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Rice Baseball: Owls crumble late as Houston evens Silver Glove Series

May 2, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball took an early lead, but couldn’t hold on dropping the second game of the Silver Glove Series to Houston on Wednesday night.

A hot start from the Rice bats wouldn’t be enough to secure their second win over Houston this season and clinch the Silver Glove Series.

Things started off on the right track. Bradley Gneiting got things going with a double to left center. He was quickly driven in by Trei Cruz to give Rice the 1-0 lead. Next, Andrew Dunlap was hit by the pitch for a team-leading 17th time, setting up Cade Edwards for an RBI single to extend the Rice lead to 2-0.

Houston would tie the game up in the seventh with a two-out double down the right field line. The score remained 2-2 entering extra innings before disaster struck in the 10th. Jackson Tyner loaded the bases and Ben Schragger allowed three runs on two walks and a hit batsman. Two more relievers would try their hand, but the game was quickly out of hand. Rice was shut out in the home half of the inning, dropping the game by a final score of 8-2.

1. Defense moving from deficit to asset

Sloppy play in the field was a significant contributing factor to the Owls rough start to the season. Rice wasn’t able to string together two error-free games together until March 22 and March 23, two games into conference play. They haven’t been perfect in the field since then, but the Owls had 11 multi-error games before that juncture and have reached that mark six times since.

Not only are they not making mistakes, but players across the diamond are also stepping up to make big plays. Gneiting made a nifty save on the track in right field in the fourth and Brandt Frazier snagged a missile sent his direction in the fifth. Rice committed no errors in 10 innings.

2. Bordwine’s best

The chances of broaching the weekend rotation this season are slim to none, but Rice is going to need all the arms they can find if they want to make a run through the CUSA Tournament and vie for NCAA Tournament slot. Using midweek games like Wednesday’s clash with the Cougars to identify those extra weapons is a must. Bordwine rose to the occasion and could write his name into lineup cards more often moving forward.

Bordwine tied a career-long set earlier this season against Prairie View A&M with five innings pitched. He allowed one hit, struck out one and walked two. He might not be as dominant as some of the other arms Rice can turn to in a pinch, but having one more reliable option is always a good thing.

3. Failing to clinch the Silver Glove Series now is a missed opportunity

When Rice was in their heyday, the Silver Glove seldom left South Main. Rice won the series every season from 2001 to 2013. As far as baseball was concerned, the Owls ruled the city of Houston. A win on Wednesday would have given the Owls a 3-3 split with the Cougars over the last six seasons. Instead, they’ll get one more chance in the rubber game of the series, held later this season at Constellation Field in Sugar Land.

Winning rivalry games is an important step in restoring the program to its historic roots. Rice has already accrued wins over in-state powers TCU and Baylor. Those are proof of a strong foundation being built by Bragga during his first campaign at Rice. There’s still more to be done.

ON DECK | at Western Kentucky (Fri-Sun)

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Filed Under: Baseball, Featured Tagged With: Bradley Gneiting, Kel Bordwine, Rice baseball

Jack Fox vs Dustin Colquitt: Evaluating the Kansas City Chiefs punters

April 30, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Undrafted in the 2019 NFL Draft, Jack Fox signed a free agent deal with the Kansas City Chiefs. He’ll battle veteran Dustin Colquitt for the punting job.

Jack Fox made waves with his impressive senior season at Rice. Now he’s on to the NFL where he’ll attempt to earn himself a spot on the roster of the Kansas City Chiefs. The limited roster room leads few NFL teams to carry multiple punters. If Fox is going to stay on with the Chiefs, he’ll most likely have to beat out veteran punter Dustin Colquitt.

Colquitt has 15 years of NFL experience, all with the Chiefs, and recently signed a 3-year, $7.5 Million extension in 2018. He’s due $4.5 Million over the next two seasons; Fox signed a 3-year deal which will pay him $1.765 Million over the next three seasons. From a purely financial perspective, Fox has a much more affordable deal.

