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AAC Football 2024: Week 5 Roundup

September 29, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

AAC Football was back in action this weekend. Here’s the latest from the teams on the gridiron this week.

Team Record  This Week Result Up Next
Army 4-0 (3-0) at Temple (Thr) W, 42-14 at Tulsa
Charlotte 2-3 (1-0) at Rice W, 21-20 vs ECU
ECU 3-2 (1-0) vs UTSA W, 30-20 at Charlotte
FAU 2-3 (0-1) vs Wagner W, 41-10 — OFF —
Memphis 4-1 (0-1) vs MTSU W, 24-7 — OFF —
Navy 4-0 (3-0) at UAB W, 41-18 at Air Force
North Texas 4-1 (1-0) vs Tulsa W, 52-20 — OFF —
Rice 1-4 (0-2) vs Charlotte L, 21-20 — OFF —
Temple 1-4 (0-2) vs Army (Thr) L, 42-14 at UConn
Tulane 3-2 (1-0) vs USF W, 45-10 at UAB
Tulsa 2-3 (0-1) at North Texas L. 52-20 vs Army
UAB 1-3 (0-1) vs Navy L, 41-18 vs Tulane
USF 2-3 (0-1) at Tulane L, 45-10 — OFF —
UTSA 2-3 (0-1) at ECU L, 30-20 — OFF —

Notable Results and Storylines // (Standings)

Green Wave Roll

Although South Florida quarterback Byrum Brown did leave this game early with an injury, it wouldn’t have changed the outcome in the slightest. Tulane mopped the floor with South Florida, exorcising some demons from a few near-misses against Power conference opponents in recent weeks. Army and Navy are the conference frontrunners thus far, but don’t sleep on a complete Tulane squad that can score and play elite defense.

Tell me more

East Carolina upset UTSA in a game in which the Roadrunners led 13-3 in the waning minutes of the first half. The Pirates have shown some spunk in recent results while UTSA hasn’t quite found its groove without Frank Harris. Which reality is more causal, though? Is ECU rising or UTSA sliding? Both? To what degree? It’s just too early to tell.

To the bottom

Rice outgained Charlotte and at the two-minute timeout but was unable to prevent the go-ahead score and missed a field goal at the end of regulation that would have won the game. Instead, they lost and now sit a 1-4 through five games. A promising season now sees the Owls enter the bye week tied with Temple for the worst record in league play. Temple has an FBS win, though. Rice does not.

Looking ahead – Key storylines

Rivalry, Beware

Navy has looked much improved this season while Air Force has struggled, but those things tend to go out the window when rivalry games arrive. A non-conference loss wouldn’t be catastrophic for the Midshipmen by any means, but it would mean a hit for — and I can’t believe I’m saying this — they’re potential College Football Playoff aspirations. Those are the sorting of dreams you get to have after taking down the preseason conference favorite and starting league play a sterling 3-0.

Bye week blues

Rice, UTSA and South Florida all enter their bye weeks in varying states of unrest. All three lost the week before and have some adjustments to do before kicking off the second half of their seasons in Week 7. None of this trio expected to be below ..500 at this point in the season, but it’s the cards they’ve been dealt. Whoever makes the most of this extra time has a chance to salvage things. UTSA and Rice will find that answer soon enough, meeting in Houston following their bye.

Fluke or Fortune?

Charlotte got a big win in Houston on Saturday, knocking off Rice. The game was going sideways before the 49ers made a quarterback change, sitting Trexler Ivey in favor of Deshawn Purdie, who led three scoring drives in the second half. Another win next week against East Carolina has the potential to bolster the 49ers’ aspirations and turn this from a lost season into a competitive one. We’ll find out soon enough.

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Filed Under: AAC, Archive, Football Tagged With: AAC

Rice Football squanders fourth-quarter lead in loss Charlotte

September 28, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football had their chances to put the game away against Charlotte, but couldn’t close when it mattered most. The Owls are 1-4.

A 10-0 halftime lead was not enough as Rice football fell by a single point to Charlotte at home on Saturday night. In the final two minutes, Rice had chances to win the game on offense, but couldn’t convert a third and short. They had a chance to win on defense, but allowed a go-ahead touchdown in the final minute. They had the chance to win with special teams, but a last-second kick sailed wide.

