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43 Days: Owls must play penalty-free football in 2018

July 13, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football was a relatively penalty-free team in 2017, coming close to a school record in fewest infractions. Can they continue that disciplined play in 2018?

There are a handful of teams in college football that can play sloppy games and still win. Talent can outweigh discipline, and it often does. Rice football isn’t quite at that level, yet. If the Owls have a messy game, they’ll lose more often than not. Case in point: Rice’s lone win in 2017 came against UTEP, a game in which they committed just four penalties for 31 yards.

Rice committed 53 penalties in 2018, coming close to their fewest penalties ever committed in a single season. That mark, 43 penalties, was achieved three times – 1961, 1966 and 1968.

The Owls were more discipline in 2017 than year’s prior, but it wasn’t enough to pad turn close games into wins. A relatively clean 1-win season won’t turn into a 6-win season unless the Owls can keep the penalties down once again.

Rice football ranked 14th in the nation in penalties per game in 2017. Their 4.4 transgressions per contest was the second-best rate in Conference USA and the Owls cleanest season in a decade. However, that season might have been the outlier. And if it takes an outlier-type season to win one game it might take perfection on the penalty front to get the Owls where they want to go this season. It’s a good thing that’s not a linear relationship.

Head coach Mike Bloomgren saw similar results in his five seasons as the offensive coordinator at Stanford. While there the Cardinal hung near six infractions per game, more or less the same rate the Owls produced over the same time period.

Year Stanford Rice
2013 5.3 5.3
2014 5.8 5.9
2015 5.6 7
2016 6.5 5.8
2017 5.8 4.4

Bloomgren was only responsible for the offensive side of the ball at Stanford. Now he’s the captain of the whole ship at Rice. He’s got plenty of things to juggle as he enters a new season. It’s going to include a learning curve, but maintaining discipline on both sides of the ball should remain a priority for the Owls in 2018.

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44 Days: Chase Clement owns school-record 44 passing touchdown season

July 12, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Chase Clement owns the entirety of the Rice football passing record books including throwing a school-best 44 touchdown passes as a senior in 2008.

The Rice football passing record books are dominated by one name: Chase Clement. In a four year career spanning 2005 to 2008 he accomplished things at South Main that no soul has come anywhere close to equaling. His 44 touchdown passes in 2008 broke his own record of 29 touchdown passes in 2007. Driphus Jackson, sitting at third all-time, threw for 24 touchdowns in 2014.

It wasn’t just one or two productive seasons for Clement at Rice. He remains the only player in Owls history to top 6,200 passing yards. Clement threw for 9,785 yards in his career. He holds the school records for total touchdown passes (99), quarterback rushing touchdowns (25) and is third all-time with a 60.0 percent completion percentage (minimum 300 passes).

The numbers were impressive by themselves, but the awe is amplified when one considers the situation around him. As a freshman in 2005, he was a part of Ken Hatfield‘s last season at Rice, a 1-10 season. Hatfield gave way to Todd Graham who left Rice after one season for Tulsa. Clement was on his third coach in three years when David Bailiff took control of the program in 2007.

As the change intensified Clement got better and better. He improved in every significant passing metric every season of his collegiate career. As a freshman, he completed 42.7 percent of his passes for 582 yards, 4.7 yards per attempt and five touchdown passes. Three years late he completed 66.5 percent of his passes for 4,119 yards, 8.4 yards per attempt and the aforementioned 44 touchdown passes.

Mike Bloomgren’s offense doesn’t figure to be pass happy, but it’s worth noting his experience on staff at Stanford with Andrew Luck. He’s an offensive guy and has worked with one of the best college quarterbacks ever to play the game. That can only be a good thing for the Owls moving forward.

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45 Days: Owls searching for depth after 45 different tacklers in 2017

July 11, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

45 different players registered at least one tackle for Rice football in 2017. Who will step up for the Owls this coming season?

One of the glaring deficiencies of the Rice football team in 2017 was a top-heavy defense. After you got past Emmanuel Ellerbee, who led the team in tackles with 95, the Owls got thin, fast. Not only is Ellerbee out of eligibility, so too are the Owl’s four leading tacklers from last season. That leaves a lot of questions that need to be addressed going forward.

