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Rice Football: Owls hope to flip script with win in 2019 road opener

July 24, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

It’s been a while since Rice Football opened the season with a road win, but that’s exactly what the Owls hope to accomplish against Army on August 30, 2019.

In 2000 and 2001 Rice Football won a pair of hard-fought thrilling openers against rival Houston. The first came at Rice Stadium with the Owls prevailing in triple overtime. The next came by a touchdown on the Cougars’ home turf. Since then Rice has come struggled out of the gate when they play away from home.

Rice fell to current head coach Mike Bloomgren’s Stanford Cardinal at the beginning of the 2018 season. The Owls’ last true road opener came against Western Kentucky in 2016. Rice lost that one 46-14. You have to go back to 1991, when Rice opened the season on the road on September 14th at Northwestern, to find the Owls most recent road opening win outside the city of Houston.

Things have been different at home. Rice has won three of their last four home openers at Rice Stadium. They’ve split their last two neutral site starts at NRG Stadium, where they’ll play later this year against Texas.

Rice won’t have the luxury of a home game to kick off 2019 when they travel to West Point to play Army. The Black Knights won the last two contests in the series with Rice football taking the four games previous to that. The Owls lead the all-time series 4-3-1.

This 2019 Army team is going to be a tough out. Check out our full deep dive on Army, including their top players to watch, a thorough depth chart breakdown and the most pressing questions about their upcoming season in our 2019 Rice Football Season Preview. We’re offering the Army preview as a free sample, just click the preview button in the top right corner of the page. Like what you see? Please consider buying a copy and learning more about the Owls and their opponents this upcoming season.

Rice Football Season Preview

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

Rice Football: Highlights from Mike Bloomgren at CUSA Media Days

July 21, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football head coach Mike Bloomgren offered a few notable soundbites at Conference USA Media Days. Here are a few quotes that stood out the most.

On what the team has worked on this spring…

“We learned that we have to find a way to finish. It’s the bottom line in our business. It’s where we want to get to. We want to be in those situations to take a team to deep water in the fourth quarter so we can come out the other side. We’ve done so much to emphasize finish this year with our team.”

–Mike Bloomgren

On the quarterback battle…

“We’re in no rush to name a starter. A lot of confidence in the two that were there for us last year [Wiley Green and Evan Marshman] and their leadership abilities. I think they lived the quarterback lifestyle and do a lot of things right, but we’re excited to see what Tom [Stewart] can bring to our team as well.”

–Mike Bloomgren

On the difficult schedule…

“That’s what they signed up for. They signed up to come to Rice to get a world-class degree and play big-time college football. Not because it’s easy, but because it’s hard – and worth it. That’s exactly what we want to do and we’re thrilled we get to do it again this year.”

–Mike Bloomgren

On the importance of strength and conditioning coach Hans Straub…

It’s the way you build [a program] and it’s the way you develop your team and the reason is very simple in my eyes. It’s somebody who’s going to set the standards we talked about and advance your culture. And they don’t have the limitations from the NCAA for when they can meet with them.”

–Mike Bloomgren

On the impact of the incoming JUCO and grad transfers…

The 10 transfers will be huge for our football team. At the very least they’re going to be unbelievable depth and they’re going to push people to become a better version of themselves. There’s nothing like competition to make somebody grow as a player, even the best of the best.

–Mike Bloomgren

On the continuity of the staff…

I think no matter what business you’re in continuity and everyone singing out of the same hymnal is a big deal. Any time we can keep our coaches together means everything to me and I think it will mean everything to our players.

–Mike Bloomgren

On the construction of the new practice bubble…

It’s going to be huge. I think it’s such a great thing for Rice University as well as our program. Everyone on campus is going to get great use out of it. For us, just being able to practice when we schedule a practice time and not having 29 times where we had to go to the [Houston Texan’s off campus] bubble.

–Mike Bloomgren

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

Conference USA Football players named to preseason watchlists

July 20, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The full set of preseason watch lists have been released and Conference USA football had several players who received honors.

College football is still more than a month away but July marks the beginning of the preseason buzz. Media days and watch lists will fill the national discussion for the next few weeks before fall camp begins.

More: Takeaways from Conference USA football’s Media Days

The watch lists for the premier college football awards have been announced. Here’s the complete list of Conference USA football honorees.

