» Rhode Island Rams
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A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: Late Surge Helps Rhode Island Edge Duquesne, 73-71

March 1, 2009 by Josh Taylor | A10CollegeHoops
PITTSBURGH, PA. — If there was ever any doubt about Aaron Jackson’s legitimacy as an elite college basketball player, perhaps one of his best efforts to remove it came over the weekend against Rhode Island. Jackson led all scorers with 24 points and added seven rebounds, five assists and four steals in a heroic effort that fell just short in the final seconds of a 73-71 loss.
On a Sunday afternoon where Duquesne honored their starting point guard, along with teammate Phillip Fayne for Senior Day at the A.J. Palumbo Center, Jackson helped get the Dukes started early with a back-door bounce pass to freshman Melquan Bolding for a slam dunk just 36 seconds into the game to put them on the board. From that point on, it was understood that it was going to be one of those days where the crowd was in for a good show.
After two early three-pointers by Jimmy Baron helped give Rhode Island a 10-4 lead, Jackson helped lead a string of three consecutive baskets with another baseline feed to Bolding for a reverse layup, and then a layup of his own to bring Duquesne within two. Bill Clark’s floater inside the paint with 16:16 remaining tied the game at 10.
Afterward came a battle between the two teams that saw four lead changes and five ties through the duration of the half. Keith Cothran’s dunk following a rebound off a Delroy James miss put Rhode Island ahead, 32-27, with 4:04 to go. Cothran scored 13 of his 20 points in the first half, shooting 6-of-9 from the floor.
But then Duquesne answered with a 7-0 run, capped off by a Damian Saunders three-pointer from the top of the circle to give them a 34-32 lead with 3:02 remaining. The 6-foot-7 sophomore forward was faced with the difficult task of defending 7-foot center Will Martell, but he held him to only four points, recording four blocked shots and three steals to go with his 12 points and six rebounds. Also, the Dukes held the scoring edge in the paint, 38-34, as Saunders and Clark combined for 33 points.
“Damian and Billy are playing as well as we could ask them to,” Everhart said of his two sophomore starting forwards, who have been forced to play against bigger opponents due to the Dukes’ lack of size in the front court. “Of course there are games when Damian can play better and there are days when I just want to choke Billy, but I have no problem with the effort they have given.”
After Rhode Island guard Marquis Jones’ layup helped tie the game for the Rams on their ensuing possession, Duquesne rattled off another string of three unanswered baskets to close out the half. The Dukes’ freshman led the way, as two B.J. Monteiro free throws and a pair of Bolding jumpers — the latter of which came from the right baseline with two seconds left — closed out the half with the home team ahead, 40-34.
In the second half, Duquesne worked quickly to build on their lead as Bolding hit a three pointer at about two minutes in to put the Dukes ahead, 45-38. He shot 6-for-8 from the floor, including 2-for-3 from behind the arc for 16 points, along with six rebounds.
Rhode Island quickly responded with a layup by Jones and another three-pointer from Baron – he made four of his eight attempts behind the arc – to pull the Rams within two. But Bolding struck again with his second three pointer, Saunders added another from the left corner, and Duquesne was back up by six at 15:54.
Over the next two and a half minutes, Rhode Island went on a 15-3 run, including five points by Baron, six by Kahiem Seawright, and a steal by Jones for a layup that had the Rams ahead, 60-54 with 11:33 to go. Baron, a former prep school teammate of Jackson’s, finished with 14 points, and Seawright scored 24, with 17 coming in the second half.
Duquesne began to chip away at the lead, with Jackson leading the charge. He scored 16 of the Dukes’ final 20 points, and his jumper with 2:01 remaining tied the game at 66. Two free throws by Seawright moments later put Rhode Island ahead by two.
But it was James — the younger brother of former Duquesne forward and season blocked shot record holder Shawn James — that delivered what Everhart called, “the biggest shot of the game.” His driving, left-handed hook shot off the glass with 1:11 remaining put the Rams up, 70-66, seemingly putting the game out of reach.
However, Jackson and his mates refused to concede, as he forced a steal off Baron and scored on a layup with 36 seconds to go to pull back within two. Seawright responded with a power move inside for a slam and a four-point Rams’ lead that became five when Cothran converted one of two free throw attempts.
Jackson then let the ensuing inbound pass bounce to half court before picking it up, pulling up at the top of the key and draining a three-pointer to cut the deficit to two with only six seconds to go. Seawright then missed the first of a one-and-one bonus free throw attempt, rebounded by Saunders and giving Duquesne a chance to tie the game or win it with five seconds left.