In addition to Ellerbee, Rice will have to replace Brian Womac, Destri White, D.J. Green and J.T. Ibe. Those five players combined for 282 tackles, 30 tackles for a loss and 11.5 sacks. All told, that’s 55.6 percent of the team’s tackles out the door. That leaves a gaping hole in the defense and plenty of opportunity for some moderately experienced players to step up.

Even with those big departures, the Owls won’t be left empty-handed. After the top four, the Owls return the vast majority of their defensive starters and a few key depth pieces. Senior linebacker Nick Uretsky is the only one that saw any semblance of meaningful time in 2017 that won’t be back next season. That leaves coach Mike Bloomgren with a new challenge: development.

Returning starters are a nice idea, but improvements in record will only go as far as the improvements in talent on the field. The talent profile should continue to climb under the new coaching staff — Bloomgren has already begun to bring his own recruits in — but only a handful of them will be expected to make sizable contributions this season. If Rice is going to take a step forward, someone on the defensive side of the ball (or two) is going to have to make major strides in 2018.

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46 Days: When will Owls add to their 46 seasons of .500 or better?

July 10, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has seen spurts of winning spanning more than a century of competition, but they’ve struggled to find sustained success. Can that change any time soon?

Beyond reaching the mountaintop and bringing home conference championships, new Rice football head coach will be tasked with one primary objective: consistency. Rice is entering its 105th season of college football. In that span, they’ve had 46 seasons in which they finished .500 or better.

Reaching 6-6 should be this program’s baseline. They’ll have better years and win some conference titles. They’ll have worse years and struggle to 3 or 4 wins. But by and large, they should be averaging somewhere around seven .500 seasons every decade. That level of consistency hasn’t existed at Rice since the 1950’s and the end of the Jess Neely era.

In the decades following the Owls haven’t stayed close to .500 for long:

 Decade .500+ seasons
 2010’s   3
 2000’s   3
 1990’s   4
 1980’s   0
 1970’s   2
 1960’s   3

Since 1960, Rice football has won 35.6 percent of their games. The good ‘ol days were good, but finding a way to tread water will be a tremendous accomplishment in itself. That takes investment, and that’s something that the university has taken seriously since the arrival of athletic director Joe Karlgaard. Bringing in a respected coordinator and recruiter like Bloomgren speaks volume’s about his intentionality and the focus on rebuilding Rice into what it once was.

Winning cures all ailments. And the administration has put a staff in place which they believe can reach that end goal — it just might be a messy process. Rice has been down for longer than many would like to admit. Despite a few positive blips on the radar, there’s plenty of work to be done. Bloomgren and his group will be given time to rebuild the program in the way they best see fit, but they’ll truly be starting from square one.

Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

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47 Days: Rice stadium needs to fill its 47,000 seats

July 9, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football stadium has the capacity for 47 thousand fans, but the Owls have struggled to fill it up over the last several years.

Old Rice Stadium held less than 37,000 people. While it served its purpose at the time, the defending Southwest Conference Champions needed something grander. The Owls historic 1949 season included an undefeated conference record, a Cotton Bowl win and a No. 5 ranking in the final AP Poll. The banner year led to the proposal and construction of a brand new stadium which was ready for the season opener next September — the Owls won.

That new stadium was built to seat 70,000 people. At the time, it was the second-largest stadium in the SWC, trailing only the Cotton Bowl in size. Since it’s creation it hosted Super Bowl VII (1974), the Bluebonnet Bowl (1959-67, 85-56) and the Houston Oilers (1965-67). In 2006 tarps were brought in, reducing the normal seating capacity to 47,000.

Even the reduced seating has been more than enough since it was installed. According to the NCAA’s latest figures, Rice brought in 96,770 in total attendance last season. When averaged across the Owls’ five home games that comes out to 19,354 attendees per game. Filling all 70,000 seats is a long way off, but the new direction of the program and the home game against Houston should get the Owls headed in the right direction on the attendance front.

As recently as 2016 the Owls’ student section was setting attendance records. The 1,830 students that came to the Owls opener against Baylor that year were the most at a single home game since 2008. Many of those same students are still around. They, along with some new classmates, can help jumpstart a new era of full stadiums for Rice football. It’s not going to happen overnight, but there’s plenty of room in the future.

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