Maxwell Award

Top player in college football
  • QB Mason Fine, North Texas
  • RB Spencer Brown, UAB

Bednarik Award

Top defensive player in college football
  • DL Alex Highsmith, Charlotte
  • CB Amik Robertson, Louisiana Tech
  • Saf Reed Blankenship, Middle Tennessee
  • LB Lawrence Gardner, Old Dominion

Davey O’Brien Award

Top quarterback in college football
  • James Morgan, FIU
  • Mason Fine, North Texas

Doak Walker Award

Top running back in college football
  • Benny Lemay, Charlotte
  • Deandre Torrey, North Texas
  • Kesean Strong, Old Dominion
  • Spencer Brown, UAB
CUSA Football Preview
Buy Now | 2019 Conference USA Football Preview

Biletnikoff Award

Top wide receiver in college football
  • Adrian Hardy, Louisiana Tech
  • Ty Lee, Middle Tennessee
  • Rico Bussey Jr., North Texas
  • Quez Watkins, Southern Miss

Rimington Award

Top center in college football
  • Jaelin Fisher, Charlotte
  • Dallas Connell, FIU
  • Junior Diaz, FAU
  • Kody Russey, Louisiana Tech
  • Levi Brown, Marshall
  • Josh Fannin, Middle Tennessee
  • Sosaia Mose, North Texas
  • Trace Clopton, Southern Miss
  • Lee Dufour, UAB
  • Derron Gatewood, UTEP
  • Seth Joest, Western Kentucky

John Mackey Award

Top tight end in college football
  • Sterling Palmer, FIU
  • Harrison Bryant, FAU
  • Armani Levias, Marshall
  • Kelvin Smith, North Texas
  • Kyle Fourtenbary, Western Kentucky

Butkus Award

Top linebacker in college football
  • Sage Lewis, FIU

Wuerffel Trophy

College football’s premier award for community service
  • Tyriq Harris, Charlotte
  • James Morgan, FIU
  • Brenden Knox, Marshall
  • Khalil Brooks, Middle Tennessee
  • Mufu Tiawo, Old Dominion
  • Nick Leverett, Rice
  • Derron Gatewood, UTEP
  • Andrew Martel, UTSA
  • Tyler Witt, WKU

Allstate Good Works Team

  • Tyriq Harris, Charlotte
  • James Morgan, FIU
  • Brenden Knox, Marshall
  • Crews Holt, Middle Tennessee
  • Mufu Tiawo, Old Dominion
  • Austin Trammell, Rice

Bronco Nagurski Award

Top defensive player
  • LB Sage Lewis, FIU
  • DB Amik Robertson, Louisiana Tech
  • LB Lawrence Garner, Old Dominion
  • DB Ky’el Hemby, Southern Miss

Hornung Award

Most versatile player
  • RB DeAndre Torrey, North Texas

Jim Thorpe Award

Top defensive back
  • Amik Robertson, Louisiana Tech
  • Chris Jackson, Marshall
  • Reed Blankenship, Middle Tennessee
  • Ky’el Hemby, Southern Miss
  • Brontae Harris, UAB

Lou Groza Award

Top kicker
  • Jonathan Cruz, Charlotte
  • Jose Borregales, FIU

Outland Trophy

Top interior lineman
  • OL Levi Brown, Marshall
  • DL Garrett Marino, UAB
  • OL Miles Pate, WKU

Walter Camp

Most outstanding player
  • Mason Fine, Sr., QB, North Texas
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

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

Conference USA Football Media Days: 4 Takeaways from Frisco

July 19, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Each of the 14 Conference USA Football teams got their turn at the mic in Frisco, Texas this week. Here are a few of the more pressing takeaways.

1. Conference USA football is wide open

Marshall and North Texas were each picked to win their division by somewhat comfortable margins, but six of the conference’s 14 teams received at least one first-place vote. There are some favorites, sure, but the conference feels particularly wide on the cusp of the 2019 season.

Louisiana Tech head coach Skip Holtz summed it up with an interesting analogy. “This conference is a lot like Nascar,” he said, “Everybody has the same size engine it’s just who does the best job of driving it that week.”

More or less every coach followed in lockstep. Holtz added there were “no weeks off.” North Texas head man Seth Littrell echoed those sentiments. Despite being penciled in as the frontrunner, Littrell knows as well as anyone there are no sure things. “A lot of things can change from July to  November,” he admitted, “There’s a lot of great coaches. A lot of great players. Any given week you better prepare the right way in order to have success… Then you gotta see what way does the ball bounce.”

