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What’s about Rice Football seniors and eligibility for 2021? All-American Q&A

December 24, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

All-American Level subscribers on Patreon get access to a monthly Q&A with me. This update focuses on eligibility and potential Rice football returning seniors.

Q. Can Collins come back since he only played 3 games?

Q. Do you expect any senior/grad transfers to come back next year?

A. There were a couple of questions to this effect in my most recent mailbag ask, so I decided to address them together, starting with the eligibility rules for the 2020 season and leading into how that impacts Rice football specifically in 2021 and beyond.

First, the 2020 season did not count against the eligibility of anyone who played football this fall.

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Filed Under: Premium, Archive, Football Tagged With: Q&A, Rice Football

Rice Football 2020 Special Teams Player of the Year: Charlie Mendes

December 24, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Charlie Mendes impressed in his debut season. The redshirt freshmen punter is our 2020 Rice Football Special Teams Player of the Year.

Before former Rice football special teams coordinator Pete Lembo left Houston to take a job with Memphis, he helped secure a commitment from punter Charlie Mendes. The California native was a member of the 2019 recruiting class who elected to come to South Main even though Lembo had moved on. That decision proved fortuitous for the Owls.

Mendes didn’t play a snap during his freshman year. His big leg caught an occasional eye in practice, but the Owls didn’t have need for the newcomer just yet. His time would come, though. After a year of waiting and learning, it was Mendes’ job to lose this spring. Not only did he keep the job, he put together an impressive season. Despite all the challenges that came with the bumpy road the Owls were forced to take, Mendes was steadfast.

When Mendes first stepped foot onto the turf at Rice Stadium in a live game the calendar had already blown past September into late October. Most teams around the country had played several football games, but Rice football was in the midst of their season opener against Middle Tennessee. Mendes took the snap and blasted a 58-yard bomb. Welcome to college, kid.

From that point onward, Mendes has been a fixture on Rice special teams. He averaged 42.8 yards per punt with a long of 59-yards. For those that don’t eat, sleep, and breathe punting statistics, the Owls’ redshirt freshmen punter had a good year. Perhaps not a Ray Guy Award-caliber season, but a surefooted debut in the midst of a season that was anything but normal.

Before the year began, special teams coordinator Drew Svoboda liked what he’d seen from the Owls’ new punter. “He’s got long levers,” he said, “He’s got great biomechanics to punt.” The 58-yarder out of the gate backed up those initial assertions. It also kept any competition from incoming transfer Collin Riccitelli at bay.

Most football fans don’t pay much attention to the punter unless there’s a misstep in a crucial moment. But the reliable foot of Mendes may have gone further under the radar than usual because of the bevy of riches the Owls’ have had at the punter position in recent years.

One of Mendes’ predecessors, Jack Fox, is a Pro Bowl punter in the NFL this season. After taking a redshirt season of his own following a stellar college campaign, Fox continues to wow with his leg. Following Fox at Rice was the tandem of Chris Barnes and Adam Nunez who pulled off one of the more spectacular shared punting seasons in recent memory, splitting the long distance and short-range duties.

And then there’s Mendes, who took over following that lengthy list of successful punting seasons and didn’t miss a beat.

On a per punt basis, Mendes put 42.9 percent of his punts inside the 20-yard line this year. Fox averaged 38 percent such punts during his three-year Rice career. Mendes put one of 21 punts into the endzone for a touchback. Nunez and Barnes had a touchback apiece in 2019. Fox averaged one touchback on roughly every 10 tries, twice the rate of Mendes.

As good as Rice has been on special teams in three years under head coach Mike Bloomgren, it hasn’t been nearly as smooth of a ride at any other facet of the third phase. Rice muffed punts in three consecutive games this year. Place kicking was good, albeit with a few notable, painful bad bounces. The Owls’ only return touchdown was called back via penalty. But punting, punting was never a problem. Because of Mendes.

Which brought to mind another conversation with Svoboda following spring practice. “When you’re back there punting in practice,” Svoboda said of Mendes, “a hundred guys seem to be staring at every punt, so it’s pretty easy to gain or lose credibility with your teammates pretty quick as a specialist. He rose to the challenge.”

Both in practice and when the lights turned on, Mendes delivered, again and again. He was named to the Conference USA All-Freshman team for his efforts. If the bar was high, Mendes held it there. The latest in a growing lineage of punters, he’ll have an opportunity to further engrave his place on the list in seasons to come.

