A rock on an ever-changing offensive line, Chad Lindberg, our 2024 Rice Football Offensive Newcomer of the Year.
Just weeks before the start of summer workouts, Chad Lindberg committed to transfer from Georgia to South Main. Even with the short runway to get acclimated to the program and the offense, Lindberg delivered in a big way on his way to becoming our 2024 Rice Football Offensive Newcomer of the Year.
A former blue-chip recruit who saw the field in a reserve role in the SEC, the plan when Lindberg arrived on campus was for him to take over one of the guard spots and stick there for the season. Lindberg was able to participate in summer workouts, but an injury sidelined him during much of fall camp. He missed the Owls’ season-opening game against Sam Houston, kicking off the first of a myriad of iterations in the trenches.
Lindberg made his Rice football debut in Week 2 against Texas Southern at left guard. His unit kept quarterback EJ Warner upright for a full 60 minutes, allowing no sacks against the FCS opponent. The following week they allowed just one sack in a loss to Houston, the Owls’ only Power Conference opponent of the season. Then the musical chairs began in earnest.
More: 2024 Rice Football Season Superlatives
Right guard John Long was injured against Houston, forcing Lindberg to switch to the right side of the line the following week against Army. Rice lost starting left tackle Ethan Onianwa in that game, another significant blow to an offensive line that seemed to finally be finding its stride.
Because of other injuries that had accumulated around him, Lindberg was asked to move again, suiting up at left tackle for three games, including the program’s first AAC win of the year. Warner was sacked only twice in Lindberg’s three-game stretch as his blind side protector, always pushing himself and his teammates to do more.
“We take it personal when anyone gets close to EJ. We don’t want to give up any pressures, much less a sack,” he said during that run. “We feel like we’re talented enough and we’re a very talented unit. The expectation is to not let anyone close to him. That’s what we try to do every week.”
When Onianwa returned, Lindberg moved back to left guard, the position he thought he was going to be playing all season long. He would, at least, finish the year there as the Owls flip-flopped the other guard spot during the final stretch of games but kept Lindberg in one place.
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Center David Stickle and right tackle Brant Banks were the only two Rice offensive lineman to play a full 12 games, accounting for every start at their respective positions during the season. Lindberg played in all but one contest was the only player on the line to play three different positions. Only one other, Weston Kropp, played two, and that included a single spot start at right guard in six total appearances.
Despite all the upheaval and injuries, including six unique line combinations in 12 games, Rice turned in one of its most impressive showing in the offensive trenches in years. The team ranked seventh nationally in sacks allowed, ceding 11 sacks in 12 games, just one of 11 programs in the nation to allow fewer than one sack per contest. Two of the teams in front of the Owls, Army and Navy, run option offenses that rarely throw the ball.
Rice ranked ninth nationally in pass attempts per game. They threw the ball an incredible amount and yet still managed to keep their quarterback’s jersey remarkably clean. To that point, Rice ranked second nationally in sacks allowed per pass attempt. Lindberg’s versatility and consistency played a pivotal role in that. Not every Transfer Portal addition works out. This one paid off in droves.