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The Story Behind Rhode Island’s Thirst Traps – Rhode Island Monthly

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The Story Behind Rhode Island’s Thirst Traps – Rhode Island Monthly


Audrey Finocchiaro, right, co-owner of The Nitro Bar, in the shop’s Providence location. Photography by Angel Tucker

It’s a late December Saturday, the morning sun promising a Rockwellian winter day as an impressive line of influenced coffee connoisseurs snakes nearly a block down Newport’s lower Thames Street.

The caffeine-craved and matcha-obsessed mob, queued behind The Nitro Bar’s roped barrier, represents a surprisingly universal archetype: selfie-snapping millennials, après-Pilates athleisure-clad women, young families, eager Alphas and the casually curious; a collective buzz in the air. Across the city, Nitro’s off-Broadway location boasts a similar scene, as does the cafe inside Dash Bicycle Shop on Providence’s West End. Locals stand shoulder to shoulder with others who have pilgrimaged from far beyond state lines, almost certainly among the ranks of the coffee micro-chain’s three-quarters of a million social media followers. To put that reach in perspective, the brand’s TikTok views exceeded more than 130 million in 2025 alone.

Countless posts, likes and shares across social media platforms underline Rhode Island’s thriving coffee culture, percolating from the more than 200 coffee shops and cafes statewide. Our collective consumption ranks eighth in the nation for both most daily cups per capita (1.9) and total cups consumed in a lifetime (40,223) in addition to having the fifth-highest lifetime expenditure on the drink ($166,523). Save for bottled water, more Americans drink coffee each day than any other beverage, according to the National Coffee Association, and specialty coffee continues to surge in popularity, hitting a fourteen-year high in 2025. But long before oat milk lattes and flat whites were all the rage, the Ocean State touted more than two and a half centuries of coffee consumption.

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As early as the 1700s, Atlantic trade routes brought coffee into Rhode Island via Newport and Providence’s busy ports. While tea and ale were the more dominant beverages in Colonial times, the Boston Tea Party inspired Colonists to boycott tea and choose coffee in an act of rebellion against the crown. Taverns and inns pouring the new velvety elixir acted as popular social gathering places — including the Crown Coffee House on Newport’s Church Street — from the late 18th century onward.

In 1895, wholesale grocers Brownell & Field Co. of Providence created Autocrat Coffee, which continues to operate in Lincoln. Since the 1930s, the company has been widely associated with its coffee syrup, synonymous with Rhode Island culture itself. So are coffee cabinets — milkshakes blending coffee syrup, milk and ice cream — perhaps best known from the soda fountain at Delekta Pharmacy, now Delekta’s, anchoring Warren’s Main Street since 1858.

Feining for Caffeine

Coffee’s enduring popularity has evolved far beyond the eight-ounce Styrofoam cups of basic black or decaf of yesteryear. Cardboard-sleeved coffee cups clenched in the hands of young and old on the go are de rigueur from Woonsocket to Westerly.

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One of the cafe’s viral “coffee buckets.”

In July, The Cubby (formerly The Coffee Cubby) in Lincoln’s Manville village became internet-famous when its “coffee buckets” — thirty-four-ounce coffee drinks served in plastic buckets with handles — went viral. The eye-poppingly large, kitschy containers were the brainchild of operations manager Abbey Gardner, who was inspired by cocktail buckets found at beach bars and nightclubs. “Within three days, they just took off,” says Gardner of the social media-savvy sippers. “On one post … we had upwards of 650,000 views.”

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The buzz lured even more creators to little Manville, eager to experience, review and amplify the newly crowned must-have brews. “We had content creators coming in as soon as they caught wind, and that helped spread it. Then there were just so many shares. We know one content creator has gotten [views] over the one million mark,” she says.

While quantifying the precise reach is murky, the stratospheric attention of the buckets proves the power of social influence is undeniable. “We had a person actually fly in from Tennessee,” to try the coffee buckets, says Gardner. “She was like, ‘I knew I wanted to come to this area, and I saw them, so, I flew to Boston, and I came here.’”

