Down 10 points to then-No. 3 North Carolina with less than 30 seconds to play, former Boston College menâs basketball guard Tyrese Rice couldnât understand why fans at Conte Forum were giving him a standing ovation. BCâwho was ahead by 14 points at halftimeâwas moments away from losing decisively to a championship contender in what had been a rather uneventful 2007â08 season prior to this matchup.
âIâm not even really understanding exactly why everybody is literally standing up and clapping or whatever, because I was just so in the moment,â Rice, BC â09, said.
The 6-foot-1 junior guard, however, had just turned in a performance nearly unparalleled in BC history, leaving the audience in Conte Forumâincluding Hall of Fame North Carolina coach Roy Williamsâstunned.
Rice finished the game with 46 points, tied for the second-highest single-game total by an individual player in BC history, and the highest total since 1964.
âIt was a little bit of an out-of-body experience for me, to be honest with you,â Rice said.
But even as Rice hit shot after shotâ23 straight, to be exactâhe didnât blink twice. For Rice, March 1, 2008 was just another Saturday.
Rice has reacted to both the highs and lows in his life with a certain steadinessâwhether that be notching a historic performance or learning that his best friend’s sister was suddenly dying from cancer.
Or finding out that his high school coach Randy Cave died before Riceâs first nationally televised college game.
Or facing the fact that two of his friends were murdered a week later.
Forty-six points against National Player of the Year Tyler Hansbrough was no sweat for Rice.
âI wasn’t one to complain about the situation I was in,â Rice said.
A Black athlete at a predominantly white institution, Rice said racial issues werenât at the forefront of his experience at BC.
âWe were aware of what was going on at a lot of these schools, but we were so trained in our minds to ignore it and just kind of, you know, figure your way out, you know, all the way through it,â Rice said.
While Rice enjoyed his success on the court, he said he had to learn how to adapt as a Black student off the court.
âWe didnât have to change who we were, but we had to be cognizant of who we were, you know, on campus and who we showed ourselves to be while we were on campus,â Rice said.
Rice acknowledges that despite not thinking about the social issues that Black athletes faced during his playing days, the circumstances could have been different.
âNow the resources are different,â Rice said. âSo I think, you know, it would have helped us live. And it would have helped us as athletes as well.â
During his playing days at BC, basketball was always at the forefront for Rice. He said it was just in his nature.
âYou know what you’re there for,â Rice said.
Through four years on the Heights, Rice averaged 15.9 points per game and totaled 2,099 points, leading BC to the NCAA Tournament three timesâin 2006, 2007, and 2009.
Even with BCâs 13â13 record heading into the Eaglesâ 2008 contest against North Carolina, the matchup was highly anticipatedâNorth Carolina was a powerhouse, but Rice said his sole focus was winning the game.
âIt was sold out before the game even got ready to happen,â Rice said. âI mean, we were coming out for warmups and half the arena was full two and a half hours before the game.â
Though it’s possible that some BC fans had piled into Conte Forum to see a Tar Heels squad that would eventually reach the Final Four, the crowd very quickly began watching history unfold, courtesy of a BC player.
âThat place was rocking,â Josh Southern, Riceâs teammate and BC â13, said. âIt was jumping. When he started hitting all them threes and we were upâI mean, it was crazy in there.â
Before the game was even over, spectators believed Rice vaulted himself alongside other BC greats.
âIt was the kind of game that had people whispering at halftime about [Troy] Bellâs legendary career-high 42-point game against Iowa State in 2003,â Jessica Isner wrote in an article in The Heights in 2008.
Between the first halfâs 18:20 mark and 10:59 mark, Rice was the Eaglesâ lone scorerâa stretch that included four consecutive 3-pointers.
âIt was like throwing a rock in the ocean,â Southern said.
According to teammates and fans, no one could believe what they were watching.
âAnything he threw in didnât even touch the rim,â Mary Mangraviti, a fan at the game and BC â86, said. âIt was one of the more memorable athletic performances I have ever seenâand I’ve been going to events since I was in high school with Doug Flutie.â
Rice said he couldn’t believe it himself.