More: The incredible story of Jack Fox

Fox has a good financial case, but that’s only going to come into play if he can produce on the field in camp. The Chiefs will get a look at both guys in person, for now, we’ll have to settle with a snapshot of how each player faired last season — Colquitt with Kansas City and Fox with Rice.

2018 Stats

Player Colquitt Fox
Games 16 13
Punts 45 80
Yards 2,021 3,636
Avg 44.9 45.5
Long 67 76
TB 5 13
In20 21 31
Net 40.5 40.1

The Kansas City offense was so effective last year Colquitt posted a career-low 45 punts. The Rice offense was not as efficient, providing Fox plenty of opportunities. Fox led the nation in punting yardage and matched up favorably with Colquitt across the board in most major statistics.

On paper, Fox absolutely has a chance to make the team. The Chiefs gave him guaranteed money, which indicates they think he’s got a good shot to stick around. If he doesn’t make the roster, he’ll be a practice squad player and have more opportunities to kick in the NFL down the road.

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Filed Under: Football, Featured Tagged With: jack fox, NFL Owls, Rice Football

Jack Fox agrees to free agent deal with Chiefs

April 27, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

After being passed over in the 2019 NFL Draft, former Rice Football punter Jack Fox has signed a free agent deal with the Kansas City Chiefs.

Fox had his tv turned on when the draft began on Thursday and stayed tuned in throughout the coverage into the weekend. He’s always been a football fanatic. He would have been following the draft regardless of which directions his career path led him. This year was different.

This year he’s met some of the guys who heard their names called, guys like 49ers fourth-round pick former Utah punter Mitch Wishnowsky. Like Wishnowsky, the players chosen by NFL teams are no larger than life characters for Fox, they’re friends and colleagues. After a strenuous pre-draft process, Fox’s childhood dream of playing in the NFL is starting to get closer and closer to becoming reality.

More: The incredible story of Jack Fox

When Saturday rolled around, Fox’s heart undoubtedly began to beat a little bit faster. Home with his family and close friends, Fox waited for the call.

Fox would have to wait until the final player was drafted before he learned where he would be playing his professional football. The focal point of several post-draft suitors, Fox was able to find the best spot for him. After weighing his options, Fox signed a free agent contract with the Kansas City Chiefs.

A half dozen NFL teams sent personnel to Houston for private workouts with Fox before the draft. The Cheifs were not among that group, but present an opportunity for Fox who is ready for the challenge.

“I’m pretty tired of the anticipation and ready to get to work,” admitted Jack Fox in the days leading up to the NFL Draft. Now, after weeks of workouts, interviews and meetings it’s finally time for Fox to get back to what he knows best: football.

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football Tagged With: jack fox, NFL Draft, NFL Owls, Rice Football

Jack Fox ready for his next chapter and the NFL Draft

April 22, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

It was November 7, 2014 and the Ladue Horton Watkins Rams trailed Webster Groves 28-6 at halftime in the Missouri state playoffs. Jack Fox, the quarterback for the Rams, was nearing the completion of his high school career — it wouldn’t end that night. That’s because Fox was asked to do something out of his comfort zone in a high leverage situation. He rose to the occasion.

As the Rams mounted their second half comeback, Ladue Horton Watkins head coach Mike Tarpey saw an opportunity. With the Rams’ opponents crashing on one side of the line, Tarpey dusted off the quarterback option and called it toward the opposite boundary. The play was scarcely used. It wasn’t remotely integral to their offense. Still, with the fate of the season on the line, Fox took the snap, took off, and didn’t stop running until he was standing in the endzone.

Ladue Horton Watkins would win the game and go on to finish 12-2 that season after a deep playoff run. Fox was the hero. Not just because he had the big play, but because he was always the guy who made the big play. For Fox, dependability has always been a reality. Coach Tarpey, who saw Fox up close in person for four years, knows that better than most.

From day one, Tarpey knew Fox was different. “Other coaches would comment about your kicker,” he said. In his 19 years of coaching that’s not something he’d heard very often. The small school was filled with two-way players. Everyone wore multiple hats, but none seemed to warrant as much attention as the guy doing the kickoffs.

