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2024-2025 Rice Women’s Basketball Season Preview

October 16, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Expectations are high for the 2024-2025 Rice women’s basketball season following an NCAA Tournament appearance under now fourth-year head coach Lindsay Edmonds.

Rice women’s basketball has hit its stride under Lindsay Edmonds, raising the bar in each successive season with her at the helm of the program, culminating in an NCAA Tournament appearance last season. That taste has everyone on the roster — which returns the vast majority of its key players, sans one — eager for an encore this coming season.

“This is the most veteran, the most mature team that we’ve had since I’ve been here,” Edmonds said. With that experience comes a different level of urgency and an even greater sense of purpose. “We’re going faster and the expectations are just higher,” Edmonds declared.

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Filed Under: Archive, Basketball, Premium, Women's Athletics Tagged With: Aniah Alexis, Dominique Ennis, Emily Klaczek, Hailey Adams, Jazzy Owens-Barnett, Jill Twiehaus, Kennedy Clifton, Malia Fisher, Maya Bokunewicz, Rice Women's basketball, Season Preview, Shelby Hayes, Sussy Ngulefac, Trinity Gooden, Victoria Flores

Rice Football 2024: Tulane presser quotes and depth chart

October 15, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Next up for Rice football: Tulane. Here’s what Mike Bloomgren had to say about the matchup and a few depth chart notes.

Head coach Mike Bloomgren and a set of players met with the media for their customary weekly availability. They recapped the UTSA game and the bye week then looked ahead at their upcoming matchup with Tulane.

More: Game Preview: Rice Football vs Tulane

We touch on those items, then dig into the Rice football depth chart and what the team looks like heading into the weekend. First, the quotes:

Press Conference Quotes

“I thought we showed up and played incredibly hard for the whole game. I still believe we have a lot of work to do to be the program we want to be, but we’re on the right track, and that’s a good thing” – Mike Bloomgren on the team’s performance agianst UTSA

“You thought with Michael Pratt going away, there would be a real drop off at the quarterback position and this redshirt quarterback is making the game look really easy… Darian Mensah is playing incredible football right now and he looks like anything but a freshman.” – Mike Bloomgren on Tulane quarterback Darian Mensah

“Enoch [Gota]’s a big part of our team, we’re just at a point now where we’ve got to go with who is hotter in practice because they’ve both had oportunities where they’ve come through big time for us in games and they’ve both had times where they didn’t get the job done in games. So as we continue to make it a meritocracy, we’re going to give Tim [Horn] another chance.” – Mike Bloomgren’s on the change at kicker

“I think it’s something that we can carry over from this past week, being able to stop the run early, not let them get going, not let them find the key plays that worked to attack us with.” – Linebacker Myron on the team’s approach against Tulane

“Tulane’s an amazing team. I think you look forward to those games… You see them and you’re like, ‘I can’t wait to play that game’. Playing these teams in a good environment like in their stadium is always something you look forward to” – Running back Dean Connors on playing Tulane

Depth Chart

Rice football

Depth Chart Notes

The most notable change on the offensive depth chart this week was the reinsertion of John Long into the starting offensive line group. That’s something we’ll be monitoring during the week of practice. To see who the favorite to suit up for the Owls at that spot against Tulane, make sure you’re subscribed on Patreon and looking for practice notes later in the week.

On defense, Daveon Hook slides over from backing up Tyson Flowers at the free safety position to manning the viper spot. In a defense that relies on the flexibility of its players so much, particularly in the secondary, this reflects the desire to get the Owls’ best players on the field at all times. Practically, that won’t be too much different than how Rice football attacked this position in their game against UTSA. Additionally, DJ Arkansas returns to his backup spot in the linebacker room where he previously was left off the depth chart with an injury.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: press conference notes, Rice Football

Rice Football 2024 Game Preview: Tulane

October 13, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football hits the road this week to take on Tulane. How to watch, key stats, x-factor picks and more.

While Tulane was on bye last weekend Rice football picked up its first conference win, rallying in the fourth quarter to stun UTSA at the final whistle. Here’s everything you need to know about the matchup between Rice and Tulane.

Kickoff time | 2:30 PM CT 
Venue | Yulman Stadium – New Orleans, LA
TV | ESPN+ (Viewing Guide)
Radio | Varsity Radio App (Online)

Audio / Visual Preview

We’ll preview Rice football vs Tulane on this week’s episode of the Blue and Gray Preview Show, kicking off live on Wednesday on the Rice Athletics YouTube channel. Look for a recap of the game on the site afterward as well as on The Roost Podcast, which should be released early next week.