âI know Iâve ran off a good amount of points before in a stretch,â Rice said. âBut never 22 straight.â
Riceâs torrid run put BC ahead 54â40 at the half, and he had registered 34 points in the first half alone. He was 20 minutes away from a career-defining upset.
âI mean, I felt like I could win this game probably by myself,â Rice said.
But Rice and the Eagles never did, and former BC head coach Al Skinner opted for a different approach.
âHe was a little more adamant about us continuing the offense and trying to get people into the game,â Rice said. âAnd when they ramped up their defensive pressure, it got to us.â
It didn’t take long for BCâs game-high 18-point lead to evaporate with Rice less involved. North Carolina exploded for a 22â3 run to snatch the lead away from the Eagles and hand BC a 90â80 loss.
âIt was tough to have to sit back, and kind of watch in a sense, instead of being able to go out there and do everything that I thought I could have done in that moment,â Rice said.
Still frustrated, Rice said he didnât let the lossâor his historic performanceâchange his mentality. Riceâin that moment and throughout the rest of his careerâremained authentic to who he was.
âI was the guy that used to play intramural football games,â Rice said. âI would go to the Plex and play randomly and just engage with the students regularly.â
Rice said he didnât seek any extra attention at BC. He roomed with non-athletes and enjoyed himself, but never to the detriment of the team.
âHe did a great job of making sure guys were motivated and were still having a blast out there,â John Oates, Riceâs teammate from 2005â08, said.
Staying grounded was something Rice had been taught growing up, and he took pride in it.
âIt’s kind of like the humble nature that I was, you know, taught as a young kid,â Rice said.
Rice grew up in Lexington, N.C., but played high school basketball in Chesterfield, Va., at Lloyd C Bird High School. He came from a blue collar family, and all the women in his family played basketball. His grandma was the best, according to Rice.
According to Rice, hard work is in his blood. He desires to maximize every opportunity and isnât one to sit around and complain about his situation.
âIt was just about playing the cards that you was dealt to the best of your ability,â Rice said. âAnd that was able to take me, you know, through high school, being the all-time leading scorer in Virginia, all-time leader in threes, all-time leader points in the season.â
But Rice struggled to receive Division I offers. BC was interested in Rice, but throughout his first three years of high school, his GPA wasnât strong enough.
But Cave did not let Rice fail in school. He set up Riceâs senior year schedule, and Rice began taking six classesâjust enough to strengthen his GPA to be academically qualified to go to BC.
âYou actually can’t even do that anymore,â Rice said. âHe was the one who got me into BC.â
Rice said Cave was excited to watch him play his first nationally televised game on Nov. 29, 2006 against Michigan State, but Caveâwho was battling cancerânever got to watch the game.
âHe died that morning,â Rice said. âEverything he did for me all throughout high schoolâhe never got to see me play one college game.â
Just a week after Cave died, two of Riceâs close friends were murdered.
On top of everything else, Riceâs first child was born next month.
âThis was like âboom, boom, boom, boom,â all my freshman year,â Rice said. âJust an 18-year-old just trying to figure it out.â
But Rice stayed the courseâjust like he had growing up. No tragic lossâor 46-point gameâever made Rice someone who he wasnât.
âI think, you know, those situations, they stuck with me as a young man, and I had to grow up so fast that I knew that I had to do something with ball because that was all that I knew,â Rice said.
Rice said that mindset carried him through his college years, as a teammate and a leader.
âHe was simultaneously very supportive but also made sure to hold us accountable,â Oates said. âHe expected everybody to be at his level of effort.â
Rice said he took every opportunity head on and never backed downânot even against then-No. 1 North Carolina in 2009. BC took down the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill, shocking the college basketball world.
âWe were never afraid of anybody that we played,â Rice said. âWe understood that we always had a chanceâit didn’t matter.â
Now, as a 35-year-old father residing in Houston, Texas, Rice said he remembers his experiences as a young man with pride. His 46-point game is permanently etched in BC historyâeven 15 years later.
âI’ve never talked about this game before,â Rice said.
Correction (2/25/23, 3:45 p.m.): This article previously stated that Tyrese Rice is 6-foot-6 on Friday, Feb. 24. It was corrected to state that Tyrese Rice is 6-foot-1.