The “it drink” phenomenon was a boon for owners Jeremiah Carey and business partner Matthew Moylan, who bought and rebranded The Cubby in 2023. A second burst of momentum soon followed via the Fluffanutter Latte, a sweet and creamy concoction of peanut butter and marshmallow Fluff (the marshmallow creme has been made in nearby Lynn, Massachusetts, since 1920). A similar drink created by a Cape Cod cafe (using Newport-based Springline Coffee) went viral, which helped boost The Cubby’s rendition, even though the Fluffanutter had long been on their menu.

Rhode Island-based creator Katie Corcoran, who posts under @RhodeIslandNative across platforms, spotted the Cape Cod version of the drink blanketing her feed and saw an opportunity to pounce on the trend through a local lens.

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Jeremiah Carey and Matthew Moylan purchased and rebranded The Cubby in Manville in 2023.

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“I took the take, and I’ve done this before, of you don’t need to leave Rhode Island to get these trendy, delicious things. Save yourself the drive to Cape Cod and just go up to Lincoln,” she says. Her Instagram reel featuring the Fluffanutter has garnered nearly half a million views, while her TikToks on the drink have amassed more than 59,000. She attributes the virality of hers and other curated coffee content to a few things: East Coast lifestyle content being particularly trendy, a movement by coffee drinkers to eschew multinational coffee conglomerates in favor of local cafes, and a rebellion against the zeitgeisty argument that if millennials and Gen Zers simply sacrificed small luxuries, like lattes, they’d be on the path to home ownership.

“There was a lot of counterculture around that; of like, ‘Screw it. Go get your $6 latte,’” she says. “Coffee is definitely having its moment, and I think it goes along the lines of enjoying your life, romanticizing your life, getting the little treat.”

The Cubby’s viral sensations, though bringing an enviable spike in sales at $7–$10 per drink, also brought lines more than 100 people deep. Customers poured out the door and haphazardly weaved through the cramped parking lot, where on weekends, and sometimes weekdays, cars jockeyed for a space. Gardner worked with ownership to mitigate wait times by increasing staff and reworking the logistics of making the coffee buckets, adopting an assembly line format. Outside, they added more patio seating to accommodate the new wave of customers and erected a pop-up tent in the parking lot for shade.

But for some regulars, it wasn’t enough. “I love The Cubby and was a regular. But since the line is insane, I don’t go anymore. I’m sad about it,” wrote one follower on Facebook. To restore those relationships, Gardner says she reached out to as many regulars as she could to invite them back and streamlined a way The Cubby could expedite local orders by giving access to one of the cafe’s alternative entrances. “It was kind of word of mouth,” she says. “Like, ‘Hey, we want to make sure you’re taken care of, because obviously you’re one of the regulars. You stick with us year-round. You’re not just here for the hype of the moment.’”

From Cart to Cartel

The Nitro Bar has also adjusted to increased demand. What started as a simple coffee cart peddling across Providence by founders Audrey Finocchiaro and husband Sam Lancaster in 2016 has evolved into the trio of brick and mortars. Most recently, the couple has been scouting for a location in the Big Apple while bringing their social media followers along as they document their day-in-the-life journey.

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“It’s just different logistical things that we’re figuring out, of how to open in New York City. The spaces are so small, and how we’ll run through that is definitely an interesting challenge,” Finocchiaro says. Both North Kingstown natives, the duo’s ties to the city stretch back a decade, when she attended college in Manhattan. “And it’s where we really, Sam and I, both fell in love with coffee,” she explains. Finocchiaro, thirty-two, has amassed more than 210,000 personal social media followers and has grown The Nitro Bar’s following to nearly 700,000.

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A Nitro Bar barista prepares coffee drinks during a weekday lunchtime rush.

Such numbers mean that while location hunting in New York, she and Lancaster are recognized on the street, an experience she calls “surreal.” Finocchiaro speculates that part of the reason both she and her business have accrued such a considerable following is her transparency online. Her content includes everything from talking about maxing out her credit card to start the business and stripped-down entrepreneurial advice to having her own “Dunkin’ dad” candidly sample and rate new Nitro drinks and get-ready-with-me videos. She also discusses profoundly heavier topics, including the harsh realities of business ownership: long nights, early mornings, eighty-hour workweeks, money management, setting boundaries, tuning out “haters,” the stuff “no one wants to talk about,” and even mental health struggles.