Sizing up the contenders

Tulane (2-0) is one of five teams still unbeaten in AAC play with eyes on a conference championship game appearance, but they’re a few wins behind Army (5-0) and Navy (3-0). Losing ground to those red-hot programs now wouldn’t eliminate those title game dreams, but it would make them harder to grasp. Keeping pace is imperative for the Green Wave, especially as a home favorite.

On the other sideline, Rice football (1-2) is trying to will themselves back from the brink. Upsetting UTSA was a good start and while nobody would fault the Owls for losing this one, another upset this week would officially put this team back on the map. Head coach Mike Bloomgren has knocked off conference heavyweights before. He needs to find a way to do it again.

Series History

All Time | Rice leads, 20-16-1
Last Five | Rice leads, 3-2
Last Meeting | Home 2023, Tulane won 30-28

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Rice Football Stat Notables

Passing | Warner – 134/217 (61.8 percent), 1302 yards, 9 TD, 6 INT
Rushing | Connors – 63 carries, 396 yards (6.3 yards per carry), 6 TD / Atkins – 24 carries, 158 yards (6.6 yards per carry), 2 TD
Receiving | Sykes – 31 receptions, 378 yards (12.2 yds/rec), 3 TD / Campbell – 15 receptions, 150 yards (10.0 yds/rec), 1 TD / Connors – 34 receptions, 248 yards (7.3 yds/rec), 1 TD
Tackles | Fresch/Morris – 31, Taylor – 28, Looes – 27
Pass Breakups | Fresch – 5, Ahoia – 3, Taylor -2 
Interceptions | Flowers/Williams/Mutombo – 1

Tulane Stat Notables

Passing | Mensah – 84/127 (66.1 percent), 1256 yards, 10 TD, 2 INT
Rushing | Hughes – 109 carries, 604 yards (5.5 yards per carry), 7 TD / Barnes – 38 carries, 181 yards (4.8 yards per carry)
Receiving | Williams – 23 receptions, 414 yards (18.0 yds/rec), 2 TD / Fleming – 17 receptions, 304 yards (17.9 yds/rec), 1 TD / Brown – 14 receptions, 207 yards (14.8 yds/rec), 3TD
Tackles | Grubbs – 29, Howard – 25, Despanie – 24
Pass Breakups | Robinson/White/Johnson – 2
Interceptions | Seven tied with one each

Tulane X-Factor | Win third down

For the most part, Rice Football has not been a team that’s been able to sustain long scoring drives this season. None of the Owls’ drives against UTSA were more than eight plays, including their scoring drives late in the game. That’s because the Owls have struggled mightily on third down and have had to rely on the big play, which has been fleeting.

Tulane has been one of the best teams in the league on third down, keeping opponents to a 34.7 percent conversion rate. Only one team has been better than 47 percent in a game against them, Oklahoma. Tulane lost that game. If Tulane can win on their down, they’ll force the Rice offense into precarious situations and have a stranglehold in this matchup.

Rice X-Factor | Run the dang ball

Rice football only had one respectable rushing performance against an FBS opponent this season, tallying 209 yards on the ground at a 6.7 yards per carry clip. Rice should have won that game, but a missed field goal at the buzzer and some late defensive lapses wasted that banner day for the ground game. 

Other than that, it’s been tough sledding for Rice on the ground. That’s meant more pressure on quarterback EJ Warner and less touches for star running back Dean Connors, who scored twice against UTSA. Getting the ball in Connors’ hands absolutely must be a priority for the Owls this week. If Rice can get things going on the ground against a Tulane defense that ranks in the middle of the pack in the AAC in yads per carry allowed they’ll have a shot to keep pace with an explosive Tualen offense.

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One Final Thing

Every win Rice football can scrape out over the next several weeks gets the Owls that much closer to salvaging what was shaping up to be a lost season. Beating a downtrodden UTSA program last week was emotionally significant, but the caliber of team Rice topped in that game pales in comparison to the one they’ll be playing in New Orleans this coming weekend.

Tulane is a bonafide contender for the conference championship. Rice is 2-4. On paper, things look daunting, but in this case, it’s probably good that none of the Owls’ games so far this season seem to have gone anything like they should have gone on paper.

Even though there wouldn’t be any shame in losing to one of the best teams in the conference on the road, Rice is running out of margin to account for such eventualities. The win against UTSA bought this team one more week to hope. Knocking off the Green Wave would give the Owls some swagger. 

