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Rice Football Recruiting: Breaking Down the 2024 Signees – Defense

February 7, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2024 Rice Football Recruiting class includes several hand-picked impact players on defense. Here’s how that side of the ball stacks up.

With the addition of 10 players on National Signing Day, the 2024 Rice football recruiting class has grown to 23 players. Of those players, 16 are current high school seniors and nine play on the defensive side of the ball plus one specialist.

This group now includes walk-on players in addition to scholarship athletes, but as head coach Mike Bloomgren was quick to point out, “All these kids are suited to come in here, play college football and compete and help the Owls.” We’ve gone position by position breaking down each of the new Owls and how they’ll help the program on the field.

* designate early enrollees

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Defensive Line (2) – Charlie Looes*, Michael Daley*

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Football Recruiting, Premium Tagged With: Alex Bacchetta, Bailey Fletcher, Blaise Tita, Cade McMillan, Charlie Looes, Ephraim Dotson, Kaleb Blanton, LaVonte Johnson, Michael Daley, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting, Tyler Day

Rice Football Recruiting: Breaking Down the 2024 Signees – Offense

February 7, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2024 Rice Football Recruiting class is loaded with a top-flight quarterback and lots of skill talent. Here’s how this side of the ball stacks up.

With the addition of 10 players on National Signing Day, the 2024 Rice football recruiting class has grown to 23 players. Of those players, 16 are current high school seniors and 13 play on the offensive side of the ball.

This group now includes walk-on players in addition to scholarship athletes, but as head coach Mike Bloomgren was quick to point out, “All these kids are suited to come in here, play college football and compete and help the Owls.” We’ve gone position by position breaking down each of the new Owls and how they’ll help the program on the field.

* designate early enrollees

This article has been temporarily unlocked.

Quarterback (2) – Drew Devillier, EJ Warner*

Now signing the first members of his seventh recruiting class, Mike Bloomgren has brought a host of quarterbacks to South Main. He’s landed a few prominent transfers that did well, most notably JT Daniels this past season before injuries cut his time with Rice football short. But Bloomgren also found success with players like Mike Collins and Jake Constantine, among others.

Meanwhile, the high school products at the position are only just now beginning to get their feet wet. AJ Padgett and Chase Jenkins have each flashed in moments and represent the most talented freshman passers Rice has had under Bloomgren. But the Owls’ 2024 quarterback signee Drew Devillier holds an even more prominent distinction. He’s the highest-rated high school quarterback Bloomgren has signed at Rice.

Devillier had originally committed to TCU to play baseball. His sport-of-choice switch benefited Rice, who was ready to scoop him up as soon as he became available. Devillier picked Rice over offers from Pitt and North Texas, among others.

Bloomgren reiterated this week Devillier that “he’s a football player first,” but the staff will do everything they can to support him as he plays baseball, too. Devillier does intend to play both sports at Rice.

Premium: Rice Football Recruiting Offer and Commitment Tracker

As a passer, Devillier’s arm is exciting. Combining his level of arm talent with an ability to create on the move has the potential to make him a fantastic find passed over because of his earlier baseball aspirations. Signing Devillier would have made for a solid return at the position, but Rice upped the ante with another marquee transfer at the position: Temple’s EJ Warner.

The son of former NFL MVP Kurt Warner, EJ has spent the past two seasons breaking just about every passing record that exists at Temple. Playing with a shaky line and a shortage of skill talent, he almost singlehandedly kept the Owls competitive. Looking for a better opportunity, he hit the transfer portal and the Rice Owls scooped him up.

When Warner hit the portal and the coaching staff started studying his game in earnest, Bloomgren said he and offensive coordinator Marques Tuiasosopo saw “a guy who has unbelievable anticipation and unbelievable knowledge of where the ball needs to go.”

More directly still: “We think he can step in and do some of the things we were able to with JT.”

Warner has two seasons of eligibility remaining. If he finds his footing quickly and establishes himself as the starter, Rice could have found a multi-year solution at the position, something they’ve been seeking for quite some time. Regardless, the athleticism and arm talent Warner possesses are irrefutable. This is exactly the type of player you look to add to your program. The NFL bloodlines are just the cherry on top.

