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37 Days: Redzone defense can only get better in 2018

July 19, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football needs to bulk up their defensive front, especially in the redzone. Few units have as much room for improvement in 2018 as the Owls.

There are few events more emotionally draining than watching your opponent march down the field, enter the redzone, and punch the ball into the endzone from close range. Forcing a field goal, although not the best outcome available to the defense, is at least a small victory. Rice needs to force a few more field goals in 2018 if they want to find a way to stay competitive for four full quarters.

Rice football allowed 37 redzone touchdowns in 2017. In 49 opportunities they held their opponents to a field goal nine times and came away with a paltry three stops. Their opponent’s scored on 93.9 percent of their red zone opportunities. Only 12 defenses in college football allowed their opponents points on 90 percent of their red zone chances.

Even the best defenses can’t keep their opponents from reaching the redzone entirely. Teams like Wisconsin, Alabama and Miami earned their stripes by clamping down in the final 20 yards, forcing field goals and creating turnovers. The Owls’ 75.5 percent opponent touchdown rate needs to creep back towards 60 percent, roughly the average mark for an FBS defense last season.

To make those improvements the Owls are going to have to get more physical. Head strength and conditioning coach Hans Straub will be instrumental in making inroads in that area. He joins the Owls from Stanford where he worked as the Director of Olympic Sports Performance. Straub has been in the strength and condition world for more than a decade, and the opportunity to see that experience pay off is at hand.

Better conditioning and smarter football should be enough to get the Owls back to the middle of the pack. They’re not going to turn into a lockdown defense overnight, but they’ll be headed in the right direction in 2018 with significant headway expected down the line.

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Filed Under: Football, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Countdown to kickoff, Rice Football

38 Days: Offensive help for the Owls is on the way

July 18, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football needs a jolt on offense in 2018. Head coach Mike Bloomgren has the experience and the know-how to make that happen.

There weren’t many teams worse on the offensive side of the ball than Rice in 2017. The Owls finished six spots above the worse scoring offense in the FBS, UTEP. Coincidentally, the Miners were the only team the Owls were able to beat last year. If Rice has their eyes on making strides in the win column they’ll need the offense to improve drastically.

Mike Bloomgren is the man for the job.

Bloomgren joins the Owls after five years as the offensive coordinator at Stanford. The difference between the Rice offense and the Stanford offense over that time was seismic. Beyond the obvious talent gap, the Cardinal frequently ran the ball effectively and put up points. They weren’t perfect, but they finished inside the top 50 in the nation three times in Bloomgren’s five years calling the shots. Rice, although they did boast a stronger offense in 2014, consistently lagged behind.

Team/Yr   Rice   Stanford
2013 62 45
2014 66 79
2015 87 18
2016 93 82
2017 125 38
Average 86.6 52.4

The low points for Stanford are noteworthy; even Bloomgren’s squads weren’t perfect. However, the upside should give fans hope. Stanford has the No. 38 offense in the nation last season. Rice hasn’t finished that high in the offensive rankings since Chase Clement took Conference USA by storm in 2008. Clement is walking through the door any time soon.

What Bloomgren did at Stanford can be replicated. He built around a strong running game with a quarterback that was able to methodically move the ball down the field. When quarterback K.J. Costello took over from Keller Chryst midway through the season the offense got even better. A little bit of mobility combined with top-level football IQ is all Bloomgren needs to build upon. Whichever quarterback he chooses, the Rice offense is in good hands.

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39 Days: Sustaining drives a key to finding offensive success

July 17, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has a decent amount of success on third down last season, but a tick up in those situations needs to be a focal point entering 2018.

Unless your offense consistently finds a way to take the top of the defense, converting on third down is a key piece of any offensive gameplan. Every coach will have a variety of plays and formations at his disposal for the sole purpose of gaining those three, seven or even 15 necessary yards and moving the chains. Offenses that can’t consistently convert on third down have to rely on chunk plays to avoid the down entirely.

Rice converted on 39 percent of their third down conversions last season. The Owls were just behind the national average of 40 percent conversions. While that’s a step up from their defensive stop rate on third down it still leaves room for improvement.

The teams that consistently turned third downs into first down predominantly were successful running the football, and not just when they had to. 10 of the top 16 third down offenses ranked inside the top 25 in rushing. Teams that run the ball frequently and with success often put themselves into a manageable down and distance. They also have the practice and the poise to get the two yards they need by handing the ball off to a trustworthy running back and letting him lower his shoulder and plow through the line.

Building up the offensive line has already been one of head coach Mike Bloomgren’s focal points. He signed four offensive lineman in the 2018 class. He’s already begun building his 2019 class around guard Regan Riddle and tight end Jack Bradley.

The ability to get the tough yards will define success. It will make the arrival of the physical brutality meant to coincide with newfound culture of the intellectual brutality which is already beginning to bleed into this program’s DNA. Whether it’s on the ground behind the revamped offensive line or through the air, converting on third down is a must.

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40 Days: Owls must find ways to get stops and force punts

July 16, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football fielded few punts last season, partly because of their inability to hold on third down. Will that change in 2018?

