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From JUCO to Rice Football: Why Blaze Alldredge’s ascent is just beginning

September 22, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football linebacker Blaze Alldredge quietly arrived in Houston two years ago, but he’s not flying under the radar anymore.

Most everyone in Conference USA circles knows who Blaze Alldredge is. Those who haven’t will know his name soon enough. The current Rice linebacker is a rising star in the conference, earning first-team All-Conference honors in the preseason, the first of a growing list of accolades that reach beyond the confines of the conference itself.

Alldredge’s superb play has earned him mention on the watch lists for the Butkus, Bednarik and Nagurski Awards this offseason. Alldredge is the only Conference USA Player in the running for all three awards. He’s no longer being spoken of as just being one of the best linebackers on his team. National outlets are paying close attention to Alldredge now as his stock continues to rise.

But it wasn’t always that way.

Not too long ago Alldredge sat in his junior college dorm room with somber thoughts. He thought about quitting, wondering if his doubters were right. Maybe he wasn’t as good as he thought he was.

“I wanted to have a real-life gut check, to ask myself if it was worth it to keep going.”

Those doubts filled his mind as he wrestled with his future. The under-recruited Floridian didn’t receive any FBS offers coming out of high school. Going the junior college route was his best option. So he went, hoping he’d make the best of another chance to prove himself.

He spent one season at Los Angeles Pierce College where he posted 88 tackles in 10 games. He was the third leading tackler on his team. It was a good start, but it didn’t raise his status to the level he had hoped it would. The stream of offers he had hoped would be forthcoming turned out to be a trickle. Again, he wondered but pressed on.

That was until Rice came calling late during the spring. The bulk of the semester had come and gone and most players had already made their plans for where they would play the next season. There weren’t many spots left to be had.

But Alldredge took a late flight, had a later than usual dinner with members of the coaching staff and went to bed prior to his last-minute visit. The next morning he showed up to the Brian Patterson Center ready to get to work.

Linebackers coach Scott Vestal remembers that meeting well. Vestal says he doesn’t like canned presentations that feel manufactured so instead of a fancy PowerPoint or prearranged cut up, he let Alldredge pick the session for them to go through together.

They sat and they watched the 2018 spring game, a game in which by Vestal’s own admission the linebackers underperformed. So they watched, critiquing the errors and talking through the breakdowns before Alldredge indicated the level of intensity wasn’t good enough. He could do better.

Vestal was sold. It wasn’t just the swagger — plenty of players have that — it was his level of detail. “Blaze notices things at such a rare level,” Vestal said adding that Alldredge “more than anyone I’ve ever seen in my life, sees the game through the coach’s eyes.”

That meeting, along with conversations stemming from that visit, prompted Rice to offer Alldredge a spot on their team, which he accepted.

At that point, it was already May. Always the underdog, Alldredge would have to hit the ground running.

Players were due to report to campus for workouts in a few weeks and most of the roster was already in place. Adding someone that late in the recruiting cycle in the era before the Transfer Portal was rare. As he’s proven himself to be time and time again, Alldredge was the exception.

That mental conversation he’d had with himself months ago had earned him an FBS scholarship. He rose from the bottom of the depth chart to second-string quickly. By the fourth game of the season, a road trip to Southern Miss, Alldredge was in the starting lineup.

An illness opened the door for him that day, but it was Alldredge who never let it swing shut.

He tallied nine tackles and the Owls’ first interception of the season that day. “I definitely look back on that and cringe a little bit that I could have played a lot better,” he remembers, “but I didn’t shrink under the light. I took advantage of my opportunity and I played well enough that I gave everybody the mindset that, ‘Okay, we need to see what this kid has and play him a little more.’”

By the time he cracked the starting lineup again his role was secure. His next start came against FIU four weeks later. He’s started every game since, a string of 18 contests which is expected to be extender further whenever the 2020 campaign begins.

Alldredge’s 21.5 tackles for a loss last season were the second-most in the nation. He finished half a TFL short of Rice’s all-time record set by Brian Womac in 2017. From JUCO to one of the nation’s best, Alldredge isn’t flying under the radar anymore.

