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14 Days: A receiving record Jarrett Dillard doesn’t hold

August 11, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

A Rice football record which has surprisingly stood for more than four decades, can anyone break David Houser’s record 14 catch game in 1976?

The vast majority of Rice football receiving records belong to All-American Jarrett Dillard. As fantastic as he was, there is one meaningful mark he wasn’t able to break. In a 1976 defeat at the hands of the Florida Gators, David Houser hauled in 14 receptions for 196 yards.

The Owls were forced to play catch up and Houser’s strong effort wasn’t enough to earn the victory. But even in defeat, Houser’s array of catches were well beyond what any Rice receiver has managed in any era.

That isn’t to say that Dillard didn’t come close. In a win over SMU in 2007 Dillard snagged 13 receptions for 128 yards, one shy of Houser’s record. That came a week after he caught 11 passes against SMU. Those two games, plus an 11-catch, 171 yards and three touchdown performance against Army in 2006, marked the only double-digit receiving games of his career.

Part of what makes Houser’s still-standing record all the more impressive is the era in which he accomplished it. Before the spread offense took flight at the turn of the century there wasn’t nearly as much of an emphasis on throwing the ball frequently.

Case in point: Dillard caught 91 passes and 21 touchdowns in 2006. The high-water mark of Houser’s career came in 197 when he caught 55 balls for five scores. He might have been less productive than Dillard on the whole. but for one game, Houser brought it.

A different era, but still a tremendous effort to produce a record that has stood for 42 years. The Owls haven’t had a truly dominant receiver since Dillard left for the NFL and new head coach Mike Bloomgren is going to focus on establishing the run first. That means Houser’s record is probably safe for at least a few more seasons.

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2019 Cornerback Gabe Jeudy commits to Owls

August 10, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2019 Rice football recruiting class continues to keep rolling. Cornerback Gabe Jeudy became the newest member, committing to the Owls on Friday, August 10.

A little over a week removed from their last commitment, Rice football added another piece to their future on Friday. Joining Atlanta, Texas running back Jawan King in the fold is Charlotte, North Carolina defensive back Gabe Jeudy.

Jeudy received his offer to play at Rice on July 21, two weeks before he trimmed his finalists down to five. That says a lot about the impression the program made as the Owls vaulted to the top of his list in such a short time frame.

On August 3 Jeudy announced his final five: Air Force, Army, James Madison, Rice and Richmond. Those were a select few of his wide-reaching offer list that included more than 25 schools at the time of his commitment. For a player without a star ranking assigned to him by any of the major recruiting outlets, that’s an impressive number of offers.

A week after narrowing things down, Jeudy made his announcement, committing to the Owls in the form of a video posted on his Twitter feed:

https://twitter.com/GabeJeudy/status/1027994200783114243?s=19

In addition to those five, Jeudy also had offers from Harvard, Princeton, Navy, Villanova and Marshall, among others.

Jeudy is the 10th commit of the 2019 Rice football recruiting class and the fourth commitment from outside the state of Texas. Despite his many offers, Jeudy has yet to be given a star ranking, meaning his commitment did not impact the Owls’ standings in the Conference USA recruiting ranks. Rice currently has the No. 9 class in the conference.

At 6-foot-1, 172-pounds, Jeudy is not afraid to lower his shoulder and make tackles in the open field:

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15 Days: Bruce Henley the gold standard for Owls’ defensive backs

August 10, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football hasn’t seen a defensive back as dominant as Bruce Henley was with the Owls in the 1970s. His interception record likely won’t ever be broken.

Bruce Henley will forever be remembered as one of the most dominant defensive backs to ever play football at Rice University. A two-sport star, Henley was also a starting pitcher for the Owls baseball team during his time at South Main. It’s what he accomplished on the football field that he’s most well-known for to this day.

Over the span of three seasons, Henley never missed a game. He started 33 consecutive times with the varsity squad where he tallied 15 interceptions, a record which still stands to this day. And that’s not the full story.

Henley’s career spanned from 1971 to 1974. Following his freshman season in 1971, the NCAA modified their rules, ending the limitations on freshman-specific teams a year following Henley’s freshman season. His four interceptions as a freshman are not included in the official records, making his true career total 19 interceptions over four seasons. Had those four been included he’d have ended his career as the SWC leader in career interceptions.