“I think I’ve given this speech a few too many times this year,” Bloomgren said at the podium following the Owls’ fourth loss in five games. “We performed better than we have been, but when the crunch time was here in that fourth quarter we failed in all three phases and Charlotte made more plays.”

Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Trust your playmakers and let them produce

In the highest leverage moments, it’s the stars that have to shine. For Rice football right now, that means the most critical offensive moments should involve Dean Connors and EJ Warner and/or Matt Sykes. They’re not the only talented playmakers on this offense but that trio has largely been at the forefront when that offense is moving the ball well.

Warner overshot a makeable touchdown pass to Sykes on the Owls’ first possession but redeemed himself soon afterward with a nice dish to Jackson for the opening score. Connors had more rushing yards on his first touch of the game than Charlotte did in the entire first quarter.

Now, this reality comes with a very real, and very important caveat: your playmakers have to produce.

Warner hasn’t overcome his tendency to elevate throws downfield. He overshot Sykes on multiple third downs in the first half. Sykes was better this week than he was against Army a week ago, but his lack of consistency has been part of what’s gummed this offense up at times. Both have played better as the season progresses, but each would (correctly) admit they have room to grow.

Dean Connors has been and continues to be the most valuable man on this side of the ball. He only touched the ball seven times in the first half; that’s not enough. He finished with 16 touches for the game and 135 yards of total offense. Your best offensive weapon — and Connors is most certainly that — needs more of the ball.

“We got other good backs. We don’t want to just wear Dean out. If you tell me Dean is going to get 20 to 30 touches every game, that’s probably the right number,” Bloomgren said after the game. “16 total touches? Would you wanna program a few more for him? Absolutely. He’s a really good player, but the flow of the game was going the way it was.”

Rice does have other good backs, but 16 is not 30. It’s not 20 either.

Rice racked up 463 yards of total offense, their highest total against an FBS opponent yet this season. It’s not a particularly impressive number on the whole, but it’s a step in the right direction. Those playmakers have to get things going if this offense is ever going to come close to the ceiling it’s shown in previous years.

Bring out the depth

So much of the discourse this offseason around the Rice football roster centered on the depth the Owls’ had accumulated in Bloomgren’s seventh season. Unfortunately, the only way to truly evaluate that depth is to have it forced into action. The results have been mixed when former twos and threes have been thrown into the first with the first units this season, but Saturday’s win against Charlotte probably doesn’t happen without some important contributions from former backups being asked to step up.

The offense line, featuring just two players in the same position they played on opening day, consistently opened up holes for the running game. Both Dean Connors and Taji Atkins got to the second level on plays that were blocked well. Although he took a few shots, Warner wasn’t sacked.

Likewise, the defense churned out some big plays from lesser-known faces. Peyton Stevenson and made consecutive plays to help stonewall a Charlotte drive in the second quarter. Daveon Hook led the team in tackles. Mutombo had the interception and followed it with a sack. None of those three were on the two-deep against Sam Houston in Week 1.

The go-ahead fourth quarter touchdown was scored by Elijah Mojarro, who wouldn’t have been on the field had Boden Groen been healthy.

What an incredible play call by the offensive staff.

What an incredible effort from Elijah Mojarro.

CLUTCHpic.twitter.com/tJFlC0kTDZ

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 29, 2024

Obviously, the Owls would love to have as many of their starters back on the field as possible. A bye week with extra rest will help those efforts, but even if reinforcements do arrive, this depth matters. Especially if Rice wants to make good on some of their preseason aspirations and get things turned around.

Unfortunately, the reliance on depth has it’s downsides too. Kicker Enoch Gota missed his first do-or-die attempt of his young career, turning what could have been a celebratory night into another painful defeat.

The defense gets some of its swagger back

The Rice offense got a big play from Dean Connors but didn’t put any points on the board in the first quarter, turning the ball over inside the redzone and punting on their ensuing possession. That put the onus on the defense to make sure they kept their team in the game.