Wide Receiver (3#) – Owen Carter, Jackson Ranucci, # Graham Walker #

Carter was a human highlight reel throughout high school. Paired with quarterback Trey Owens, a Texas commit, he lit up scoreboards across the state, surpassing 1,000 receiving yards during his senior season and hauling in a team-leading 15 touchdowns. One of the highest-rated wide receiver commitments in the Bloomgren era, Carter should pair nicely with the quarterbacks signed in this class.

It’s worth noting here that Carter is the only true pass catcher in the 2024 Rice football recruiting class thus far. And while it’s entirely possible the Owls add a player out of the portal in the coming weeks ahead or during the spring, signing just Carter is a testament to how much the staff believes in him and the core of receivers that are currently on campus.

Carter will be joined by Jackson Ranucci, a teammate of fellow Rice signee Cullen Witt, who earned a scholarship after a standout performance at camp this summer. Ranucci missed most of his senior season.

# Walker was not formally announced on National Signing Day as the Owls waited for the appropriate paperwork to process. Much like Matt Sykes last year and others in the past, no signing day announcement won’t keep him from following through on his commitment. Walker brings physicality and size to this room and could vie for a starting spot as soon as he arrives on campus.

Running Back (3) – Rhys Phillips, Coleman Bennett*, Taji Atkins, Trey Kibbles

Rice doubled its haul in the backfield during the early signing period, picking up a pledge from Bucknell transfer Coleman Bennett to compliment high school commit Rhys Phillips. They’re two very different players who will fill very different roles in the Rice offense.

The 6-foot-3, 230-pound Phillips is a versatile, hybrid back with experience operating as an h-back, tight end and everything in between. Most recruiting services still have him listed as a pure tight end and honestly, even the Rice staff hasn’t solidified his role

“We’re not sure how he’s going to fit into our offense yet,” Bloomgren admitted. “Because he does so many things so well.” At 6-foot-3, 225 pounds, he’ll probably do more blocking and receiving work than lining up as a pure rusher in the backfield.

On the other hand, Bennett will operate as a much more traditional runner. NextGen Prospect rated him as one of the fastest players in the Transfer Portal this cycle and that shows through on the field. Adding Bennett to a backfield that already has Dean Connors should keep opposing defensive coordinators up at night.

Taji Atkins is perhaps the most exciting addition to this unit, though. Originally committed to the Owls before the Early Signing Period, he decommitted before since reversing course and signing with Rice on National Signing Day. Bloomgren is ecstatic to have him back in the fold. “This dude is special,” Bloomgren explained.

Atkins is an all-purpose weapon with speed, quickness and vision. In the playoffs alone, he rushed for 1117 yards (four games) including an unbelievable 403-yard performance against Klein Cain. Atkins averaged 14.5 yards per carry this season on 178 rushes. “That’s pretty good,” Bloomgren said with a smile.

The Owls further bolstered their backfield with the addition of Trey Kibbles, who Bloomgren dubbed “a solid runner with great balance.” Kibbles ran track in high school and promises to bring some explosiveness to the backfield.

Tight End (0)

After loading up at the tight end position in the last two cycles, Rice didn’t take a pure tight end from the high school ranks this year, unless you want to count Phillips. The staff loves the room as it’s currently constructed and has high hopes for what Boden Groen, Ethan Powell and others can accomplish this coming season.

Offensive Line (3) – Luke Miller, Lane Jeffcoat, Spencer Cassell*, Jabari McAlmont

The 2023 Rice Football recruiting class included seven scholarship offensive linemen, a year removed from the Owls signing five in the previous class. With so many young, talented trench movers still on the roster, Rice was going to have a much smaller haul in the offensive trenches this haul. Just three: Luke Miller, Lane Jeffcoat and transfer Spencer Cassell.

Miller and Jeffcoat each committed during the same weekend this past summer. The staff got to work out both of them during camps and made sure to offer both, despite their knowledge this would be a tighter class and that they would go over their projected position count if they brought in more players in the portal. It didn’t matter. They had to have these guys.