Special from the start

Tarpey called Fox “an athlete that can also punt and kick”, adding that Fox was the kind of person who could completely compartmentalize the game, wiping negative plays from his short term memory in order to focus on the task at hand. Tarpey used words like “deliberate”, “methodical” and “perfectionist” when it came to how Jack Fox attacked the game.

That focus and level of detail gave way to a college scholarship. In the fall of 2015, Fox traded one blue uniform for another and transitioned permanently to a special teamer at Rice. He handled kickoffs during his freshman season, but quickly expanded his role to extra points and his first collegiate field goal against North Texas.

The following season Fox became the Owls’ punter, taking over for James Farrimond who had begun his own senior year on the Ray Guy Award watch list. Fox had big shoes to fill, but no matter the stage, things never seemed too big for the eager specialist.

Fox averaged 40.7 yards per punt with a long of 58 yards that season, improving his average to 44.2 yards in 2017 with a career-best 62-yard boot. That wasn’t enough for Fox, who applied the same taciturn commitment to his craft every week. Not a “rah rah” vocal leader, per se, Fox led by humble example, grinding away to be the best version of himself he could be. He hadn’t yet begun to realize what might come if he continued to improve his game. He was just determined to get better.

Things took off when special teams coordinator Pete Lembo was hired from Maryland the spring prior to Fox’s senior year. A previous head coach at several stops in the northeast, Lembo had coached several specialists who’d taken their shots at the NFL. By his own admission, none of them, save perhaps Ray Guy award finalist Scott Kovanda at Ball State, measured up to the pure talent Fox possessed.

Lembo’s insertion into the special teams’ room gave Fox structure. That order helped Fox clear his head and focus on the intricacies of punting and kicking. The Rice specialists watched film of themselves, other collegiate specialists and NFL greats. Lembo helped Fox break down what elite punting ought to look like and Fox translated those lessons to the field.

The impact of Lembo’s guidance was readily apparent in Fox’s breakout 2018 season. The year began with a walk-off win over Prairie View A&M, spearheaded by five field-flipping punts by Fox and his first-ever game-winning field goal as time expired. It only got better from there. Fox would lead Conference USA with an average of 45.5 yards per punt, 31 punts inside the 20-yard line, 26 punts of 50 or more yards with a long of 76 yards against North Texas.

In a few short months, Fox had gone from scarcely entertaining professional football to being in rooms with NFL coaches and personnel on a regular basis. It’s been a whirlwind, one that Fox acknowledges he didn’t see coming.

A cavalcade of awards

Although it might have come as somewhat of a surprise to him, it wasn’t to his coaches. Tarpey knew Fox would be special coming out of high school. Lembo echoed those observations, “He’s a junkie,” Lembo said, “That’s part of why I’m optimistic that he’ll make it [to the NFL]. At that level, you gotta live it.”

” He’s a junkie. That’s part of why I’m optimistic that he’ll make it [to the NFL]. At that level, you gotta live it.”

Live it, Fox has. As a testament to his incredible senior season, Fox was awarded Rice Football’s George R. Martin Award, given annually to the team’s most valuable player. Not only the Rice football MVP, Fox was named the Conference USA Special Team’s Player of the Year, the first punter to ever win the award. To top it all off, Fox finished as a semi-finalist for the Ray Guy Award, given to the nation’s best punter.

Not one to sit back and bask in his own success, Fox kept working. He represented the Owls at the East-West Shrine Game, where he blasted a 57-yard punt in front of NFL coaches and scouts. From there he traveled to Indianapolis for the NFL Combine, came back to Houston for Rice Football’s 2019 Pro Day, and spent the last few weeks of April doing individual work outs for several NFL teams.

Lembo, who’s continued to keep up with Fox throughout the entire process, remains confident Fox is on the right track. “The great thing about what I’ve been seeing from Jack,” Lembo noted,  “is that he’s been treating those opportunities just like any other work out. That’s what you gotta be to make it at that level. You gotta be consistent.”

Throughout his years of development as both a football player and a person, perhaps no word better describes Fox than that: consistent. Whether it was stepping up to the plate in the key moments of a high school football game, the game-winning field goal over Prairie View A&M or the countless field-flipping bombs he launched to keep his 2-10 team in games, Fox has never waived.