“Authenticity online plays a huge role. I think people aren’t used to small business owners talking about how they run their business, or things they’ve learned, or challenges they face,” she says. “That connection with the audience is really strong because we’re being so ourselves and real online. It’s so crazy going to the shop and having people be like, ‘Thank you so much for talking about mental health’ or like, ‘You made me feel less weird about feeling this way or feeling like that,’ which is obviously the best part.”

Having that kind influence is clearly meaningful to Finocchiaro, who is forthcoming on social media that she, too, is still figuring it all out. “It feels really cool to have young girls come up to us and just be like, ‘You’re inspiring me that I could do this too, that I could open my own coffee shop,’ or ‘I can do my own thing,’ or ‘It’s OK if I’m not doing well in school — that doesn’t mean I’m going to be a failure.’”

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The couple’s success story has become a blueprint business model, covered by multiple media outlets including Fortune and CNBC.com, which reported in April 2024 that The Nitro Bar raked in $4.5 million in sales that year according to documents reviewed by the outlet.

More than just fancy coffee, Nitro is also known for an ever-evolving food menu and trendsetting merch. New collections with hoodies ($87), ballcaps ($37), a fleece ($118) and more continually sell out, and not just on-site. “Hawaii, Alaska — we’ve shipped to every single state, and when we’re printing out the slips, we’re shipping and packing everything ourselves,” Finocchiaro says. “It’s so cool to be like, ‘This is going to New Mexico!’ ‘This is going to Idaho!’ ‘This is going to Oklahoma!’”

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Customers sample the fare at The Nitro Bar.

While amusing to think of Oklahomans clad in quahog-emblazoned hoodies, it’s serious business: Swag accounts for about 10 percent of Nitro’s revenue.

That meteoric growth, however, has required the company to adapt. Its Thames Street location saw 300,000 customers walk through the door in 2025. Melissa Holder, manager of a neighboring business near the Newport store, says the cafe has brought a beneficial “rising tide floats all boats” effect to the neighborhood, along with a few learning curves. “We did struggle with [customers] this summer with the line blocking the doors, people sitting on the stoop,” she says. A conversation with ownership led to the addition of stanchions to better organize the lines while keeping sidewalks flowing and business doorways accessible.

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Finocchiaro and Lancaster also wanted to accommodate the customers who were patiently waiting and improve their experience. As long lines become commonplace, the owners hired a “host” to engage with customers, pass out menus, offer water, and see if they could assist in any way. “How we can really up our hospitality game has been so fun and cool to figure out,” says Finocchiaro. “Because I think coffee shops are meant to be this watering hole where you feel this connection with community.”

Such lines have also meant greater visibility for some neighbors. “I wouldn’t say it’s impacted our bottom line, per se, but it’s brought a lot of happy, excited people to the block, so that’s obviously a good thing. Everybody’s in a good mood when they’re at Nitro,” says Phil Ayoub, owner of Beau Tyler, a retail shop on the block.

“We’ve been amazed at how busy they’ve been, even on off days. It’s been incredible to see. It’s been a Newport phenomenon, really; people coming to town just for them.”

“I’ve literally waited down the street in a line before. It’s so worth it,” says Rhode Islander Samantha Bousquet while waiting to get into Nitro on Thames Street this past December. She ordered her regular “go-to” drink but had recently seen a new one posted on social media. “So I got both,” she says with a laugh. “The coffee is just so good. I’ve seen girls on TikTok literally from New Jersey wake up at 5 a.m., drive here, and then drive home.” An Instagram post from September follows a creator from Pittsburgh who flew to Rhode Island specifically to go to Nitro.

Boston-based couple Carolyn Chambers and Mike Cronin rented a nearby home last summer and became Nitro regulars throughout the season. In town for a New Year’s Eve wedding, the two said a Nitro fix was top priority. “This is our first stop. We haven’t even gotten to the house yet,” Cronin says with a smirk.