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Filed Under: Football, Archive Tagged With: Charlie Mendes, Rice Football, The Roost Awards

Rice Football 2020 Offensive Newcomer of the Year: Khalan Griffin

December 23, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

After rising through the ranks and making the most of his opportunity, Khalan Griffin is our 2020 Rice Football Offensive Newcomer of the Year.

A year removed from his first carry as a Rice Owl, Khalan Griffin was on crutches. A leg injury suffered in the first game of his senior season shortened his high school career, but not before he would amass 208 rushing yards, hobbled, in his second game before being shut down.

Touching twice the century mark on one leg was impressive. But it wouldn’t be the last time Griffin fought the odds and compiled an absurd state line. Healed up and back to 100 percent, Griffin hit the ground running at Rice as soon as he could.

He was attentive in preseason Zoom sessions, working to learn an offensive far more complex than any he’d run before. It was tough sledding. When he arrived on campus, he was buried on the depth chart, just like most of his fellow freshmen classmates. But Griffin didn’t stay there.

By way of effort and opportunity, Griffin and fellow freshman running back Kobie Campbell were the only two healthy running backs during the Owls’ first scrimmage of fall camp. That would mean a heavy workload for Griffin, the first big test of his collegiate career.

He carried the ball 32 times that Saturday morning, racking up 247 yards on the ground, 165 of which came after contact. One of the stingiest run defenses in Conference USA was gashed by a true freshman who, admittedly, was still learning the ropes.

Rice had the No. 3 rushing defense in the conference this fall.  One player surpassed 100 yards on the ground against the Owls all season. Preseason all-conference rusher Brenden Knox averaged a meager 3.8 yards per carry on 20 attempts, tallying 76 yards against the stout Rice front seven. Griffin had more than double that after initial contact in his first padded scrimmage. The bar had been set.

Immediately following the big day, head coach Mike Bloomgren opened up his post-practice press conference with comments on Griffin. “Khalan Griffin was dominant again today. It didn’t matter what defense he was going against. It didn’t matter what offensive line was blocking for him. He just found a way to make every run violent,” Bloomgren said. It was high praise for a young player.

Then the games arrived. The backup to starter Juma Otoviano out of the gate, Griffin provided fresh legs in the Owls’ fourth-quarter rally against Middle Tennessee in their season opener. His first carry of the fourth quarter went for 10-yards. Then he exploded for a 20-yard scamper up the gut. Rice would go on to pull within one score following a touchdown pass on that possession.

Two games, and almost a month later, Griffin started his first career game. On the road against North Texas, Griffin ran for 72 yards and caught two passes for 45 yards, surpassing 100 all-purpose yards for the first time in his career. Rice wouldn’t win the game, but the moment wasn’t lost on the grateful freshman.

“I want to start off by saying thank you to my coaches and the whole running back room because without them, I don’t think I’d be standing in front of you today,” Griffin said when asked about his first start. “I also want to give a hats off to Juma [Otoviano], Ari [Broussard], Kobie [Cambpell] and Jawan [King].”

Griffin would lead Rice football in rushing in the abridged 2020 season. He finished second on the team to only Austin Trammell in all-purpose yards. His first collegiate touchdown managed to elude him, despite a first down run against Marshall that was stopped at the one-yard line.

Beyond that, the rest of his freshman campaign went extremely well. Griffin had three starts in five games. He ran for 249 yards and carved out a key role in the offense. His future is bright.

When asked what the pecking order would be in the backfield before the season, Bloomgren was noncommittal. He went as far as to say Griffin “took advantage of an opportunity.” What would transpire in the weeks and months to come was far from decided. Griffin made those decisions easier with his commitment and effort, both on and off the field.

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Filed Under: Football, Archive Tagged With: Khalan Griffin, Rice Football, The Roost Awards

Rice Football 2020 Defensive Newcomer of the Year: Miles McCord

December 22, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Thrust into a starting job, corner Miles McCord made the most of it, earning the title of 2020 Rice Football Defensive Newcomer of the Year.

McCord began his collegiate career at Gold West College in 2018. He was a rotational defensive back that year, but did enough to give himself a chance to play at the D1 level. He joined the Rice football team in May of 2019, shortly before offseason workouts began.

When McCord arrived, he was a work-in-progress player, a guy that wasn’t expected to be in the starting lineup any time soon. He was a depth piece with good athleticism and untapped potential, a raw talent, ready to be molded.

McCord appeared in four games his first season at South Main, primarily playing on special teams. By the time spring ball arrived in 2020, he hadn’t cracked the two-deep. The casual fan wouldn’t have paid much attention to McCord, No. 24, but his coaches noticed.