2. The Transfer Portal is still taboo

Coaches across the conference sounded off on the introduction of the Transfer Portal. Perhaps unsurprisingly, none gave it a particularly positive endorsement. UTEP head coach Dana Dimel didn’t mince words. “It’s become too accessible,” he declared, “Once you’re worked your tail off to get a kid now he’s gotta take the ups and downs of what college careers are all about. You can’t just pull the ripcord.” Marshall’s Doc Holiday’s criticism was succinct: “I don’t like it.”

The schools are clear victims of the players’ accessibility to the transfer market. It makes sense for coaches to want to do everything they can in their power to keep their players on campus, but there’s another angle to this coin.

CUSA Football Preview
Buy Now | 2019 Conference USA Football Preview

Once a player puts his or her name into the Transfer Portal they waive the right to their current scholarship. If the player tests the waters and decides to return the university has no obligation to reserve a spot for them. That sticky middle ground has left many in a tough spot.

“I think the coaches as a whole weren’t in favor of it,” Southern Miss coach Jay Hopson said. “Just because most of us [coaches] are former student-athletes. What’s happened now is there are hundreds of kids who had a scholarship and now they don’t.”

There’s clearly some more work to be done to iron out the kinks of this process.

3. The coaching carousel never really stops

Stability on the coaching front is rare for any league and Conference USA is no exception. Western Kentucky (Tyson Helton) and Charlotte (Will Healy) are breaking in new coaches this season. On the other end of the spectrum, North Texas (Seth Littrell) and UAB (Bill Clark) are trying to hold on to theirs.

Littrell and Clark each had their names tied to prominent jobs in the offseason. They each stayed put, with Littrell inking a lucrative contract extension. 2020 might be a different story. Clark went as far as to address some of the rumors. “I have dreams and aspirations. I want to coach at the highest level. Those are things that I’ve worked for, but it’s still what about we do today.”

4. Nobody is sleeping on Rice

There was a fair amount of buzz about the Owls around the room in Frisco this week. It’s no secret Rice runs an unconventional offense compared to their conference foes. The complexity of the scheme was limited in year one, but should continue to progress into 2019. Opposing coaches are well aware of the challenge the Owls will pose when they get things up and running.

Seth Littrell praised the intricacies of the Owls attack, saying that Rice does “a lot of different things, not only just using a fullback, but their tight ends. Then you get to their shifts, trades and motions. You gotta be extremely disciplined on defense in order stop that system.” Frank Wilson called Rice a team that’s going to “punch you in the mouth.”

It’s clear Rice is gaining recognition amongst their peers. Next, they’ll need to put all the pieces together and prove it on the football field this fall.

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

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

Rice Football: Setting a new standard for effort in 2019

July 17, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The process continues into Year 2 for Mike Bloomgren and Rice Football and building a winning culture remains a focal point of the Owls rebirth.

Rice Football Season Preview
Buy Now | 2019 Rice Preview

When Mike Bloomgren took charge of the Rice football program it had fallen on challenging times. The Owls were in need of a major reset, one which got underway with a 2-11 campaign in 2018. Those arduous weeks produced churn in the starting lineups on both sides of the ball. Talent was a factor, but grit and focus were equally prevailing forces.

Instilling grit begins with the strength and conditioning program, one which Bloomgren himself has revamped his program over the past year. “We’re just night and day different from last year,” he said, “I think Hans Straub is the best strength and conditioning coach in the country. We are so lucky to have him. Everything he does helps me sleep at night”

That refrain, initially spoken by Bloomgren, was echoed by his players during the other media sessions.

“You see it too?” senior defensive lineman Myles Adams asked on the way from one interview to the next. The core of the change, at least how Adams describes it, is the culture.”It’s different. I’ve never felt like this since I’ve been at Rice.”

More: Conference USA Media Days Live Blog

From the workouts to the new people being added to the program in each recruiting cycle. The new Rice feels different. “Culture, that word is real,” Adams echoed, “When I first came in I used to say we didn’t have a culture, but we had a culture it just wasn’t a winning mentality, it wasn’t a winning culture. And now we’re starting to reshape than and understand what it takes to win.”

Wins are the defining metric by which all football programs are measured. The Owls final record will be the overriding determinant of success in 2019. But, in a year with expectations in the process of being reset from four consecutive losing seasons, how Rice plays could be equally important.

If this team is as tough as the talk, the wins will follow. Or, as Adams says, “when all the wheels are moving it’s hard to stop the train.”

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

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Filed Under: Football, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Conference USA football, Media Days, Rice Football

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