“I was thinking, this is our chance to win the game,” Jackson said.
Jones, with two Rams’ team fouls to give, made a heady veteran move and fouled immediately to force Duquesne to inbound from the far end of the court with three seconds left. Then, on the ensuing inbound play, he fouled again to force another inbound with 1.5 seconds to go.
Jackson got the inbound pass and got in position to shoot the potential game-winner from the top of the circle, but his three-point attempt fell short, and so did Duquesne’s comeback hopes.
“We tried to run a back-door screen play for Damian or [Jason] Duty,” Everhart explained, “but they guarded it pretty well and Aaron cut in between them. If we would’ve had another timeout, we probably would’ve used it and tried to do something else.”
Trailing Temple by one game in the A-10 standings, Duquesne has a meeting Wednesday against St. Louis in their home finale and a March 7 meeting with Dayton, needing to likely win both games in order to finish in fourth place and secure a first-round bye in the conference tournament.
“We tried to get the win today, but we didn’t, so we have to look towards the next game,” Jackson said. “We want to win these last two games and get that bye, so we’re going to get to practicing to get there.”
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A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: URI decimates Dayton’s defense 93-91 in OT

February 25, 2009 by Chris Frechette | A10CollegeHoops
KINGSTON, RI – URI was pretty in pink tonight at the annual “pink out” game as they defeated Dayton 93-91 in overtime on a last second driving layup by point guard Marquis Jones as time expired.
After Dayton shooting guard Marcus Johnson tied the game at 91-91 on a 3 pointer with Rhody guard Jimmy Baron in his face with 12 seconds left, Jones brought the ball upcourt, worked off of a pick from forward Kahiem Seawright, drove the lane and put up a layup with his back to the basket that rattled around the rim and fell through as the buzzer went off sending the 7,218 Rhode Island fans into a frenzy.
“I got a screen from Kahiem and what happened, happened,” Jones said. “I was trying to get fouled as I went up (for the shot)”. The overtime win puts the Rams’ record at 3-1 in overtime games this year, 12-1 at home, and brings their overall record to 21-8, 10-4 in the A-10 which is good for third place in the conference.
Kahiem Seawright puts the last play of the game in different perspective. “I wanted the last shot so bad. We did a pick and roll, they switched, I rolled and I had a little guy on me and I looked at him like you better give me the ball,” he said. “Marquis made a move and I was still looking at him saying you better give me the ball, and he made the shot. So he didn’t have to give me the ball.”
Rhode Island was led by a balanced scoring attack where five players reached double figures. Jimmy Baron, Kahiem Seawright, and Keith Cothran all had 19 points, while Delroy James chipped in 18 points and Marquis Jones added 13 points.
URI was on fire in the first half, shooting 17-29 from the floor (59%), and 8-11 from three point range (73%). The Rams finished the last minute of the first half with a 7-0 run on two free throws from Delroy James, a three pointer from Jimmy Baron, and Delroy James dunk off of a steal from Marquis Jones which gave the Rams a 52-44 halftime lead. URI’s 52 halftime points was just 7 shy of the 59 points per game the Flyers average on defense.
“Our defense was just awful in the first half,” Dayton coach Brian Gregory said. “With that being said, they’re (URI) the most efficient offensive team in the league.” The Flyers tightened up their defense in the second half and allowed only half the points they allowed in the first half (26). Led by a game high 21 points from Marcus Johnson, Dayton (23-5, 9-4 A-10) clawed back into the game to force overtime on a layup by point guard London Warren (6 points, 4 assists, and 3 steals).
“You saw a great indication on how good the (A-10) league is,” Gregory said. “You saw a team with 21 wins and a team with 23 wins, and you saw why (they both have that many wins)”. Gregory added, “You lose on the road in this league and you don’t have to apologize to anybody, and I don’t apologize for our effort tonight”.
“This is the greatest moment I’ve had at URI,” said Jimmy Baron. “We didn’t win these types of games last year, or early this year. We’re all on the same page now, setting ourselves up for success”.
Coach Baron agreed that URI’s recent success has to be attributed to its senior leadership. “The senior leadership has been tremendous,” he said. “I couldn’t be more proud of our kids, they played with great tenacity”.
Jimmy Baron was also named to the second team Academic All-American team by ESPN the Magazine.
The University of Rhode Island community raised over $19,000 dollars for the Gloria Gemma Breast Cancer Resource Foundation with their annual “Pink Out” game.