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Other Boston-area customers expressed hope that a Nitro Bar will one day open in the city. Finocchiaro is open to the idea, but says New York is their focus right now. However, Nitro fans everywhere will be able to make the cafe’s most viral drinks and more soon: Finocchiaro is working on a cookbook with Ten Speed Press to be released later this year.

‘Bachelor’ Brouhaha

An enviable buzz was instantaneous for Audrey’s Coffee House and Lounge in South Kingstown since the day it opened in 2021. Owners Jared Haibon and wife Ashley Iaconetti appeared on different seasons of “The Bachelorette” and “The Bachelor” ABC reality television series and eventually met on its offshoot, “Bachelor in Paradise.” With millions counted among  the show’s global fanbase, dubbed “Bachelor Nation,” Audrey’s drew national press, which added an automatic level of pressure, but Haibon says the heat is on for any new small business owner.

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Jared Haibon of “Bachelorette” TV fame owns Audrey’s Coffee House and Lounge with his wife, Ashley Iaconetti.

“There’s really no warm up with any business, for everybody when they open, whether you’re known or unknown, because a lot of people are going to give you a first chance, maybe a second, but after that, they’re going to have their mind made up,” he says. “Because of Ashley and I and our small notoriety, we knew we’d probably be pretty busy right off the bat. So we knew we’d have to be able to handle high volume as soon as we opened the doors for those first few weeks, because people just want to check it out and see what it was all about.”

Audrey’s has thrived during the past five years, with customers from far and wide continuing to post from the South County Commons coffeehouse, which doubles as a lounge with coffee cocktails by night. Haibon is used to coming around the counter to take photos with fans, but one couple’s epic trek truly shocked the reality star.

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“They were on a road trip from Colorado, and I was like, ‘Oh, that’s awesome. What’s your end destination?’” he says. Audrey’s was the destination. Haibon calls these experiences both incredible and humbling, adding he’s grateful for the support. It also reinforces his commitment to consistently deliver a product that resonates, and the work’s paid off. A 2025 study based on user reviews shows Audrey’s was the number-two-rated celebrity-owned restaurant in the U.S., second only to Jon Bon Jovi’s JBJ Soul Kitchen.

The cafe will likely be thrust in the limelight again when Iaconetti appears as a cast member on the highly anticipated release of “The Real Housewives of Rhode Island” on Bravo. An official release date hasn’t been announced as of press time, but the series is expected to drop this spring. Haibon says he can’t confirm if the show filmed any scenes at Audrey’s, “but you know, it follows Ashley’s life, and Audrey’s is certainly a part of that.”

No stranger to leaning into trendy coffee drinks and capitalizing on cultural resonance, Haibon says, “We’ll have something up our sleeves for that as well.”

While tourism boards and public relations agencies work tirelessly to promote the spoils of the Ocean State from our seafood to our shoreline, social media has catapulted our coffee culture far and wide. Our percolating prowess isn’t news to locals though, where ordering shorthand is its own language (regular: cream and sugar, or “extra extra”) and our New England hardiness is flaunted with an iced coffee in the dead of winter (bonus points for sporting shorts and a parka).

No matter the time of day or season, the coffee is always on.

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Dunkin’ Devotion

How influencers are helping draw social media attention to the locally founded national chain.

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Ian Brownhill, third from left, with New England sports mascots. Photograph courtesy of Ian Brownhill.

No Rhode Island coffee culture conversation seems complete without mentioning the grande latte-sized elephant in the room: Dunkin.’ While the brand spans the globe, its stranglehold on the New England customer base is without comparison, especially as the Ocean State ranks high in most Dunkin’ locations per capita.

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The brand has a long history of working with influencers and content creators (yes, there’s a difference) to amplify new products, build brand awareness, boost social media engagement and hop on viral trends. For nearly four years, Dunkin’ has collaborated with creator Ian Brownhill of Westerly, whose content mostly consists of comedic New England- and Rhode Island-centric skits.