Aided by favorable field position on a few occasions, the defense delivered one of their better starts to a game this season. Blake Boenisch didn’t suit up on Saturday, but the Owls still held Charlotte to 1.2 yards per carry in the first quarter. The safety room was as depleted as it’s ever been under head coach Mike Bloomgren, but they limited Charlotte quarterback Trexler Ivey to 5-of-10 passing for 35 yards on the 49ers’ first three offensive series.

The Charlotte never got in gear under Trexler Ivey. When they did finally get the ball across the 50-yard line midway through the second quarter they were swiftly turned away by this interception from defensive lineman Joseph Mutombo, who has seen an elevated role in the defense partly because of the slew of injuries in front of him.

Joseph Mutombo with the big INT in the first half. pic.twitter.com/4n9M7ekHA6

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 29, 2024

Charlotte finally found life under backup quarterback Deshawn Purdie, who connected on three deep passes, all of which resulted in scoring drives. That was essentially it for the Charlotte attack. Three plays. But it was enough.

As the offense works through its challenges in real time, more and more pressure is going to be put on this defense to win games. On Saturday against a woeful Charlotte offense, they came close enough but got little help from the other phases. If they can translate that to more talented opponents, Rice is going to have a fighting chance to win some games, but they’re the last bastion of hope for a team that’s hurting.

Losing on the Margin

A fourth down pass interference call against Sean Fresch changed the outcome of this game. A block in the back penalty on the ensuing possession might very well have swung the outcome, too. Both plays exemplified the dangerous tightrope Rice Football attempted to walk in this game. Rice let a bad Charlotte team stick around to the point where one blown coverage could shift the result of the game.

The best teams in the sport create margin. You can afford a bust on any particular play or phase of the game when there’s a buffer to cover those shortcomings. When you’re stuck in a one-score game, every mistake matters. Teams with more faults make more mistakes. There’s some truth to the old adage that good teams stay good and bad teams stay bad.

This is a bad football team right now.

One that, in Bloomgren’s own words “failed in all three phases” to one of the few teams left in the country that had yet to beat an FBS opponent. It’s hard to imagine a lower point than this in a season that was supposed to be a breakthrough campaign. Picked to finish in the thick of a competitive AAC, Rice football sits dead last in the standings and they have yet to play UTSA, Tulane, Memphis or South Florida.

This is a team out of excuses and out of answers. There’s a lot of soul-searching to be done during this bye week from everyone in the program. This isn’t how this season was supposed to go.

Digging deeper

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Fourth and the Woe Zone

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Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Daveon Hook, Dean Connors, EJ Warner, Enoch Gota, game recap, Joseph Mutombo, Josh Pearcy, Matt Sykes, Peyton Stevenson, Rice Football, Taji Atkins

Rice Football: Behind enemy lines with an Charlotte Insider

September 27, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Charlotte is next up on the 2024 Rice football schedule so we’re going behind enemy lines with 49ers’ insider Hunter Bailey of the Charlotte Observer.

49ers’ insider Hunter Bailey was kind enough to stop by and answer a few questions about the upcoming matchup between Rice Football and Charlotte. The answers below should shed some light on the Owls’ upcoming opponent.

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For those checking in for the first time, or those returning, a quick programming note. Special features like this are reserved for our subscribers. Have questions? You can get those answered in our monthly Q&As and get access to all practice notes, recruiting updates and features like this one when you subscribe on Patreon today.

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

Rice Football 2024: Charlotte Game Week Practice Report

September 26, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football takes on Charlotte this week with eyes on a bounce-back win. Here’s what we learned from the Owls at practice this week.

It’s midseason and injuries are starting to take a toll on the Rice football roster. The Owls have made a lot of adjustments to counteract those personnel losses this week and keep tweaking the offense as they go. How much improvement can they make in a short window of time as they face a must-win game against Charlotte on Saturday.

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For those checking in for the first time, or those returning, a quick programming note. Special features like this are reserved for our subscribers. Have questions? You can get those answered in our monthly Q&As and get access to all practice notes, recruiting updates and features like this one when you subscribe on Patreon today.

Can I get a safety, please?