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Baron leads Rhode Island past Fordham

February 21, 2009 | AP Press
NEW YORK, NY – Jimmy Baron scored 19 of his 29 points in the first half and Rhode Island handed Fordham its sixth straight loss, 77-58 on Saturday.
Kahiem Seawright added 19 points for Rhode Island (20-8, 9-4 Atlantic 10) in the matchup of teams nicknamed Rams, while Delroy James had 11 points and nine rebounds.
Mike Moore had 19 of his 28 points in the second half for Fordham (3-21, 1-11), which has lost 14 of its last 15. Freshman Jio Fontan had 19 points for Fordham.
Baron had two of his six 3-pointers in a 10-0 run that have Rhode Island a 16-6 lead with 14:50 left in the first half. Rhode Island’s biggest lead of the half was 39-21 on two free throws by Ben Eaves with 3:44 to go. Rhode Island led 47-23 at halftime.
Baron was 10-for-12 from the field including 6-for-8 on 3s while Rhode Island finished 9-for-17 (52.9 percent) beyond the arc.
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A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: Cothran carries URI over UMass

February 18, 2009 by Chris Maza | A10CollegeHoops
AMHERST, Mass. – The UMass student section’s “blackout” couldn’t stop Keith Cothran from shooting lights out.
As the UMass fans donned all black in an attempt to throw the Rhode Island Rams off their game, Cothran found his with a career high in points and URI came back from a 12-point deficit to beat the Minutemen, 71-59, at the Mullins Center Wednesday night.
“He’s very aggressive and he attacks the bucket,” Rams head coach Jim Baron. “He’s a kid who just plays hard. He creates problems because he’s a big guard.”
Cothran came off the bench to score 26 points on 11-of-17 shooting.

Keith Cothran – Rhode Island Rams (G)
“I just knew I wanted to go out there and be aggressive,” Cothran said. “I watched film on them and they like to scramble (on defense), so I just wanted to hit the open shots and drive to the basket.”
It was an incredibly big effort on a night when usual team leaders Kahiem Seawright and Jimmy Baron disappeared. Baron, who came in averaging 16.6 points per game, was a non-factor throughout, scoring six points on 1-of-7 shooting. His lone field goal came in the final minutes of the first half. Seawright scored just four points.
Cothran and the rest of the Rams bench came through, however, combining for 43 points.
“It was tremendous. I think our younger guys stepped up,” Jim Baron said. “We had a lot of guys stepped up and in this league, you can’t do it with one or two guys. You need to have a number of guys being able to step up and our guys really showed it.”
UMass jumped out to a lead right off the bat with a pair of three points to start the game and didn’t give up the lead for the rest of the half. The Minutemen extended the lead to 12, the largest of the game, with a floater in the lane by Ricky Harris and a put back by Tyrell Lynch, putting the score at 31-19.
But the Rams charged back into it with a 9-0 run to end the half and close within three points at 31-28 going into the half.
Rhode Island finally took its first lead in the second half on Cothran’s three-pointer, but UMass posted an 8-0 run to jump back out front, 47-41.
The Rams finally took the lead for good with 2:28 remaining when Seawright hit two free throws to give Rhode Island a 59-57 lead. Those free throws sparked a 12-2 run to end the game.
“It’s getting a little redundant. We play really great basketball for 36 minutes and then almost figure out a way yourself to lose,” UMass head coach Derek Kellogg said.
After being held to 29 percent shooting in the first half, Rhode Island rebounded and shot at a 60 percent clip to outscore UMass, 43-28, in the second half. Meanwhile, UMass shot consistently poorly, hitting just 37 percent of its attempts.
The Minutemen got 15 points apiece from Harris and Chris Lowe. Lowe also dished five assists, leaving him one short of becoming UMass’ career leader. Tony Gaffney added 11 points and blocked six shots, but no one took charge for the Minutemen down the stretch.
“Until someone steps up and says, ‘I’m going to take this game over, I’m going to be tough, I’m not letting us lose,’ we’re going to continue to throw games away at the end and our season will end before we know it,” said Gaffney.
It was UMass’ second straight loss and sixth in its last eight games. At 9-15 and 4-7 in the Atlantic 10, the Minutemen drop into a tie with St. Bonaventure with one of the conference’s worst records.
The win was a huge boost for the Rams, who leapfrogged St. Joseph’ to take over 4th place in the standings with an 8-4 conference mark. They are 19-8 overall on the season.