“There’s definitely something to be said about how the power of social media can boost brands overnight,” he says. His audience of 2.3 million social media followers isn’t necessarily looking for the latest craze in coffee, so his content leans more relatable than aspirational. “My demographics are typically above the age of twenty-five or thirty into the mid- to late-sixties. So, demographically speaking, I’m in a world where people who are consuming coffee at that age are probably just looking to get a coffee fix on their way to work.”

Much of his Dunkin’ content is product placement: weaving in a “medium iced regulah” mention or having a Dunkin’ drink in hand, often with a doughnut topper. But he acknowledges that coffee content is having a moment.

“There is this new craze about curating something that is aesthetically rewarding to the naked eye on social media,” he says. But that’s not his lane. “I’m just speaking the language that my audience and my quote-unquote followers understand, versus me trying to be the popular ‘it’ girl, so to speak, where I’m like, ‘Hey guys, check out this new matcha!’”





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Rhode Island

Lieutenant governor candidate wants the office to be RI’s inspector general

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Lieutenant governor candidate wants the office to be RI’s inspector general


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  • Republican candidate John Loughlin proposes transforming the Rhode Island lieutenant governor’s office into an inspector general.
  • Loughlin aims to use the office’s staff and budget to investigate government waste, fraud, and corruption.
  • The state’s lieutenant governor role currently has few official duties beyond succeeding the governor if necessary.

Republican candidate for lieutenant governor John Loughlin wants the office to become the Rhode Island inspector general his party has been seeking in vain for years.

Loughlin, a former state representative, said on May 11 that, if elected, he would staff the underutilized office with people who would help him expose “fraud, waste, abuse, and government corruption.”

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“Rhode Islanders are sick and tired of watching their tax dollars disappear into a black hole of inefficiency, cronyism, and outright corruption while the General Assembly talks a big game but delivers nothing − year after year after year,” Loughlin said in a news release. “For more than two decades, the legislature has failed to create a true Inspector General with real investigative power. Enough is enough. If they won’t do it, the Lieutenant Governor’s Office will − starting on day one.”

Why turn the lieutenant governor into an inspector general?

The Rhode Island Constitution gives the lieutenant governor little to no authority beyond being available in case the governor is unable to finish their term. That’s prompted some to call it a “do nothing” office and others to propose abolishing it.

“Frankly, the current workload of the office leaves ample time and resources to do far more for taxpayers than ceremonial appearances and ribbon-cuttings,” Loughlin said in his news release. “Rhode Islanders deserve a Lieutenant Governor’s Office that works every day to protect their money and hold government accountable.”

The lieutenant governor’s office has a budget of $1.4 million, which Loughlin said is enough to staff and run an effective investigative team made up of “certified auditors, investigators, and compliance professionals” to review state agency spending and contracts.

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He acknowledged that the lieutenant governor does not have subpoena power, but believes that investigations can be completed utilizing public records requests and gathering publicly-available data.

Loughlin, who ended his talk radio show earlier this year when he announced his campaign for governor, said he would communicate his findings through “RI Report” publications, news briefings and podcasts.

He said he would also make the office’s resources available to city and town leaders.

Republicans have been fighting for an inspector general

Rhode Island Republicans have for years promised to lower state spending by rooting out government waste, fraud and abuse. The last GOP Rhode Island governor, Donald Carcieri, launched a “Fiscal Fitness” program that aimed to save money and find efficiencies.

Democrats criticized Carcieri’s tenure for featuring exorbitant privatization and outsourcing.

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Since Carcieri, the idea of creating an independent inspector general similar to those in other states has become a holy grail for Rhode Island Republicans, but the Democratic General Assembly has had little interest in it.

“If our office saves just 1% from Rhode Island’s bloated state budget, the savings would return more than ten times the entire cost of the Lieutenant Governor’s Office to taxpayers – and that’s only the beginning,” Loughlin said in the news release.



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RI Lottery Numbers Midday, Numbers Evening winning numbers for May 10, 2026

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The Rhode Island Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.

Here’s a look at May 10, 2026, results for each game:

Winning Numbers numbers from May 10 drawing

Midday: 9-9-9-0

Evening: 5-5-0-9

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Check Numbers payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Wild Money numbers from May 10 drawing

01-13-14-16-32, Extra: 02

Check Wild Money payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Millionaire for Life numbers from May 10 drawing

01-03-20-35-46, Bonus: 05

Check Millionaire for Life payouts and previous drawings here.