Head coach Mike Bloomgren ran out of new adjectives for Fox’s repeated wondrous performances about midway through the 2018 season. Instead of inventing new praise, Bloomgren started to stick to a repeated epithet: “Jack Fox is a stud.”

That’s Jack. He’s the best who refuses to cease his own efforts to become even better. He’s been so busy perfecting his craft, his big moment, coming in the next few days, has almost snuck up on him.

When asked about what it’s going to feel like come draft time, Fox offered a nonchalant grin and an honest reply. “I haven’t thought about it yet,” he admitted. “I feel like there’s these steps — I had the season, then the Shrine Game, then the Combine, then the Pro Day, so I really haven’t had a whole lot of time to think about anything other than that.”

His apparent easygoing disposition is genuine. The way he describes it, “kicking and punting is definitely a big personality thing.” Whether it’s a certain level of quirkiness or an abnormal attention to detail and a process-oriented perspective, Fox is the total package. And even if he wasn’t, he’d work at it until he was. Because that’s who Jack Fox is.

Nowhere to go but up

The former All-Conference high school quarterback became one of college football’s best punters, and he did it in four years. If the past eight years have been any indication of what the future holds, Fox is going to build on this foundation and continue to improve. He might get drafted, he might not, but Jack Fox is going to do everything within his power to kick in the NFL, a notion which is still a bit surreal for the small-school kid from Missouri.

Making a roster as an NFL specialist isn’t easy, neither is being drafted. Conversations with NFL teams have given Fox a feel for his future. Ultimately, though, he still doesn’t know what the NFL Draft holds for him. All he can do right now is enjoy the process.

“This whole thing is really cool,” Fox revealed with a twinge of angst in his voice, “It’s been really exciting, but I’m ready to know where I’m going to go and kinda start focusing on the next chapter of the whole thing.” That next chapter remains a mystery. From the Combine to his workouts, Fox has spoken with nearly every NFL team. He’s established better relationships with some, but has yet to receive any guarantees.

With days leading up to the biggest moments of his football journey, Fox doesn’t know what to expect. “I wonder about where I’m going to go. I don’t really know,” Fox said, “Hopefully I get drafted, but if not it sounds like I’m going to get an opportunity [as a free agent].”

Few punters have more ability than Jack Fox, but he’s made it his mission to ensure no one outworks him. So far the results speak for themselves.

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Filed Under: Featured, Football Tagged With: jack fox, NFL Owls, Rice Football

Rice Baseball sweeps MTSU, earns Matt Bragga’s first home sweep

April 21, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball picked up their first home series sweep under head coach Matt Bragga, winning three games against Middle Tennessee State to improve to .500 in conference play.

Rice entered Easter weekend with a bad taste in their mouth. The Owls had blasted Charlotte in their series opener and outscored them by 10 runs over the course of three games only to drop the series. With no midweek game to take their mind off the tough blow, all efforts turned to Middle Tennessee.

Coach Bragga’s charge to his team this weekend was straightforward. “We need to start making a move if we’re going to make one.” Rice made their move, sweeping their second conference opponent this season. Here are some notes on an encouraging series at Reckling Park.

THURSDAY | Rice 10 – MTSU 4

Rice RBI leader Andrew Dunlap got things going in the series opener with an RBI single in the first inning. The Owls took the 1-0 lead into the third where they broke the game open, batting around and scoring eight runs on six hits and four walks. Justin Collins and Braden Comeaux picked up two RBI apiece, with four other Owls driving in one run during the big inning.

The nine-run cushion was more than enough for Matt Canterino, who put together what was arguably his best outing of the season. He struck out 10 in seven innings, earning his team-leading fifth win of the season. Middle Tennessee would tack on four against Rice reliever Drake Greenwood, but the sizable lead would hold for the Owls’ fourth-straight win in series openers.

FRIDAY | Rice 7 – MTSU 2

The Owls’ bats got off to a slightly slower start on Friday night, but once they woke up, they caught fire. Two home runs, one by Cade Edwards another Dominic Cox, put Rice ahead 2-0 in the fourth inning. Then the Owls exploded for five runs in the fifth.

