they viewed as his enemies. 

As 2022 is winding down, with the mid-term results in the rearview mirror, Trump's image as a big-ass winner is losing its luster. There's no way that Trump being seen as history's sorest loser is going to help with the Trumpist cult's recruitment in 2023. The damning January 6th Committee report will soon drop and that won't be a good day at Mar-a-Lago.

Of course, I'm not saying our troubles with Trump are over. Hardly that. However, I am saying we've turned the corner. 

In 2023, I expect we're going see a steady stream of elected Republicans plotting a new course, to push away from the most bizarre stuff, such as Trump calling for the "termination" of inconvenient parts of the Constitution. 

Still, it's no surprise to me that all-in MAGA Republicans want to ignore the Constitution. Of course they do. When did they ever respect the Constitutional rights of people they don't like? 

Nonetheless, at happy hour in the back booth of the downtown pub, in the locker room at the tennis club, standing around the pool table in the basement, self-interested conservatives who want a future in politics are going to be talking about letting go of the crazy. 

We, the people who still believe in democracy, can win this battle with these new Nazis. America has had its confrontations with their ilk before. In the 1920s there was a nasty resurgence of  KKK activities. Take a look at this haunting video of a Nazi rally at Madison Square Garden in 1939

Yikes!

There was a significant fascist presence in the USA in the last years of the Depression. Then came the post-war Red Scare years, with McCarthyism and blacklisting, etc. Eventually, the steam ran out of such shameful detours from the march toward progress. 

With 2022 nearly finished, it looks to me like 2023 will be a good year for some prominent homegrown fascist plotters to face the music. 

-- 30 --

Sunday, December 11, 2022

VCU stiff-arms Howard's second-half rallies

Final Score: VCU 70, Howard 60

Location: The Siegel Center in Richmond

Current Records: VCU 6-4, Howard 4-8

In a nutshell: Four Rams, led by graduate forward Brandon Johns with his 16 points, scored in double figures. Playing without star point guard Ace Baldwin (another wrist injury), VCU put together a 10-point halftime lead and then held off a series of second-half Howard rallies.
 The play of Johns, Jalen DeLoach and Josh Banks was particularly noteworthy.  

NOTES (Notes info provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D.)

  • Johns' 16 points came on 5-of-10 shooting from the field and he was a perfect 6-of-6 from the free throw line. Additionally, Johns grabbed seven rebounds and made three blocks, leading the team in both of those categories
  • Banks, a junior guard, had a career night, setting career-best marks in both points (11) and rebounds (5)
  • Sophomore forward Jalen DeLoach put on 11 points on 4-of-5 shooting, eight of which came in the first half. DeLoach left the game with a knee injury at about five minutes to go in the first half, but was able to come back to play 15 minutes in the second half
  • Senior forward David Shriver was the fourth Ram in double figures, scoring 10 points on 4-of-9 from the field, including 2-of-6 from beyond the arc
  • Howard had three double-figure scorers themselves, with Steve Settle III, Bryce Harris, and Jordan Wood scoring 18, 13, and 12 points, respectively 
  • Howard got the early lead with a 10-2 run in the first 4:02, but the Rams outscored the visiting Bison 39-21 for the rest of the opening half to take a 41-31 lead to the locker room
  • The Rams grew their lead to 12 before the Bison went on a 7-0 run over the course of three minutes to cut the margin to five at the under 16 media timeout
  • VCU responded with a 7-0 run of their run over 1:50 to swell the lead back to 10, at 57-47 with 10:06 left. The Rams kept Howard at arm’s length for the rest of the game, not allowing Howard to get any closer than five points. VCU and Howard scored 29 points apiece as the Rams maintained their 10-point halftime lead at the final buzzer
  • The bench players came up big for the Rams, outscoring Howard’s bench 23-10
  • The Rams improved to 21-2 against teams from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC), including two wins this season, defeating Morgan State earlier this season  

QUOTES


“Proud of our guys. We had some resolve there to finish the game off. I just thought we had more intensity and stuck more to the game plan then we have the last two games. Just proud of our guys. We had two really hard days of practice the last two days to get ready for this one and thought the guys responded the right way.” – VCU Head Coach Mike Rhoades

 

I think it's really important to start off the game with great intensity and great effort and really important to end the game with great intensity and great effort. If you don’t end the game well, how you going to win. So I think we were very disciplined tonight. We had a couple of fouls that we could’ve been more disciplined on. I think overall we have been working the past two days on defense and I think it's going to be more of an emphasis for us and I think we did pretty well with it tonight.” -- Brandon Johns Jr. on finishing off the game strong

BOX SCORE

 

UP NEXT


The Rams’ six-game homestand continues, when in-state rival Radford visits the Siegel Center on Wed., Dec. 13. Tip-off against the Highlanders is set for 7 p.m. The game will be broadcast live on MASN and streamed on ESPN+.


-- 30 --

Wednesday, December 07, 2022

Jacksonville outplays VCU at both ends of the floor

Final Score: Jacksonville 73,VCU 62

Location: Siegel Center in Richmond

Current records: Jacksonville 5-2. VCU 5-4. 

In a nutshell: Although the Rams made a good effort in the last five minutes, overall, their effort this time was lackluster. Based on his team's last two surprisingly weak performances, Coach Rhoades has his work cut out for him. The hopeful news is, in early December a lot of good teams play a couple of bad games when roles are still forming..

 

Notes info provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D. 


NOTES


      Brandon Johns tied a career-high with his 20-point performance. He shot 5-of-10 from the field and made 9-of-12 from the free-throw line

      Sophomore guard Jayden Nunn connected on 5-of-10 from the floor for the Black and Gold and scored 14 points

      In his first collegiate start, freshman forward Tobi Lawal added a career-high ten points and five boards for VCU

      VCU forced 13 turnovers, scoring 13 points off the mistakes and allowed just eight turnovers of their own. Junior guard Ace Baldwin led the Rams with three steals as the team totaled nine.