They noticed his intellect, the way he understood the scheme and where he was supposed to be. They noticed him come off the field during practices, identifying missed assignments and improper reads. By the time fall camp finally came around, McCord had made a tremendous leap from where he was as a late-summer flier more than a year ago.

Meanwhile, transfers and injuries ravaged what was expected to be a rather deep position group. Tyrae Thornton was gone. Collin Whitaker was off the roster. Andrew Bird was hurt. Jason White was hurt. Tre’shon Devones would be in and out of the lineup as he battled injuries of his own. Newcomer Sean Fresch played in one game before missing the rest of the regular season, injured.

At times it felt like McCord was the only man left standing. At times, he was.

“His confidence is growing. He’s mastered the defense,” cornerbacks coach Gerard Wilcher said midway through the season. Wilcher noted that McCord was behaving much more like a veteran in terms of his understanding and communication than the junior college player the Owls’ had initially recruited.

If McCord fell upward into the starting corner job, he didn’t stick there by default. As his teammates returned to practice, almost of all which fall above him in the original pecking order, it was McCord who stayed on the field. McCord was the only corner on the roster to appear in every game the Owls’ played in their abridged 2020 season. No other corner played in more than three. McCord played—and started—every contest.

McCord had the Owls’ first interception of the season, snagging a deflected pass from Southern Miss’ Jack Abraham late in the first quarter of that game. The redzone pick led to a Rice field goal on the ensuing drive, the first points in what would be the Owls’ first win. McCord’s takeaway also played a role in one of the team’s most impressive defensive statistics: Rice allowed zero points in the first quarter all season.

It wasn’t always perfect, but McCord proved himself as a trustworthy starting corner in the bumpiest season he and the Owls will likely ever experience. He had two passes defended along with the interception. His 14 tackles were the most of any corner and the 10th most of any player on the team, an impressive mark for someone who plays as far away from the ball as corners typically do.

But the most impressive contribution McCord produced in 2020 can’t be found on the box score. He was a tremendous asset in coverage, limiting opportunities for opposing offenses. Rice needs true man-on-man cover corners to execute their defensive scheme. The Owls had exhausted all other options. They desperately needed McCord to rise to the occasion. And he did. Again, and again, and again.

McCord’s rise is a feel good story. He’s another junior college player turned into a Conference USA mainstay by this coaching staff. But more than anything, he kept an elite defense operating at the same level through a year flush with challenges. When Rice needed someone to hold the line, McCord stepped in and elevated the play of those around him. The Owls will be glad to have him patrolling the boundary for years to come.

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Filed Under: Football, Archive Tagged With: Miles Mccord, Rice Football, The Roost Awards

The Roost Podcast | Ep 67 – Rice Football Recruiting Early Signing Period Review

December 21, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2021 Rice football recruiting class signed its first members this past week. We dig into the class and the storytelling from the Rice creative team.

The Early Signing Period is in the book and the 2021 Rice Football recruiting class is off to a great start. Carter and Matthew dedicate this episode of the podcast to the incoming Owls, their strengths and how they fit with the roster as its currently constructed.

Before getting to X’s and O’s, it seemed fitting to talk to the Owls’ own storytellers. The creative team of Caroline Hall and Trey Jackson took us behind the scenes on #FlightSchool21, telling us how the design elements came together and what it was like sharing this team’s story through a wild year.

You can always find previous episodes on the podcast page. For now, give a listen to Episode 67.

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Episode Notes

  • Housekeeping — Don’t miss this opportunity to subscribe on Patreon. Get two months free when you subscribe to an annual membership today. There’s a lot more in store for this football program, including all our Early Signing Period content. Get the scoop on the Owls’ 2021 class and more now.
    Become a Patron!
  • Interview: Rice Creative – Caroline Hall and Trey Jackson 
    • What goes into the graphics we see on social media?
    • Behind the scenes on the Marshall speech and the Early Signing Period
    • Takeaways and learnings from content creation in 2020
  • 2021 Rice Football Recruiting Class – Early Signing Period Review
    • Offensive evaluations
    • Defensive evaluations
    • Wish list for the rest of the class
    • What will scholarship restrictions have on future classes?

Where can you find us?

Download and subscribe to The Roost Podcast on any of your favorite podcast providers. The show is available on iTunes, GooglePlay, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn and PodBean. Please consider leaving a review wherever you listen.

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

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Filed Under: Podcast, Archive, Featured, Football, Football Recruiting Tagged With: podcast, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting

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