Bradley Gneiting, Trei Cruz, and Andrew Dunlap strung together three consecutive RBI hits. Dunlap came around to score the seventh run on an error. The 7-0 lead would hold until the ninth inning where once more MTSU would collect a flurry of hits, scoring two, not enough to give the Owls much of a scare.

SATURDAY |Rice 7 – MTSU 5

For the first time in the weekend, Rice was forced to come from behind. Starting pitcher Jackson Parthasarathy wasn’t as sharp as his predecessors on the mound. He would have been serviceable had the defense not committed three errors on the day, two of which resulted in three unearned runs charged to Parthasarathy.

Trailing 4-0 after Parthasarathy was removed midway through the third inning, Rice began to chip away. Rice got two in the third, one in the fourth and one in the fifth before tying the game in the seventh on a Cade Edwards sac fly. Justin Collins would drive a two-out single to left later in the inning, scoring what would be the game-winning run.

MTSU didn’t make it easy, loading the bases in the ninth. With the tying run in scoring position, Kendall Jeffries induced a double-play to clinch the victory and the series sweep.

TAKEAWAYS | Rice wins series 3-0

1. Pitch like this every weekend

It’s been no secret the Rice starting pitching is the strength of this team. When all three of the Owls’ rotation are locked in this team is going to have a chance to win most series. Aside from the sloppy defense on Saturday, the starting pitching was nearly as good as it’s been all season this weekend against Middle Tennessee, and the results were the first home series sweep of the Matt Bragga era.

Canterino, Kravetz and Parthasarathy combined for 27 strikeouts with five walks, and one earned runs allowed. That’s a stellar line through 16.2 innings on the bump. More length out of their Sunday starter would have been ideal, but an extremely fresh bullpen gave coach Bragga a bit more leeway with how long he left Parthasarathy on the mound. If Rice pitches this well, they’ll have a chance to win each of their remaining CUSA series.

2. Cade Edwards

The Rice lineup has become more consistent as the season has gone on. Slowly but surely the top three became the top four. Somewhat quietly, Cade Edwards has entrenched himself as part of the glue which holds this offense together. Batting fifth throughout the weekend, Edwards picked up six hits, batting .600 in the series with the go-ahead home run on Friday and the game-tying sac fly on Saturday.

Edwards is riding a 7-game hitting streak. The Rice offense has scored five or more runs in five of those seven games, and Edwards has been in the thick of the action. Bragga likes what he’s seeing from the Owls’ second baseman, calling Edwards “a real solid hitter [who has] some really good bat speed and drives through the ball really well.”

3. Come and take it

Rice has officially passed the midway point of conference play. It’s been a bumpy ride, but after starting 0-5, Rice has won nine of their next 14, pulling themselves back to .500 in conference play. It’s no guarantee of future success, but it is a testament to a team willing to fight.

With four series remaining, Rice is in the thick of the pack in Conference USA. FAU leads the way at 14-4 with the Owls five games behind, tied for fifth. They entered the weekend tied for seventh, with tiebreakers putting them in ninth place.

Winning the conference is still mathematically possible, but even without an incredible late surge, Rice has enough season left to position themselves for the conference tournament in Biloxi.

Entering the weekend D1 Baseball projected Conference USA to be a two-bid league with league-leading FAU sitting in the First Five Out. Rice has a few signature wins (TCU, Baylor), but the chances of reaching the postseason with a sub-.500 overall record will be slim to none.

Rice is 18-23 right now, meaning the most likely avenue to postseason play is a CUSA Tournament win. That’s much easier to do as a three seed than an eight-seed. Coach Bragga says he’s aware of the numbers and the scenarios, but “at the end of the day, we have to go perform. If we perform, we’ll have an opportunity, if we don’t we won’t.”

ON DECK | vs Louisiana Tech (Fri-Sun)

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Filed Under: Baseball, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Andrew Dunlap, Cade Edwards, Evan Kravetz, Jackson Parthasarathy, Matt Canterino, Rice baseball

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