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Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your prize

  • Prizes less than $600 can be claimed at any Rhode Island Lottery Retailer. Prizes of $600 and above must be claimed at Lottery Headquarters, 1425 Pontiac Ave., Cranston, Rhode Island 02920.
  • Mega Millions and Powerball jackpot winners can decide on cash or annuity payment within 60 days after becoming entitled to the prize. The annuitized prize shall be paid in 30 graduated annual installments.
  • Winners of the Millionaire for Life top prize of $1,000,000 a year for life and second prize of $100,000 a year for life can decide to collect the prize for a minimum of 20 years or take a lump sum cash payment.

When are the Rhode Island Lottery drawings held?

  • Powerball: 10:59 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
  • Mega Millions: 11:00 p.m. ET on Tuesday and Friday.
  • Lucky for Life: 10:30 p.m. ET daily.
  • Millionaire for Life: 11:15 p.m. ET daily.
  • Numbers (Midday): 1:30 p.m. ET daily.
  • Numbers (Evening): 7:29 p.m. ET daily.
  • Wild Money: 7:29 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Rhode Island editor. You can send feedback using this form.



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Rhode Island FC steals a point from Tampa Bay; Here’s how it happened

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Rhode Island FC steals a point from Tampa Bay; Here’s how it happened


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PAWTUCKET — JJ Williams finally had his space and rose to the opportunity.

The Rhode Island FC striker, deep in the attacking zone, came back to a cross and headed Nick Scardina’s service to the near post to salvage the night for Rhode Island. Williams’ goal landed in the 86th minute to draw Tampa Bay Rowdies, 1-1, in rain-soaked Pawtucket.

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It’s the third draw in USL Championship play for Rhode Island at Centreville Bank Stadium this season. RIFC was turning in a familiar performance before snagging the tie against the league-leading Rowdies as Williams supplied his third regular-season goal of the year. The draw is the first time RIFC has earned a result after the opposition opened the scoring since its 1-1 tie vs. Birmingham Legion FC on July 5, 2025.

Rhode Island now travels to USL League One side Portland Hearts of Pine for its second game of the 2026 Prinx Tires USL Cup group stage on Saturday, May 16 at 4 p.m. The club returns to Pawtucket on May 23 against Brooklyn FC.

“All night they made it tough because they were doubling,” Williams said of Tampa Bay. “And wherever I went to, they were going contact first, especially in this league with no [Video Assistant Referee] … but on that one, the ball was so good that they spun around, and then I was able to make good contact.”

Rhode Island had a string of missed chances in the first 15 minutes that fed into a goal for Tampa Bay and then a triple substitution in the second half that provided little spark. Max Schneider’s cross from right of the box found Pedro Dolabella at the far post for a clinical header in the 29th minute in front of an announced attendance of 6,790.

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The game’s first score came just 10 minutes after attempts from Hugo Bacharach and Jojea Kwizera were saved and Williams sailed an open shot past the bar.

“We tried to correct some of those things that we struggled with last week,” Williams said. “Getting to the ball, making tackles, making a stick, I think that we weren’t as clean in possession as we would have been, especially as we won the ball and played forward. We had a lot of turnovers in the first half where we could have seen more chances, but we did well to weather the storm early and create some. But for me, I [have] to bury that first one.”

Rhode Island creates plenty of chances — it is tied for fourth with 112 attempts — but has just 12 goals this season. If it had finished one of the early chances against Tampa Bay, it would’ve shifted the tenor of the match and forced the visitors to play outside of its form. But the final scoring sequence is still missing with the summer months coming soon.

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“Happy with the spirit, happy with the effort, happy with the fight,” RIFC coach Khano Smith said. “You’ve seen that a lot with our team. They just fought to the end, never gave up, kept pushing. Ultimately, it’s two more points dropped at home, and we need to find a way to stop doing that. We need to be ruthless – just ruthless in front of the goal.”



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