The accolades are nice. Alldredge called the Butkus Trophy “an award every linebacker dreams of winning from a young age.” But the attention hasn’t shifted his focus. “I still feel like I have a lot to prove,” he said. “There’s a lot of people that don’t truly see and recognize the level that I’m at. And that’s on me to go out and show them.”

Alldredge has bet on himself from the beginning. He’s never been one to settle for where he’s at right now, constantly reaching for the next rung. He calls his expectations “realistic”. Whether or not that’s a fair representation rests in the eyes of the goal setter.

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To this point, Alldredge has constantly delivered. He’s put in the work in the weight room, cutting his body fat to jaw-dropping levels. He’s become a wizard in the film room, forcing his coaches to prepare even more diligently than normal to anticipate his inevitable questions. There’s always another gear, but it’s the same process.

Alldredge says he’s not seeking to do anything new. “The thing for me this season isn’t to do anything extra, do anything spectacular. It’s just to not miss anything, to make the plays that come to me and just do my job. And if I do that, and I help my team win games,” he said, “then everything else is going to come to me.”

A conference championship is the next objective on his list. From there, many believe he’ll have a chance to play on Sundays in the NFL. Those days may very well come. Alldredge aims to get there by being the best version of himself he can possibly be right now. And that’s not something he’s worried about at all.

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football Tagged With: Blaze Alldredge, Rice Football

Rice Football 2020: Owls in the NFL Week 2 Update

September 21, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football is well represented on 2020 NFL rosters. Here’s the latest from the NFL Owls in action in Week 2.

There are former Rice football players scattered across the NFL. Stay tuned each week for their game results and notables from each player.

Week 2 results

Cleveland (Sendejo) def Cincinnati (Covington), 35-30
Pittsburgh (Boswell, McDonald)
def. Denver (Anderson, Callahan), 26-21
Green Bay def. Detroit (Fox), 42-21
Baltimore def. Houston (Gaines), 33-16
Seattle (Willson) def. Patriots, 35-30

Offense

Calvin Anderson – OT, Broncos

Anderson was active for the Broncos’ Week 2 loss to the Steelers. The Broncos host the Bucs in Week 3.

Vance McDonald – TE, Steelers

McDonald was held to one catch in Week 2 against the Broncos, hauling in a three-yard reception on two targets. The Steelers host the Texans in Week 3.

Luke Willson – TE, Seahawks

Willson was active in the Seahawks’ thrilling win over the Patriots in Week 2 but did not see any passes thrown his way. The Seahawks host the Cowboys in Week 3.

Defense and Special Teams

Chris Boswell – K, Steelers

Boswell was perfect against the Broncos in Week 2, converting his lone field goal attempt from 21 yards and all three extra-point trys. The Steelers host the Texans in Week 3.

Bryce Callahan – CB, Broncos

Callahan had fives tackles and one tackle for a loss against the Steelers in Week 2. The Broncos host the Bucs in Week 3.

Christian Covington – DL, Bengals

Covington joined the Bengals on the eve of the regular season and has already become a fixture of Cincinnati’s defensive line. He played 59 percent of the snaps against the Browns with three tackles, including half a tackle for a loss. The Bengals visit the Eagles in Week 3.

Jack Fox – P, Lions

Fox put together another strong outing in his second pro appearance. He put two of his punts inside the 20 and averaged 54.2 yards on his five attempts with a long of 67 yards. His shortest punt of the day went 45 yards. The remainder went 50+. The Lions visit the Cardinals in Week 3.

Don't look now, but rookie Jack Fox has strung together a couple of top-notch performances!

Also Matt Haack had himself A DAY pic.twitter.com/a3TLjObVbq

— Puntalytics (@ThePuntRunts) September 20, 2020

Phillip Gaines – CB, Texans

Gaines had one tackle against the Ravens in Week 2. The Texans visit the Steelers in Week 3.

Andrew Sendejo – Saf, Browns

Sendejo was one of two Browns to play all 92 defensive snaps on Thursday Night Football against the Bengals.  He led the team with 10 tackles. The Browns host Washington in Week 3.