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A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: URI holds on to 69-61 win over St. Louis
February 14, 2009 by Chris Frechette | A10CollegeHoops
KINGSTON, RI — Rhode Island started off their contest against St. Louis in much different fashion than their win over St. Bonaventure last Wednesday, but the outcome was still the same. “It’s real important to grab an early lead, especially after the St. Bonaventure game,” said URI Coach Jim Baron. That seemed to be in the minds of all URI players after they fell behind by 15 points at the half this past Wednesday against the Bonnies.
URI jumped out to a 10-2 lead in the first three minutes of the game scoring on its first four possessions highlighted by a Marquis Jones to Lamonte Ulmer alley oop.
Ulmer was huge in the Rams victory scoring a game high 18 points on 8 of 9 shooting from the field, which included four layups and four dunks, two of which were alley oops. “I feed off of the crowd, but not too much,” he said. “I feed off of my teammates. I’m thankful to the crowd, it’s a good feeling to do something productive and help the team. It just feels good.” Coach Baron was singing Ulmer’s praises, “Lamonte plays with such high energy, it’s good to have that kind of athletic ability.”
St. Louis (15-10, 6-5 A-10) battled back to cut the Rams lead to 14-13 on a Willie Reed (9 points, 6 rebounds) dunk at the 10:01 mark despite turning the ball over 7 times at that point. The turnover situation would be huge in this game as the Billikens would go on to turn the ball over 20 times to just 8 for URI. The Rams physical defense lead to 8 steals, but St. Louis just didn’t take very good care of the ball as they passed the ball out of bounds, twice when noone was in the area of the pass.
Coach Baron was pleased with his teams effort, “We knew it would be a hard fought game, they beat us last year and we knew how physical it would be,” he said. “We made some adjustments with our pressure, and we turned them over 20 times and took it to the basket, and we had 18 assists.”
The Rams took much better care of the ball, led by point guards Marquis Jones and Stevie Mejia, who combined for 10 assists and just 4 turnovers. “We battle every day in practice and pressure each other and make each other better,” Mejia said.
Rhode Island (18-8, 7-4 A-10) built up its biggest lead at 57-42 with 5:17 left in the game as Kahiem Seawright slipped under the defense for a layup on a pass from Mejia. Seawright posted a double-double with 12 points and 11 rebounds.
Even down by 15 points it didn’t feel as though the Billikens were out of the game. Rhode Island was only 8 of 18 from the free throw line at that point and if St. Louis was going to get back into the game, it may have been because of the Rams shaky foul shooting. But down the stretch URI was perfect from the charity stripe knocking down all 6 of its free throws, although one was called back for a lane violation on Ben Eaves. “We got to keep working on our free throw shooting and concentrate better,” said Coach Baron.
With the win, Rhode Island improved to 11-1 at home this season and it was URI’s first win over SLU since February 14, 2007.
It was another sweet Valentine’s Day for the Rams and the 5,214 fans in attendance at the Ryan Center.
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A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: URI’s second half comeback tops St. Bonaventure 87-80

February 11, 2009 by Chris Frechette | A10CollegeHoops
KINGSTON, RI – URI Coach Jim Baron said it best, “This was a tale of two half’s.” That statement was as on the mark as a Jimmy Baron three pointer. It appeared as if the teams traded uniforms in the locker room at halftime.
St. Bonaventure (12-11, 3-7 A-10) decimated the URI press en route to a 49-34 halftime lead. The Rams looked good in the first five minutes of the game building an 8-5 lead with 15:24 remaining when Will Martell, URI’s 7 foot center, picked up his second foul and sent him to the bench with four points. Not coincidentally St. Bonaventure went on a 9-2 run to make the score 14-10 Bonnies, with 13:53 left in the first half. After trading buckets for the next minute and a half, the Bonnies made another run. With 12:21 left in the half, St. Bonaventure went on an 8-0 run as Malcolm Eleby beat the Ram press for a layup, freshman Andrew Nicholson (19 points, 13 in the first half) chipped in his own layup and free throw as he was fouled by Delroy James, and Tyler Benson hit an open 3 pointer the next time down court with 11:08 left in the half to give the Bonnies a 27-18 lead.
St.Bonaventure Coach Mark Schmidt when asked on his teams first half, “I thought we played extremely well in the first half, we shot the ball, and shared the ball extremely well. We did well against their press and they backed off.” And back off they did as URI abandoned the press after a layup by Jonathan Hall on a pass from Chris Matthews at the 9:56 mark which put the Bonnies up 32-20.