The Owls forced a grand total of 40 punts in 2017. If that number seems a bit low, it is. There was only one FBS team that forced fewer punts than Rice last season, Oregon State, who not-so-coincidentally also went 1-11.

This goes all the way back to the basic fundamentals of football. Run the ball and play defense. Last season Rice wasn’t fundamentally sound, and it showed. The Owls finished 90th in the nation in total defense and a miserable 125th in third-down defense. Opponents converted a staggering 48.6 percent of their attempts. The national average on third down was 38.6 percent, putting the Owls in the red by a sizable margin.

If you can’t get off the field, you can’t get your offense onto it. The defensive woes bled through to an offense that ranked 125th in the nation in scoring. And the problem compounded on itself. It’s a vicious cycle. The only way to fix it? Find a way to get stops on defense.

The best teams in the nation, as far as forcing punts go, average just north of seven punt attempts against per game. Combine that with a couple of turnovers, maybe the end of a half and you’re approaching 10 possession in which your opponent doesn’t score and you get the ball. The math adds up rather quickly, and sooner or later those numbers translate into wins.

Rice football has a laundry list of items that need to be changed as the program continues to progress under head coach Mike Bloomgren. A switch isn’t going to flip overnight; it’s going to be a process. One of those stepping stones, which could make a huge difference for the psyche of this team early on, is getting off the field on third down.

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2018 Houston Cougars Season Preview

July 15, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has the opportunity to claim a landmark upset early on in their 2018 season. Can they make enough plays to overcome the more talented Houston Cougars?

Major Applewhite saw mixed results in his inaugural campaign as the head coach of the Houston Cougars. After having his first game canceled by weather concerns, Houston beat Arizona and Rice to open the 2017 season. Defeating Arizona was an important statement win for the program, even if it came before the electrifying Khalil Tate was inserted at quarterback.

Houston would go on to finish the season 7-5. They were on the wrong end of four one-score decisions, only falling by double-digits once, a 45-17 shellacking at the hands of Tulsa.

Their marquee win, over Arizona, was close; the Rice game was not. Houston trounced the Owls 38-3, scoring all of their points before halftime. Game No. 41 in series history went to the Cougars, who hold the lead in the series 30-11. Rice hasn’t defeated the Cougars since 2010 and enters 2018 carrying a four-game losing streak to their cross-town rival.

Offense

Kyle Postma and Kyle Allen each saw meaningful time as the starting quarterback for the Cougars last season. Both of those passers are gone, leaving D’Eriq King as the only experienced quarterback on the roster. King appeared in 10 games last season. After Postma and Allen had their struggles and injuries, King was named the starter for the final four contests.

A converted wide-receiver, King adds athleticism to a competent arm. He had a career-best 141 rushing yards against Tulane and topped out at 330 yards through the air in a win over East Carolina. As long as he’s under center, Houston is going to be dangerous on offense. It was King that led Houston over undefeated USF, who were contenders for the AAC title entering the final week of the regular season.

Complementing King out of the backfield is former Texas transfer Duke Catalon. He never saw the field with the Longhorns but didn’t miss a beat when he got to Houston. Catalon possesses a curious combination of speed and power plus soft hands. He’s already caught 59 passes in two seasons at Houston, and that’s in addition to his 1,165 yards on the ground over the past two seasons. The 6-foot, 215-pound grinder has the potential to be a work-horse back, should Applewhite choose to use him that way.

The biggest question mark for Houston entering the season is the wide receiver position. Gone are Steven Dunbar and Linell Bonner, their top two receivers from a year ago. Their No. 3 pass catcher was D’Eriq King, but he’s slated to be the full-time quarterback. That leaves a pair of sophomores, Courtney Clark and Keith Corbin, who combined for just 23 catches, 399 yards and two touchdowns last season

Defense

The offense is going to be productive, but the defensive unit will be the difference maker for Houston in 2018. The Cougars return an upperclassmen starter at every position. Returning starters is a relatively bogus statistic, but in this case, the combination of experience and talent are enough to suggest the Cougars will be even better on defense this season than they were a year ago when the finished second in the AAC in yards per play allowed and fourth in total defense.

The preeminent reason for that success is future 2019 NFL Draft first round pick Ed Oliver. The junior-to-be made waves earlier this offseason when he announced his declaration for the draft. It’s not uncommon for underclassmen to know they’re jumping to the next level before the season, but Oliver’s year-ahead proclamation is a first.

Unfortunately for the rest of the opponents on the Cougars’ schedule, Oliver intends to play out his final season. A true contender for the Heisman Trophy, at least as much as any defensive player can be expected to contend, Oliver is a game-changer on every snap. He’ll anchor a defense that allowed just 23.8 points per game.

Behind Oliver, Emeke Egbule and Joeal Williams should provide strong build blocks at the linebacker position. Both saw increased roles last season and are primed to be season-long starters in 2018.  Pass defense, their Achilles heel last season is the biggest question mark. Jeremey Winchester and Isiah Johnson were serviceable on the outside, but their best bet to improve is continued pressure up the middle from Oliver and Co. in the front.

Schedule

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Filed Under: Football, Featured Tagged With: 2018 Rice Football Season Preview, Countdown to kickoff, Rice Football

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