A handful of four-year players have come close to the official number, most recently Dan Dawson who picked off 13 passes from 1998 to 2001. Huey Keeney, whose career ended in 1948 with 13 interceptions, held the record prior to Henley’s emergence. Henley remains one of just six Owls to reach double-digit interceptions in his career. As it stands, Henley’s 15 picks are tied for 12th in SWC history.

Takeaways were not a strong-suit of the Owls’ defense in 2017, putting further into perspective just how dominant Henley was in his time. The Owls three total interceptions were fewer than Henley averaged per season by himself in his time at Rice.

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Quarterbacks, offensive line updates from practice (8/9)

August 9, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football continues to solidify the depth chart, thinning out the quarterback and offensive line positions midway through fall camp.

Head coach Mike Bloomgren spent the majority of the practice with the offensive line. A former offensive line coach at Stanford, Bloomgren got down and dirty teaching techniques first hand. At one point he had his hands on turf instructing one of the younger players in a one-on-one drill.

In addition to focusing on the offensive line, Bloomgren appears to have trimmed the quarterback competition down from three players to two. With that, here are a few tidbits from Thursday’s practice:

Movement in the quarterback battle

Quarterback battle update:

Former QB Sam Glaesmann has moved to wide receiver. Plan is for Tyner and Stankavage to split reps with the ones moving forward. #GoOwls pic.twitter.com/bZUGkb8Luu

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) August 10, 2018

The most pressing news first: the quarterback position is down to two. As many of you saw late Thursday evening, I broke the news that Sam Glaesmann has moved to wide receiver. Coach Bloomgren wouldn’t say the move was permanent, but he did mention the need for additional reps for Jackson Tyner and Shawn Stankavage moving forward.

Offensive line is beginning to take shape

The first team is beginning to solidify. Tackles Uzoma Osuji and Sam Pierce have been consistent fixtures at left tackle and right tackle, respectively. Shea Baker appears to have locked down the job at center as well.

Jack Greene and Joseph Dill have the lead at the left and right guard positions, but redshirt freshman Corbin Smith is challenging for time in the interior as well. A notable omission from the first team is Florida transfer Andrew Mike. Despite joining the Owls from the SEC it doesn’t appear Mike has done enough in practice to vie for a starting job just yet.

Backup center Cole Elms went down with a leg injury during Oklahoma drills and had to be helped off the field. He was able to return to practice for goal line work later on.

Offensive line tests in short-yardage drills

It’s been no secret that the defensive line is one of the deepest units on the team. The offensive line has struggled to keep up with the power rushers opposite them, but Thursday was a huge step in the right direction.

Thursday’s practice was all about winning in the trenches. The team pitted the offense and the defense against each other in three drills: Oklahoma, short yardage and goal line. The defense, by and large, won the Oklahoma drill but the full team drills were dominated by the offense.

Both units met at midfield with one-yard to go for the first down in a series of reps. Play action, bootlegs and runs straight up the middle resulted in a series of first downs. Bloomgren preaches that everything is a competition, so the defense had to do push-ups as a result of their defeat.

Offense wins goal line drills

The same theme rang true on the goal line. Both quarterbacks beat the edge to the pylon and scored touchdowns with their feet. The real stars were the running backs and the offensive line. Boosted by enough space in front of them to operate, several tailbacks lept over both lines and landed in the endzone. When freshman tailback Antonio Faaeteete sailed through the air and into the endzone the entire offense went berserk, celebrating the head-to-head win over their teammates.

The offensive line wasn’t perfect. A few players were blown up in the backfield and they registered a sack at the goal line. On the whole, though, the efficiency of the quarterbacks and running backs proved that this starting group has enough umph to get the important yards when they need to.

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Veteran presence crucial to Owls’ rebuilding process

August 9, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Head coach Mike Bloomgren is in the early stages of turning Rice football into conference championship contender and he’s leaning on his most experienced players to help him get there.

There’s something to be said for guys that really have been there and done that. As the 2018 Rice football team embarks on their journey upward from a 1-11 season a year ago they will lean heavily on their veterans. That experienced hand will come from several sources but the net effect, hopefully, will serve as a catalyst toward what Mike Bloomgren is building at Rice.