More Owls in the NFL

From practice squads to current free agents, there are others Owls on the cusp of returning to active rosters. Find more detail on current contractual agreements and former Rice football players waiting for their next opportunity here.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: NFL Owls, Rice Football

Conference USA Football 2020: Week 3 C-USA Roundup

September 20, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Conference USA Football was back in action this weekend. Here’s the latest from the teams on the gridiron in Week 3.

Team Week 3 Result Week 4
Charlotte  at UNC CANCELED vs Georgia State
FAU at Georgia Southern CANCELED vs S. Florida
FIU — OFF —  — at Liberty
LA Tech at Southern Miss W, 31-30 vs HBU
Marshall vs App State W, 17-7 — OFF —
MTSU vs Troy L, 47-14 at UTSA
North Texas vs SMU L, 65-35 at Houston
Rice — OFF —  — — OFF —
Southern Miss vs LA Tech L, 31-30 vs Tulane
UAB — OFF —  — at S. Alabama
UTEP vs ACU W, 17-13 at ULM
UTSA vs SFA W, 24-10 vs MTSU
WKU vs Liberty L, 30-24 — OFF —

Notable Week 3 results – Standings

Have Ya Heard about the Herd?

It was hard not to get exciting when freshman quarterback Grant Wells dazzled in a 59-0 debut win over Eastern Kentucky. But knocking off a ranked App State squad in his second career game was an encore better than most could have imagined. Not only is Marshall 2-0, but they’ve also solidified themselves as one of the frontrunners in the East.

Don’t give us Liberty

With several Power 5 conferences shutting off their non-conference slate, Liberty paired up with several Conference USA football squads for games this year. The Flames will play FIU next week and Southern Miss later in the year in games that might be more interesting than expected after Liberty dropped 30 points on what most expected to be a stingy Western Kentucky defense.

Mayhem continues in Hattiesburg

Southern Miss parted ways with head coach Jay Hopson last week after an embarrassing loss to South Alabama. For much of their Week 3 game with Louisiana Tech, it looked like the switch to interim man Scottie Walden would prove to smooth things out. Then Bulldogs’ quarterback Luke Anthony found Griffin Hebert for a toe-touching go-ahead touchdown in the final seconds to extend the dour mood in Hattiesburg for at least one more week.

This is definitely a (potential game-winning) TD for Louisiana Tech pic.twitter.com/v81h18yGDU

— Yahoo Sports College Football (@YahooSportsCFB) September 20, 2020

Week 4 storylines

National Spotlight

One of the perks of the slimmer slate of games this fall has been more opportunities in the spotlight for Conference USA football. It hasn’t all been positive — some of it has been downright dismal. UAB’s matchup with South Alabama on ESPN on Thursday will afford the Blazers a chance to do what Southern Miss couldn’t do and do it with a large audience.

HBU stops before others start

Schedules have been strange in 2020 and you don’t have to look much further than a Houston Baptist team who faces their second C-USA opponent next week. A game against Louisiana Tech completes a three-game slate for the Huskies, which also included losses to North Texas and Texas Tech earlier in September. Next week HBU will finish their season on the same weekend FIU begins.

UTS-Ahead of schedule?

New head coach Jeff Traylor turned some heads when the Roadrunners knocked off Texas State in overtime in his head coaching debut. Unfortunately, he won’t get a chance to knock off a ranked Memphis team after that game was canceled on Saturday. Still, beating Middle Tennessee would elevate UTSA to 3-0. That’s a fantastic start no matter the circumstances.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Conference USA, Conference USA football

College Football: Odds suggest a bumpy 2020 season

September 19, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

The past few weeks have served as a stark reminder that no matter how many precautions are taken, no college football game can be guaranteed.

When this post goes live on Saturday morning, 16 college football games will have been postponed since the season began three weeks ago. At the conclusion of today, 49 games will have been completed as scheduled. Simple math says that’s a rate of roughly one in four scheduled contests never making it to the field.