More: Breaking down the Defensive signees in the 2024 Rice Football recruiting class

Bloomgren said that Miller “plays with a little bit of nastiness,” as glowing of an endorsement as any offensive lineman could dare to receiver. And as for Jeffcoat, Bloomgren was effusive in his praise. “I really think we hit a home run with this kid,” he said. “I think the future is incredibly bright because of the way he bends and the gifts he has from a size standpoint.”

The final addition, Spencer Cassell, was not a new name for this staff. The Owls actually recruited Cassell as a preferred walk on out of high school in 2019. Cassell opted to go the scholarship route and attend Harvard. He has since graduated and matured physically, becoming a talented offensive lineman.

Now Cassell is back at South Main for good this time as a scholarship player, potentially with two seasons of eligibility if a medical redshirt waiver goes through as expected. He’ll start at guard, but has experience at tackle as well.

Jabari McAlmont spent a good portion of this season banged up, which might prove to be a blessing gin disguise for the Owls, who were able to get him to campus without too much fanfare. Bloomgren called him a player with “tremendous upside.” Already blessed with a 6-foor-4, 300-pound frame, McAlmont could have great potential for this program down the line.

Cullen Witt played tackle in high school but projects as a center at the collegiate level. Bloomgren praised his intelligence and movement.

||  UPDATED 2/7/2024 ||
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Filed Under: Football, Football Recruiting, Premium Tagged With: Coleman Bennett, Drew Devillier, EJ Warner, Graham Walker, Jabari McAlmont, Jackson Ranucci, Lane Jeffcoat, Luke Miller, Owen Carter, Rhys Phillips, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting, Spencer Cassell, Taji Atkins, Trey Kibbles

Alem Huseinovic’s huge night not enough as Rice Basketball falls to SMU

February 7, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Alem Huseinovic’s huge night was not enough to keep pace with a furious SMU attack as Rice basketball remains winless at home in AAC play.

SMU started the scoring at Tudor Fieldhouse and did not stop, shooting better than 50 percent in the first half against Rice basketball. With defense unable to keep the Mustangs at bay, the Owls turned to Alem Huseinvoic, who delivered a monster night including a series of big threes to keep pace with the visitors for as long as possible.

Huseinvoic helped push Rice to a nine-point advantage in the final minutes before halftime and scored the only Rice basket in the next eight minutes of court time spanning the final four 3:48 of the first half and the first 4:17 to the second frame. In between SMU outscored Rice by a staggering 29-4 margin.

“At 35-26, I thought, alright, this is going to be a ball game. We’re going to have a chance to win this thing. I could not have been more wrong.”

Things didn’t really get sideways until the opening minutes of the second half when a 15-0 SMU run sent Rice spiraling. Outside of Huseinovic, the Rice offense was spotty at best. Mekhi Mason, fresh off a career day against UTSA, was quiet, scoring just eight points. Travis Evee was 0-for-5 from three. As a result, the Rice deficit would only continue to balloon.

Pera was almost at a loss for words in the aftermath. “I wouldn’t be this upset if I didn’t know it was in there. If I didn’t know what this team is capable of. If I didn’t know how much these kids cared. If I didn’t know how much they really want to win then I wouldn’t be this upset.”

SMU led by as many as 29 points, closing out the game with ease and sending Rice to their seventh consecutive defeat at home in conference play. All three of the Owls’ AAC victories thus far have come on the road.

Final Box | SMU 95 – Rice 69

FINAL | SMU 95 – @RiceMBB 69 pic.twitter.com/pPaJkBuNoP

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) February 8, 2024

Key takeaway | Inconsistency from Top to Bottom

Travis Evee and Max Fiedler are the heart and soul of this basketball team. The veteran leaders combined to score 18 points and grab seven boards against SMU on Wednesday night. Either of them is capable of reaching those totals themself, and it wouldn’t require all that unusual of a performance to get there.

“We’re not winning in this league if Max and Travis aren’t playing well,” Pera said point-blank. “Our room for error here isn’t large.”

Rice basketball didn’t lose the game solely because their vets had off nights, but the inconsistency from the top down points toward a lingering problem for this team as a whole. They’re hot and cold to an extreme. At their best, they can take down Memphis and go toe-to-toe with FAU. Both of those teams have been in the Top 25 this season. But when things aren’t clicking it can get messy. Fast.