This team has been maddeningly inconsistent but marquee upsets have been part of their calling card under this coaching staff. Rice upset Houston last year and have headliner wins over C-USA leading UAB (twice) and Top 15, undefeated Marshall, too. 

The odds are long, but there’s a chance. And goodness gracious, that’s why we watch this game.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Game preview, Rice Football

The Roost Podcast | Ep 188 – Rice Football tops UTSA plus Soccer, Volleyball w/ Jason Metko

October 13, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football sideline reporter Jason Metko joins the show this week to recap the UTSA win and share the latest from soccer and volleyball.

It was a storybook weekend at South Main. Rice football knocked off UTSA for the first time in a decade and soccer and volleyball continued their impressive seasons. Owls’ sideline reporter and broadcaster for soccer and volleyball joined the show this week to share his perspectives from the field, court and everywhere else.

You can find previous episodes on the podcast page. For now, give a listen to Episode 188.

Follow @TheRoostPod

Episode Notes

DCTF

The Roost Podcast is now part of the Dave Campbell’s Republic of Football Podcast Network. You’ll still get the same content with the same hosts, but now under the DCTF banner.

Homefield

We’re thrilled to partner with Homefield Apparel, the premier proprietor of college football clothing. First-time buyers can use the code ROOST for 15% off their order. The Owls hoodie is a personal favorite as is the Luv-Ya-Owls shirt. Make sure you check out the brand-new sailor hat (pictured below) as you shop the Rice collection or pick up something else (or both)!

You can also grab the Luv-Ya-Owls shirt if you haven’t picked one up yet!

Homefield

Patreon

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Recapping Rice Football vs UTSA, Soccer and Volleyball seasons

  • EJ Warner and Matt Sykes come through in the clutch
  • Offense finds some momentum
  • Defensive makes just enough plays
  • Special teams uncertainty
  • Rice Soccer keeps winning
  • Rice Volleyball is on a roll

Where can you find us?

The Roost Podcast is part of the Dave Campbell’s Republic of Football Podcast Network. You can find this podcast and all of our partner podcasts on Apple, Spotify and wherever you get your podcasts.



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

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Podcast Tagged With: game recap, podcast, Rice Football

“Do or Die”: Matt Sykes emerges as Rice Football’s go-to guy

October 13, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

From a one-catch campaign to becoming the go-to guy, Rice football wide receiver Matt Sykes has stepped up in big ways when his team has needed him most.

Rice football wide receiver Matt Sykes had the best spring of any player at his position, bar none. It was hard to walk through the halls of the Brian Patterson Center and avoid the chatter about the transfer wideout’s big step forward. Coaches and teammates were quick to speak of his playmaking ability at practices. The drumbeat for a breakthrough season was there.

But at the same time, it was just spring football.

Countless players have shown out in the spring when nobody wearing a different color jersey breaks across the middle of the field and delivers a jarring hit the stakes are lower. Translating practice into game day has always been the differentiator between good and great. Sykes had done all the right things, but he still hadn’t done it on Saturdays, not yet.

Sykes caught one pass in his first season at Rice following a transfer from UCLA. Injuries and inconsistent play kept him from making a more meaningful impact that season. Then came the strong spring and a chaotic fall camp that transformed the Owls’ feel-good story from a luxury to a desperate need. Sykes wasn’t going to be eased into his new role. He was needed now.

Landon Ransom, Rawson MacNeill and Thai Bowman were thought to be the Owls’ top three receivers entering the season. All three of them were injured in some capacity by the time the 2024 season began. Suddenly, Sykes’ emergence was essential.

Debut

In the Owls’ season opener against Sam Houston, Sykes caught six balls for 74 yards, both career-highs in his fifth season of college football. He followed that up with two catches for 47 yards and his first Rice touchdown grab a week later against Texas Southern. For a receiving corps decimated by injuries in need of a playmaker, Sykes delivered.

“I feel a lot more comfortable,” Sykes said, evaluating the difference between his first and second season on South Main. “Getting a lot of reps, just feeling back in my flow. [I’m] really confident, playing fast.”

Sykes would continue to be the primary target for Rice quarterback EJ Warner as the season progressed. As the offense ebbed at flowed, having No. 8 on the field proved to be a positive more often than not. As his production on the field grew, expectations came with it. More and more was asked of Sykes as the offense tried to find its way.

“The thing that I’m most impressed with him and most pleased with him about is that I think he wants to step up. I think he’s capable of doing it. Like I said, he hasn’t arrived yet, but I think he’s on his path to being that guy,” receivers coach Bobby Kennedy said. “Because of him and the way he works, you think, okay, maybe he can get this done. Maybe he can really, really, really be the guy. And if he continues to have some more success, I’m excited to see what happens as games go on because I think he’s got it in him.”