Rice football’s crosstown rival Houston was the latest to experience that staggering statistic firsthand. The Cougars were meant to play Baylor today in one of the quickest scheduling maneuvers in recent college football memory. The game was organized and planned in a little less than a week’s time. Less than 24 hours before kickoff, that game had been squelched too.

Houston’s equipment truck was already at the stadium.

We were ready and we will stay ready… #GoCoogs #%$@&$ pic.twitter.com/wAtINo1as9

— Dana Holgorsen (@Holgorsendana) September 18, 2020

Houston head coach Dana Holgorsen couldn’t spell it out on social media, but his non-so-subtle collection of characters conveyed a frustration mounting among coaches, players and fans alike. For whatever reason, this game just wasn’t meant to be.

Back to the math.

If rapid testing helps limit the impacts of transmission and contact tracing, that 25% number will be too high. But if the impacts of positive cases begin to tick upward as the number of games increase, it could be too low. The best we can do for the time being is use the data we have now as a proxy for what is to come.

If this rate of cancelations continues, the chances of having a season that looked anything like the “best case scenario” is slim. Many conferences have built in some buffer room and flexibility, but that would fix multiple cancelations per school. Eventually, the calendar runs out.

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Given any 10-game schedule with a 25% cancelation rate, a team would have roughly a 5% chance of playing all 10 games. On average, every 10-game schedule would end up with two to three cancelations. That’s sobering.

Those that do play could find themselves in situations like Austin Peay: who played their first game of the year without any healthy long snappers and relied on quarterback pooch punts. Or Texas State, which swapped quarterbacks because from game one to game two because of precautions. It’s going to be weird.

Some teams will be more fortunate than others. The odds suggest somewhere around a half dozen of the teams playing this fall will complete their entire schedules as-is. Some others will be on the other end, losing large chunks of their seasons. It’s going to be strange, but that’s the reality of playing college football under these conditions.

Be grateful for the college football you do get to watch this year. From Campell vs Coastal Carolina on national TV to a marquee SEC matchup in October and everything in between. If your team is playing, cherish it. There’s no guarantee they’ll be playing next Saturday, no matter what the schedule says.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: college football, COVID-19

Rice Football: 2021 Wide Receiver Peyton Stevenson commits to Owls

September 17, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2021 Rice Football recruiting class has picked up their first commitment from a wide receiver. Alabama native Peyton Stevenson has committed to the Owls.

Rice football has been on the hunt for pass catchers to add to the 2021 class for some time. Tight end Jaggar Hebeisen was one of the first in the fold during the spring, but the Owls had yet to secure a pledge from a wide receiver as the calendar crept out of the summer and towards the fall.

Then Rice offered Demopolis, AL wide receiver Peyton Stevenson on Sep. 10. A week later the big-bodied pass catcher had pledged his commitment to the Owls. Stevenson will fill a pressing need on the outside, giving Rice some more options to “rebound” and outjump defenders in the redzone. Brad Rozner has taken up that role for the time being, but he won’t be around forever.

With his decision, Stevenson becomes the second quickest from offer to commit in the 2021 recruiting class. Only Ethan Onianwa who committed two days after his offer was quicker. The rest of class, which is likely more typical of college recruiting these days, took weeks to sift through their options. Stevenson clearly knew what he was after an made the jump.

“The academic excellence as well as the high caliber football is what initially turned my head,” Stevenson said, “I was also comfortable with the coaching staff because of the way they communicated and the effort they put into me and my family. I felt like it was a great opportunity, and I’m glad to be a part of the family!”

Premium: 2021 Rice Football Recruiting Offer and Commitment Tracker

Rice also continued their trend of identifying talent early. The Owls were the first FBS program to offer Stevenson, who also had offers from Jacksonville State, North Alabama and Culver-Stockton and the time of his Rice commitment.

Versatility is a huge plus in the Rice football offense. Stevenson’s playmaking ability with the ball in his hands as a quarterback will only aid to what he’s able to do as a wide receiver. This was a good pickup for the Owls who now have 12 commitments and a Top 5 class among their Conference USA peers.

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Football Recruiting Tagged With: Peyton Stevenson, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting

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