With another crucial home game looming against South Florida, Pera took full responsibility on Wednesday night “I am not deflecting blame. This is on me,” he said. “This is my responsibility. I am going to hold myself accountable and my staff. We are going to dissect the tape, watch the first USF game and find ways to help these kids be better.”

Up Next: vs USF (Saturday, Feb. 10)

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball Tagged With: game recap, Rice basketball

Jazzy Owens-Barnett’s career night boosts Rice Women’s Basketball past USF

February 7, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

A career night from Jazzy Owens-Barnett pushed Rice women’s basketball to victory over South Florida on the road.

Rice women’s basketball found itself on the ropes in the early going against South Florida on Wednesday night, hoping to avoid being victims of a Sunshine State sweep following a loss to FAU over the weekend. Rice made just four shots from the field in the first quarter and fell into a 10-point hole following a three-ball from the Bulls to start the second quarter.

It would be hyperbolic to say it was all Owls from that point forward, but it’s fair to say some sort of switch flipped in the blue and gray with their backs against the wall. It was at that point Jazzy Owens-Barnett began to take over, scoring 11 points in the span of five minutes of court time as Rice erased the gap and managed to walk into halftime with a 29-29 tie.

The teams traded buckets early in the third but the later parts of the quarter is when Rice really took command of the game. The Owls made 10 consecutive field goals from the midpoint of the third quarter going into the final frame. Almost at the same time, the Bulls missed 12 shots in a row. USF was able to hang around, but Rice never trailed in the final quarter, pulling out a big win on the road.

“We want to be playing our best basketball right now and I feel like that’s where we’re starting to trend to,” head coach Lindsay Edmonds said afterward. “We’re learning from mistakes. We’re growing. And I think the best is yet to come.”

The win was Edmonds’ 50th at Rice, making her the fastest coach in program history to 50 victories.

Final Box | Rice 69 – USF 59

FINAL | @RiceWBB 69 – USF 59 pic.twitter.com/FC6qncaxuo

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) February 8, 2024

Key takeaway | Getting close to full strength

Rice spent the better part of the past month without Malia Fisher or Jazzy Owens-Barnett on the court. Injuries had forced the Owls to do their best with a makeshift starting lineup and reworked defensive rotations. Various players have stepped up and had big games in the interim, but it’s been quite a while since we saw this team playing up to its fullest potential.

Owens-Barnett has been back in the lineup for a few games now. Fisher returned for the first time tonight. This is as close as the Owls have been to 100 percent in weeks and they were able to go on the road and pick up a crucial victory against a team tied with them in the standings when the day began.

A career night from Owens-Barnett, 21 points including a perfect 4-for-4 from three, propelled the Owls this time around. “I feel like every night someone from our bench can step up,” Edmonds said of Owens-Barnett. “What a spark plug. We needed every single one of it. She led our charge offensively, but she helped us a ton defensively as well.”

As Edmonds alluded, it might be someone else next time out. And that’s the beauty of depth. Finally healthy and with so many options, this team has the potential to be scary down the stretch.

Up Next: vs Tulsa (Saturday, Feb. 10)

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball, Women's Athletics Tagged With: game recap, Rice Women's basketball

Rice Football Recruiting: 2024 National Signing Day Live Blog

February 6, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2024 Rice Football Recruiting class wraps up on National Signing Day. Follow all the action here as the Owls close out the class.

National Signing Day marks the culmination of the 2024 Rice Football recruiting class. This live tracker will follow all the latest news and updates throughout the day, with further updates on the class as it’s finalized. If you’re not a subscriber yet, here’s your chance.

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As we did during the Early Signing Period, we’ll have a Live Blog up and running with updates throughout the day. (Not a subscriber, we’ve unlocked this post to give you a flavor of what to expect — live updates as soon as we get them).

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Which newcomers are program-changing talents? Who is the diamond in the rough? More to come. For the time being, let’s dig into the latest from National Signing Day, below.

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Filed Under: Featured, Football, Football Recruiting, Premium Tagged With: National Signing Day, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting

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