Although so much of what Sykes did on the field was encouraging, there were still growing pains that come with less experienced players growing their roles so quickly. Sykes struggled through some concentration drops against Army and had a pass tip off his hands into the waiting arms of a defender for an interception.

“He just became a dominant catcher of the ball, like he was so confident in his ability, he saw the ball in the sky and went and got it,”

Adversity is part of the game, but it’s also one of the reasons Sykes’ coaches theorize he’d yet to emerge in a significant way on Saturdays. Coaches pointed to a lack of confidence in the old Matt Sykes, a tendency to get in his own head and get rattled with things didn’t go according to plan. The veteran player had struggled when faced with trying situations in the past, but with no relief coming, something was going to have to change.

Sykes responded to a rough start against Army with a flawless touchdown grab later in the game. Then he authored the best game of his college football career.

Against Charlotte the following week Sykes hauled in a career-best eight passes for a career-high 97 yards. A 25-yard reception in the fourth quarter put Rice in position to attempt a game-winning field one play following what could have been a debilitating penalty that set the offense back near midfield.

At that point, the grab was one of the most high-leverage moments in Sykes’ well-traveled career. This time, he made the play.

Miracles

Unfortunately, Rice football didn’t win that game. A missed field goal at the end of a regulation made Sykes’ valiant effort for naught. For as far as he had come to that point, the Owls still needed a little bit more from their new go-to receiver. Could Sykes transcend from reliable to game-changer?

Sykes almost didn’t get that chance. A week and a half later he found himself in a hospital bed, forced to check himself into the emergency room on the Monday evening prior to the Owls’ next game against UTSA. He stayed in the hospital for almost three days. “He was essentially ruled out,” Bloomgren admitted.

The situation got so dire that the team elevated multiple scout team players during the week to take reps with the first team offense. Corner Sean Fresch even made a cameo appearance as a receiving threat. It was all hands on deck with Sykes, regrettably, sidelined.

Then the first miracle happened. Sykes walked out of the hospital and was cleared to return to practice. Members of the coaching staff were making resurrection jokes on the sideline while inwardly breathing sighs of relief that their top passing game option would be on the field, still not knowing for sure how much he’d have in the tank to give. As it turns out, he had plenty.

Days removed from his hospital bed, Sykes hauled in seven receptions for 85 yards, setting a career-high in receiving for the fourth time this season and the third consecutive game. This time, though, it wasn’t just the counting stats that told the story.

With nine seconds remaining on the clock on third down, Rice had the ball at the UTSA 18-yard line trailing by four points with one time-out. Even by conservative estimates, that meant the Owls had time for two shots at the endzone should they require it. Warner took the snap, dropped back and fired a missile to the middle of the field, finding the fingertips of Sykes at the top of the capital C in the white RICE OWLS lettering that adorned the navy blue endzone.

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Blanketed by a defender who had one hand already on his jersey and another swiping at the ball, Sykes momentarily juggled the pigskin in the air before hauling the precious rock into his arms, which smacked the turf in bounds milliseconds later. At that moment, fans listening to the radio broadcast heard longtime Rice Owls Voice announcer JP Heath exclaim, “Matt Sykes pulls down a miracle, back of the endzone, Rice scores.”

Touchdown. Not only had Sykes secured the ball, he’d won Rice the game.

“I knew I was definitely one of the reads to get open on the post and I know EJ likes to take chances with me so I knew, regardless, that I had to win my route,” Sykes said after the game. “I knew that was a must-do, do-or-die moment, so I had to come down with it.”

In so many ways, Sykes’ journey has been unbelievable. A fifth-year senior who had one catch to his name and was bound to a hospital bed just days before had somehow transformed into a storybook ending.

“It’s an amazing feeling,” Sykes said. “I don’t think I’ll ever have something like this again, to feel this great.”

The 2024 version of Matt Sykes remains a work in progress. There will be more highs and lows along the way. But it’s hard to imagine where Rice football would be without him.

“He just became a dominant catcher of the ball, like he was so confident in his ability, he saw the ball in the sky and went and got it,” head coach Mike Bloomgren said of Sykes’ ascension. “That’s the standard he set for himself and what we have to expect of him. When you ask what’s different, I think it came down to confidence in allowing him to grow into the player we thought he could be.”

** This story has been modified from its original version ** Photo credit: Maria Lysaker **



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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Sidebar Tagged With: Matt Sykes, Rice Football

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