Bloomgren knows there is wisdom in his locker room that can speak to the rest of the team in ways that he can’t. A head coach can dictate, but it takes ownership to build a culture. Ultimately, creating a culture of love, physicality and competition remains at the heart of what he has set out to do.

To that end, he’s assembled a 13-player leadership council to help him turn that vision into reality. That council and veteran players beyond it are crucial in laying the groundwork for Bloomgren’s program.

The most senior of those veterans is 23-yeard old Graysen Schantz who started playing football at Rice when the current freshmen class was still in middle school. Four times the victim of season-ending injuries, Schantz was granted a medical redshirt and one more season of college football this fall.

Schantz hopes to use these final months to prepare the younger players on the roster for the continuation of what he helped begin. “Those young guys are the future”, Schantz said of the incoming freshman. “They have to carry the torch when I’m gone.”

These freshmen are all talented athletes, making Schantz’s primary focus the film room. For many of them, this will be the first time breaking down film in a meaningful way and they’ll be learning a new system while they do it. Schantz has been doing that for five years and he’s learned a thing or two along the way.

“I’ve learned three defenses while I’ve been here. It’s the same process. It’s buying into the system. It’s absorbing as much knowledge as you can, taking notes, paying attention and giving your best effort on the field, but then also correcting it in the film room,” remarked Schantz when asked about what he plans to pass on to the next wave of Rice football players. His experience will prove invaluable to this team, but he’s not alone.Rice Football

Grad transfer Gio Gentosi has been on campus for a little over a month after spending the most of his college career at UCLA. He’s learning the ins and outs of Bloomgren’s program along with everyone else, but there are several aspects of the college game that he feels he can help the younger players with.

Gentossi called the college game “a different animal than high school football” adding “the knowledge they have to have goes a lot deeper.” For him, the knowledge came as a reserve offensive lineman and fullback under Jim Mora Jr. with the Bruins. He’s seen an uptick in his usage during fall practices with Owls and his can-do attitude has been evident. He’s lined up in the backfield, he’s been split out wide and he’s turned heads on special teams. Wherever the coaches decide to put him, he’s willing to put in the work.

These veterans have taken it upon themselves to help the “young bucks”, as Bloomgren calls them, learn as much as they can as quickly as possible. Senior defensive tackle Zach Abercrumbia summed it up like this: “We’re here at Rice, so it’s not a matter of if you can learn it, it’s how quickly you can learn it. I really feel like the guys are doing a great job of that so far.”

That’s high praise coming from a player that could be the most dominant players on the Owls’ roster this fall. Abercrumbia has been almost unblockable in fall camp, wreaking havoc on every combination of players along the offensive line. It’s evident he’s put in the work and understand the many changes that need to be made.

It’s going to take more than one offseason to get the team ready to take the next step and contend for conference championships. But that hasn’t dissuaded those on their way out from putting their all into final seasons.

“We’re here at Rice, so it’s not a matter of if you can learn it, it’s how quickly you can learn it. I really feel like the guys are doing a great job of that so far.” – DT Zach Abercrumbia

Senior offensive lineman Sam Pierce said it’s a challenging combination of emotions to process. “It’s both bittersweet and exciting. Exciting in that some of the stuff we’re doing is really exciting because we’ve seen in the spring and the fall camp how well it can work when we all work together. Also bittersweet just because I wish I had a couple more years with these coaches.”

The impact of this coaching staff cannot be undersold. From new strength and conditioning coach Hans Straub to the energy and detail being provided by the position coaches, every facet of the new program has been tailormade to produce results. Bloomgren is taking the model that worked at Stanford and bringing it to Rice. The players believe in what he’s doing and are committed to making it happen.

The tone from each of these men was both expectant and focused. They’re going to have fun, but they’re going to leave Rice football in a better place than where they found it. Pierce said he’s a firm believer in what Bloomgren is building at South Main saying “There’s no telling where this program is going to go in the next few years.”

Regardless of who gets formally recognized or how much extra work it takes, the Owls can count on their experienced members to lead the chrage. “[Leadership] comes with a lot of responsibility,” said Pierce, “but somebody has to do it… We’re all helping each other out as we go.” That help is paying big dividends in camp. This team will be ready for the fall, thanks in large part to its eldest members.

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

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