St. Bonaventure wasn’t done yet, as they closed out the last 4:47 of the first half with an 11-2 run with point contributions from five different players to build their halftime advantage to 49-34.
No doubt the Rams were embarrassed being down by 15 at home at halftime. Said URI forward Kahiem Seawright, “Everybody saw the first half, it was disgusting, they got whatever they wanted, open threes, layups, they outrebounded us (19-11).”
URI guard Jimmy Baron put the first half in context, “We were embarrassed as a team on our first half play, a lot of mistakes, we were very emotional in the locker room, it was unacceptable, no excuses. Our defense was not good in the first half and I think that was the biggest adjustment we made.”
Jim Baron, on what was said in the locker room at halftime, “We got some upperclassmen, and I talked to them about taking responsibility, they (St. Bonaventure) out-worked us in the first half and took it to us. We came out flat and they took advantage of it. You got to be ready for each team you play.”
Whatever was said at halftime, it worked as the Rams went on a 16-5 run at the beginning of the first half cutting their deficit to 54-50 at the 15:40 mark. Ten of those points were scored by Jimmy Baron, who scored 23 of his game high 28 points in the second half despite playing with a sore back. “It (my back) hurts, it’s sore, but once you step out onto the court; you can’t think about it”, said Jimmy Baron.
“Jimmy had a great game, he hasn’t practiced in the last two days, he was in the zone,” said Coach Baron.
Baron’s biggest shot of the game may have come at the 8:53 mark when, down 64-61, Baron dribbled the ball about ten feet past the top of the key, stopped, and popped a 30 foot three pointer to tie the game at 64-64.
“We knew he could shoot it from the CVS logo,” Schmidt said, referring to the CVS logo near midcourt on the Ryan Center floor, “he hit some tough shots and if you give him some easy ones he gets his rhythm.”
Asked about how he felt when he took that shot, Baron replied, “When you feel it, I can’t explain it, it just happens and when you’re at home, you spot up and let it go, you don’t think about it.”
And Jimmy Baron was feeling it, he hit a fadeaway three pointer to break a 66-66 tie and after a Delroy James steal the Rams regrouped and found Baron again for a three pointer to give Rhode Island (17-8, 6-4 A-10) a 72-68 lead. James made another steal at midcourt and finished unabated to the hoop with a thunderous dunk which brought the 4,211 in attendance at the Ryan Center to its feet as the Bonnies called a timeout, down 74-68 with 2:39 left to play.
The closest the Bonnies would get was 85-80 after a three pointer by Tyler Benson, but with just 20 seconds left in the contest, it was too little too late.
Schmidt said, “It’s a disappointing loss as well as we played in the first half. Ask any coach, the first five minutes of each half are critical. We turned the ball over 12 times in second half, it’s hard to beat anybody.”
The turnover situation (St. Bonaventure 18, URI 10) was the difference in the game, the Bonnies shot the ball well (48% for the game compared to 46% for URI). The difference was the Rams scored 24 points off of turnovers compared to 11 for St. Bonaventure.
Coach Baron was visually pleased with his teams second half performance, “It’s a tremendously positive sign. The comeback. I’m real proud of how we fought back, this is an excellent win. We forced turnovers and attacked the bucket in second half. Our long term goal is to win the (Atlantic 10), but we want to get better too, each and every game, and I think we got better in the second half.”
That you did Coach Baron. That you did.
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Temple snaps Rams win streak

February 8, 2009 | AP Press
PHILADELPHIA, PA – Lavoy Allen scored a career-high 23 points and grabbed 13 rebounds in leading Temple to a 68-62 victory over Rhode Island on Sunday.
Dionte Christmas added 19 points and Craig Williams 12 for Temple (13-9, 5-3 Atlantic 10), which hit on 26 of 55 shots.
Keith Cothran had 16 points for Rhode Island (16-8, 5-4), while Jimmy Baron added 13.
The Owls led 48-30 five minutes into the second half, but Cothran helped rally the Rams to within 64-57 with 3:17 left to play. Rhode Island closed to 66-60 on a 3-point shot by Lamonte Ulmer with 1:36 to go, but Christmas hit two free throws at 0:19 to end the threat.
Baron, hampered by a sore back, played only 26 minutes, but connected on 5 of 6 shots in the game.
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A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: URI Edges Out Charlotte in Final Seconds, 71-64

Charlie Coley's electrifying dunks were not enough.