      Aside from Nolan’s 20 points and 8 assists, Jacksonville sought help from Mike Marsh’s 17 points and nine rebounds

      The Dolphins shot 50 percent (9-of-18) from the 3-point line, while VCU struggled from beyond the arc, misfiring on 23 of 28 attempts

      Jacksonville used a 7-0 run, ignited by a pair of Marsh buckets, to take a 43-36 lead with 16:23 remaining. The Dolphins never trailed again and led by as many as 16 at 64-48 with 4:32 remaining

      VCU rallied to within 64-58 with 2:37 left behind a 9-0 run that included seven Johns free throws. But on the ensuing possession, Nolan buried a 3-pointer from the deep left wing as the shot clock expired to push the Dolphins advantage back to 67-58 with 2:04 on the clock

      Jacksonville owned a 38-30 rebounding advantage

      The Dolphins shot 90 percent (18-of-20) from the free-throw line

 

QUOTES


VCU Head Coach Mike Rhoades: “Credit to Jacksonville. They came in here and took it to us. They created some really good opportunities, really gave themselves some confidence and put us on our heels. For most of the game, they just played harder than us. I thought late in the game, we played harder and had more success on both ends of the court. We've got work to do. I like this team, I know what we’re capable of, but I’ve got to do a better job with these guys, and we’re going to have some heart-to-hearts and get to work.” 

 

Brandon Johns Jr. on the last few minutes of the game: “Yeah, that was a spark of energy that we should have had from the beginning of the game. Unfortunately, it was too late. We need to do that all game. We need to start doing it from the jump.” 


BOX SCORE

 

UP NEXT


The Rams play their second game of a six-game homestand of the season in a match-up against Howard on Sunday, Dec. 11 at 7 p.m. The game will be streamed on MASN and ESPN+

Monday, December 05, 2022

Baldwin named A-10 Player of the Week

The following information was provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D.:

Ace Baldwin Jr’s triumphant return to the VCU lineup continues to generate excitement. Baldwin, a junior point guard, was named Atlantic 10 Conference Player of the Week, the league announced Monday. It’s the first weekly honor for Baldwin, who was an Atlantic 10 Preseason First Team pick prior to this season.

The 6-foot-1 Baltimore native averaged 22.0 points, 6.5 assists and 3.0 steals, while shooting .579 (11-of-19) from the field, including 5-of-6 from 3-point range, in a pair of games. He also connected on 17-of-19 free throws and recorded an assist-to-turnover ratio of 3.3-to-1.

 

Baldwin returned from right wrist surgery on Nov. 30 and erupted for a career-high 28 points in a 70-65 victory over Vanderbilt. He followed up with 16 points and nine assists Dec. 3 at Temple.

 

This season, Baldwin is averaging a team-high 17.0 points, 6.8 assists and 4.0 steals per game, while shooting .500 (18-of-36) from the floor.

 

VCU and Baldwin will return to action on Wednesday, Dec. 7 when they host Jacksonville at the Siegel Center. Tip-off is scheduled for 7 p.m. on MASN. 


-- 30 --



Saturday, December 03, 2022

VCU's defense missing in action: Temple 83, VCU 73

Final score: Temple 83, VCU 73

Location: Liacouras Center in Philadelphia

Current records: Temple 5-4. VCU 5-3

In a nutshell: Junior point guard Ace Baldwin and sophomore forward Jalen DeLoach provided 16 points each for VCU. Meanwhile, the Owls' two starting guards outscored them; Battle 27 points and Dunn 17 points. In addition, Temple scored four more points in the paint and its bench outscored VCU's by eight points. Moreover, the Rams defense was a step slow the whole game.

NOTES


·      Baldwin shot 4-of-5 from the line and 7-of-7 from the line for VCU. He added nine assists and four steals

·      DeLoach’s 16 points were a career-high, and he scored 11 of them in the second half alone. He added six rebounds and a pair of blocked shots.

·      Sophomores Jamir Watkins and Jayden Nunn also provided 14 points apiece for the Rams.

·      Battle scored 15 of his 27 after the break to help hold off VCU. He connected on 7-of-19 from the field, including 4-of-10 from 3-point range. He hit all nine of his free throw attempts. Damian Dunn added 17 points for the Owls. 

·      Temple shot 50 percent (27-of-54) from the floor in the game and converted 22-of-27 free throw attempts.

·      VCU committed 18 turnovers, which led to 17 Temple points. VCU forced 14 Temple turnovers, but just four in the second half.

·      The Owls outrebounded the Rams 30-28 overall, including 18-11 in the first half as they built a 37-33 lead.

·      VCU pulled within 55-54 on a Watkins corner 3-pointer with 12:03 left, but Temple responded with a 10-0 run that included a Battle 3-pointer to extent its lead to 65-54 with 7:30 remaining and eventually led by as many as 16 points.

·      Temple built an 18-7 lead in the first, but VCU chipped away with 12 first-half points by Baldwin, who converted a four-point play at the 1:16 mark to pull the Rams within 35-33.

·      This was the third all-time meeting between these two schools. Temple leads the series 2-1

·      VCU saw four players score in double figures for the first time this season.

·      The Rams shot a season-high 49 percent (25-of-51) from the field, including 50 percent (7-of-14) from 3-point range.

 

BOX SCORE


NEXT UP


VCU will host Jacksonville on Wednesday, Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. at the Stuart C. Siegel Center. That game will be broadcast on MASN and ESPN+. 


-- Notes info provided by Chris Kowalczyk, VCU Assistant A.D.