Ben Braun: An Uncertain Future at Rice

Posted by Nate Kotisso on December 23rd, 2012

When Ben Braun was hired to be the head coach at Rice University in 2008, it looked like a home run hire. For Rice’s standards anyway. Here was a guy who did a great job with Eastern Michigan, taking a five-win team in year one of his tenure to an NCAA Tournament appearance two years later and then a Sweet Sixteen two years after that. He took the California job in 1996 and went on to four more Tournaments in his first six years in the Bay Area. He was Mr. Fix It. But walking into Tudor Fieldhouse last night was like walking into the old Autry Court. It was the same school that hasn’t been to the NCAAs since 1970. It was still the place where Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winners, not former athletes, get more attention even in an athletic facility. It was still the place where visiting team’s fans outnumbered Owls’ diehards. It had the same feel of a program stuck between neutral and reverse, the worst feeling a program can have.

Ben Braun has had some trouble getting Rice basketball off the ground. (Houston Chronicle)

Ben Braun has had some trouble getting Rice basketball off the ground. (Houston Chronicle)

But then Mr. Fix It was methodically at it again.  The Owls finished last season 19-16 and had a solid core returning to make a run at some kind of postseason action with second team all-CUSA forward Arsalan Kazemi along with Tamir Jackson, Dylan Ennis, Ahmad Ibrahim and Omar Oraby. Everything was going according to plan. Or so it seemed.

Then a May article in the Houston Chronicle announced that Rice assistant Marco Mocros, an integral part of the recruitment of Kazemi and Oraby, would not return to the staff and unfortunately set off a dangerous domino effect. Ibrahim was the first who decided to leave the program to play basketball overseas. Ennis transferred to Villanova, Oraby left for Southern Cal and Kazemi alighted to Oregon. CBSSports.com then reported that the transfers of Kazemi and Oraby were both due to racial discrimination by Rice athletic director Rick Greenspan. The AD and Braun vehemently denied those dangerous accusations (which can put a black eye on the program for years) but as far as this season was concerned, they were already cooked. All the hard work Braun had put in for four years at Rice was gone in a matter of  months.

Last night versus TCU, the Horned Frogs jumped out early on the 3-7 Owls and had built a 41-23 lead only 1:26 into the second half. Missouri City native Garlon Green was on his way to a career night in front of his hometown fans. Knowing all the difficulties he’s gone through during the last seven months of 2012 (and the whole game up to that point), I kept a close eye on Braun’s sideline demeanor in the second half. He was clapping after every Rice rebound or forced turnover. There was still some fight in him and he made it clear to his ragtag bunch in the small arena that they must continue to battle on every possession. And so, in classic Ben Braun fashion, the Owls orchestrated a slow, methodical run in the second half to get within 15, then eight, four, and one.

Nine seconds left in the game. Rice ball. Everyone in the building knew that Tamir Jackson — who led Rice in scoring with 25 points — was taking the final shot. With one second left, Jackson heaved an off-balanced three-pointer for the win that missed everything but the floor as the final buzzer sounded. Yeah the Owls lost but it taught me something about Ben Braun. The guy doesn’t give up. Despite last night’s close loss, is his job in serious jeopardy? Yes. Are the Owls probably destined for falling near the bottom of C-USA? Yes, but who wouldn’t want to play for a coach who meets adversity unafraid and head-on? He is going to give it his all until he’s asked to do otherwise.

Hopefully that’s not anytime soon because I’d like to see him finish what he started at Rice.

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One response to “Ben Braun: An Uncertain Future at Rice”

  1. […] – A great-read on Rice head coach Ben Braun and the uncertain future he faces due to the Owls’ struggles. (Rush The Court) […]

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