February 5, 2009 by Jordan Keyser | A10CollegeHoops
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – With their postseason hopes possibly hanging in the balance, The Rhode Island Rams pulled together late and toppled the Charlotte 49ers, 71-64.
The Rams (16-7, 5-3 A-10) came into the game with an RPI ranking of 63: right on the cusp of being a bubble team. Despite trailing early and often, the Rams rallied behind star Jimmy Baron, who scored all of his 19 points in the second half. Despite controlling the tempo for most of the game, Charlotte (7-14, 1-6 A-10) simply could not stop Baron when it mattered the most.
Rhode Island head coach Jim Baron couldn’t agree more.
“Jimmy really did a great job in the 2nd half of attacking the bucket. He kept moving off screens and really stepped up. I’m really proud.” Coach Baron said of his son’s performance.
49er’s head coach Bobby Lutz sang his praises as well.
“Baron really stepped it up in the 2nd half. I thought we played him very well defensively, but he hit the big shots. The credit goes to him.”
The 49ers lead by as much as 11 late in the first half, but an 8-0 run by the Rams to close out the half stopped the bleeding.
“After (the 8-0 run) I thought we were in great shape,” said Coach Baron.
The Rams came out of the locker room firing early and silenced the crowd. A rim-rattling, 2-handed tomahawk dunk by Charlotte’s Charlie Coley quickly changed that. Despite adding several other jams that energized the home crowd throughout the second half, the biggest play Coley was involved in was a possible no-call on a dunk attempt with under a minute to go.
“I definitely felt like it was a foul; I definitely felt a push in the back, but that’s how it goes,” said Coley. “(The game) was really physical. A lot of trash talking and scrapping.”
One of Coley’s other electrifying dunks was an alley-oop from Harris that brought the Niners within 1-point, with only 2 minutes left to play. But like all big-time players do, Baron stepped up in crunch time and stole a lazy pass for an easy lay-up, which put the Rams up for good. He added a runner down the lane only seconds later, which proved to be the final dagger.
DiJuan Harris played all 40 minutes and netted his second straight double-double for the 49ers, with 10 points and 10 assists. It was his third double-double of the season.
Coley finished with 13 points and 7 boards in the losing effort, while Lamont Mack contributed 17 points and 7 boards, nearly identically matching his averages for A-10 play (17.8 ppg 7.0 rpg).
Kahiem Seawright’s 14 points and 9 rebounds complimented Baron’s 19 second-half points for the Rams.
URI heads to Philadelphia on Sunday to face Temple and possible A-10 POY candidate Dionte Christmas. Charlotte faces Dayton and Chris “Top Flight” Wright on Sunday at home.
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Seawright, James lead Rams past La Salle in OT

January 31, 2009 | AP Press
KINGSTON, R.I. — Kahiem Seawright had 25 points and eight rebounds, while Delroy James added 22 points to pace Rhode Island to a 98-88 overtime win over La Salle on Saturday.
Lamonte Ulmer finished with 19 points for Rhode Island. The Explorers were led by Rodney Green who hit 7 of 15 from the field for 22 points and five assists. Ruben Guillandeaux chipped in with 15 for La Salle.
Rhode Island (15-7, 4-3 Atlantic 10) led 46-35 at halftime.
La Salle’s (12-8, 3-3 A-10) Kimmani Barrett evened the score at 80-80 and sent the game into an extra session when he knocked down a three point shot with 22 seconds remaining in regulation. The Explorers went on a 13-2 run in a span of 2:44 to tie the game in regulation.
The Explorers shot 56.1 percent from the floor to the Rams 55.6 percent.
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Seawright leads Rhode Island past Temple

January 28, 2009 | AP Press
KINGSTON, R.I. — Kahiem Seawright scored 17 points to lead Rhode Island to a 67-59 victory over Temple on Wednesday night.
It was the first time this season Rhode Island (14-7, 3-3 Atlantic 10) won while scoring fewer than 70 points.
Temple’s Dionte Christmas led all scorers with 27 points, but scored just five in the final nine minutes.
Temple (11-8, 3-2 A-10) managed to slow the fast-paced Rhode Island offense, holding the Rams to four fast-break points, but the Rams executed well in the half-court, connecting on 51 percent of their shots, 26-for-51.
Point guard Marquis Jones directed an efficient offense, doling out six assists and turning the ball over once. He scored nine points and Jimmy Baron added 13. URI held Temple to one field goal and six points in the final nine minutes of play.
Ryan Brooks scored 12 points for the Owls.