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Recent Posts

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: AJ Stephens, Aquantis Clemmons, Blaise Tita, Blake Boenisch, Brant Banks, Chad Lindberg, Charlie Looes, Chike Anigbogu, Colin Giffen, David Stickle, DeMone Green, Drew Devillier, Elroyal Morris, Ethan Onianwa, Izeya Floyd, Jojo Jean, Joseph Mu, Josh Pearcy, Lamont Narcisse, Marcus Williams, Michael Daley, Michael Larbie, Myron Morrison, Plae Wyatt, practice notes, Quinton Jackson, Rice Football, trace norfleet, Ty Morris, Weston Kropp

Rice Football 2024: Charlotte presser quotes and depth chart

September 24, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Next up for Rice football: Charlotte. 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 Army game and looked ahead at their upcoming matchup with Charlotte.

More: Game Preview: Rice Football vs Charlotte

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

“They out executed us. They out-played us in many ways, played with better fundamentals including pad-level. Unfortunately it was a very common occurance where the gold helmets were under the silver helmets. They played with better leverage and because of that they were able to move us. We put a strong emphasis on fundamentals this week and [we’re] really counted on our coaches doing a great job putting us in position to play the game.” – Mike Bloomgren on what the team has adjusted since Army

“They’re an unbelievabley talented team. You look at pieces that they brought into their program. It’s something Biff’s always said he would be able to do and has done. I think top to bottom, they are very talented American Conference team and they’re playing hard. They’re just not getting [the results]. Probably like looking in the mirror a little bit. I think we’re very talented. We’re not getting results we want. So probably a very similar feel in their camp right now to ours.” – Mike Bloomgren on Charlotte

“I think what we’ve seen is a guy grow. I think he kinda got thrown to the wolves last year against us. I’m not saying he wasn’t ready or anything like that, but the quarterback we saw on film against Indiana had the ability to get the ball out of his hands, the ability bring his feet into the game, those are the positives. I just think you’ve got greath growth. I think us looking at the guy that played against us last year would be a mistake if we think that’s the guy we’re gonna get this Saturday.” – Mike Bloomgren’s on Charlotte quarterback Trexler Ivey

“When you almost shut out a team the previous year, there’s some confidence, but it’s a whole nother year. It’s a whole nother team. We’re a whole new team. They’re a whole new team… It doesn’t really matter who we play. We’re focused on the Rice Owls having a good week of practice and coming back with that energy and confidence.” – Linebacker Josh Pearcy on experience against Charlotte last year

“From game one I think our communication, number one, has improved drastically. We’ve done a really good job of  being on the right people and making sure we’re all on the same page. That was a big emphasis that coach Sanders [Davis] had on us at the beginning of the year when I first got here during camp, communication, communication, communication. I think that we’ve done a really good job just emphasizing that and fixing that as well as getting movement and holding up in pass protection.” – Offensive linemen David Stickle on the growth of the o-line 

Depth Chart

Rice Football

Depth Chart Notes

There were a ton of changes to the depth chart this week, the majority of them injury-related. Let’s start with the offense where Chad Lindberg has been moved to right guard, filling in for an injured John Long. That also required Weston Kropp to step in and take over the left guard space behind Lindberg. That’s it for the offense.

On defense, Demone Green is off the two-deep after announcing on social media this week that he would miss the remainder of the season with a torn ACL. Joseph Mutombo takes over his spot behind Charlie Looes. At linebacker, Ty Morris and Myron Morrison are the starters this week with Andrew Awe replaced by Blaise Tita on the two-deep.

Safety continues to be a revolving door. The injury to Tyson Flowers — Bloomgren seemed optimistic he might be able to go this week, something subscribers should look for in practice notes later in the week. For the time being, it’s Peyton Stevenson slated to make the start with Chike Anigbogu as his backup. Daveon Hook takes over the free safety spot. Lamont Narcisse and AJ Stephens, both of which have been in the corner room to this point, move to the backup safety spots as JoJo Jean was also banged up last week. This is a rough room right now.



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Recent Posts

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  • Rice Baseball 2025: MLB Owls Update – May 7

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

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