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AAC Football 2024: Week 1 Roundup

September 1, 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 1-0 (0-0) at Lehigh (Fri) W, 42-7 at FAU
Charlotte 0-1 (0-0) vs James Madison L, 30-7 at North Carolina
ECU 1-0 (0-0) vs Norfolk St W, 42-3 at ODU
FAU 0-1 (0-0) at Michigan St (Fri) L, 16-10 vs Army
Memphis 1-0 (0-0) vs N. Alabama W, 40-0 vs Troy
Navy 1-0 (0-0) vs Bucknell W, 49-21 vs Temple
North Texas 1-0 (0-0) at S. Alabama W, 52-38 vs SFA
Rice 0-1 (0-0) vs Sam Houston St L, 34-14 vs Texas So.
Temple 0-1 (0-0) at 16 Oklahoma (Fri) L, 51-3 at Navy
Tulane 1-0 (0-0) vs SE Louisiana (Thr) W, 52-0 vs Kansas St
Tulsa 1-0 (0-0) vs Northwestern St (Thr) W, 62-38 at Arkansas St
UAB 1-0 (0-0) vs Alcorn St (Thr) W, 41-3 at ULM
USF 1-0 (0-0) vs Bethune-Cookman W, 46-3 at 5 Alabama
UTSA 1-0 (0-0) vs Kennesaw St W, 28-16 at Texas St

Notable Results and Storylines // (Standings)

Return of the Mean Green

North Texas had 77 new players on its roster this fall and 11 new starters in their season-opening win on the road against a strong South Alabama squad. The touchdown underdogs sure didn’t look like a team in the midst of an unexpected Year 2 reboot. This was by far the most impressive win for the AAC in Week 1.

Cooked Rice

On the other side of the coin, Rice football significantly underwhelmed high expectations in their first game of the year. The Owls were pushed around by a Sam Houston team that went 3-9 a season ago, the Bearkats’ first year in FBS. There were some positives — EJ Warner looked the part and the defense tallied seven sacks — but those things don’t make up for a Week 1 egg that’s going to take a while to get past.

Tune up: Complete

Outside of FAU, who hung around with a lackluster Michigan State team for a while, the bulk of the conference played FCS opponents in their openers. That led to five AAC squads that held their opponents to three points or less, including shutouts by Memphis and Tulane. The schedule will get harder as the season progresses, but all of these schools past their first test. That’s how opening week is supposed to go.

Looking ahead – Key storylines

Texas-sized tussle

In what’s turning into one of the most heated rivalries in the state, UTSA and Texas State face off in Week 2 after rather mediocre wins to open their season with UTSA edging out Kennesaw State and Texas State squeezing past Lamar. A win is a win, but both teams have a lot of work to do this week before they play one of the biggest games of the season which — if either squad does put it into gear — could possibly impact the College Football Playoff down the line.

Conference play is here

Part of the reworked conference schedules, including the late addition of Army has meant conference games are already on the docket. The Black Knights travel to Florida Atlantic this week to play their first-ever AAC game while fellow service academy Navy hosts Temple. Oddly enough, there are no conference games for the AAC in Week 3.

P4 shots

The American built its brand on knocking off power programs, but last year the conference only finished with one Power 4/5 win: Rice beat Houston to win the Bayou Bucket. This year there appear to be a few reasonable chances for the AAC to get one of those marquee upsets under its belt, but it will be a tall order. The best shot this week is probably Tulane, which hosts Kansas State, but the South Florida faithful won’t be writing off their rematch with Alabama after they went toe to toe with the Tide last year.

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

Rice Football sputters against Sam Houston in disappointing home opener

August 31, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

After a summer of hope, Rice Football spent all its goodwill in an opening night loss to Sam Houston that never seemed as close as the score suggests.

Any illusions of a storybook season on South Main were shattered quickly on Saturday night. Rice football dropped its season opener to a Sam Houston State team the Owls had historically dominated, winning 16 of the 17 previous contests. That history couldn’t save the Owls this time around who fell to 0-1 in their seventh season under head coach Mike Bloomgren.

Bloomgren didn’t hide from the obviously disappointing result. “I apologize to our fans. I thought our game day atmosphere was really good from the first Owl Walk ever to all the things that people outside of this team control,” he said. “They were about as good as they can be and we didn’t do our part tonight.”

Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Sputtering from the start

Even with a few key transfers missing, Rice football couldn’t have gotten off to a much worse start to the season. The offensive line was overwhelmed early by the Sam Houston front, putting quarterback EJ Warner under pressure and providing little in the way of running room for the Owls’ backs. The first four Rice drives yielded 10 total yards and a pick-six.

The degree to which a Conference USA defensive line was able to push Rice around was concerning. There wasn’t much time to test the Bearkats downfield, allowing their entire defense to creep in and contributing, at least in part, to that crushing pick-six on the Owls’ third possession.

The defense faired slightly better, but not much. A busted coverage allowed Sam Houston a walk-in 67-yard touchdown. Then, already trailing by two scores, they let Sam Houston nickel and dime them down the field to make the deficit 17-0. A veteran team that was about a 10-point favorite looked shell-shocked before the first-quarter buzzer had ever sounded.

The first play of the second quarter? A missed field goal. Offense, defense and special teams all came out flat. That’s not how this game was supposed to go.walk

Three more quarters would ensue, but the gist of head coach Mike Bloomgren’s postgame synopsis was already begun to take form. “This is a team butt-whipping,” he said, after first crediting Sam Houston’s performance. “They took us out to the woodshed and beat the heck out of us and we’ve got to respond. We can’t put that kind of product on the field ever again.”

A tale of two lines

The defensive lines from both teams earned their keep on Saturday night. Although it was far from a defensive clinic on the Rice side, the pass rush did its job. Rice racked up seven sacks from seven different players. Charlie Looes stepped in for Coleman Coco and looked very much the part, impacting the game from his first series in blue and grey, tying for the team lead with 1.5 tackles for loss.

Sam Houston’s long touchdown passes weren’t slowly developing plays. Both featured quick shots deep downfield in which the Rice defensive back just got beat, either because of a miscommunication in coverage or a lost foot race. It’s hard to put either of those shots on the defensive line, which for the most part, made life extremely hard for quarterback Hunter Watson when he tried to throw the ball.

When the teams switched sides, the same reality was evident. The Sam Houston defensive line dominated a Rice front that was supposed to be revamped, featuring veteran tackles and hand-picked transfers on the interior. The Owls had zero running game and quarterback EJ Warner did almost all of his work under duress.

“Our offensive line, that is not the product we expect to put out there,” Bloomgren assessed.

Sam Houston ranked 124th in the nation in sacks last season. They added a few transfers to beef up the defensive line, but it’s not as if they brought in a bevy of blue chippers headed for the NFL. They sacked Warner two times, registering four official hurries and putting him off his spot too many times to count. A blistering shot in the final minutes of the game had Warner hobbling to the sideline as the Owl faithful held their collective breath.

The degree to which Rice struggled against an opponent that was not as talented on the line as others they fared before suggests this might have more to do with scheme than talent. If so, that’s a silver lining. Scheme can be analyzed and fix from game one to game two. Talent is what it is. Hopefully for the Owls, the first was the culprit on Saturday night.

The EJ Warner of it all

In desperate need of a pulse, EJ Warner took control. The first sparks of life came from two throws down the field, the first to Braylen Walker and the next to Matt Sykes. That drive would stall, but Warner would make a nifty play on the next sequence, throwing across his body as he rolled out to move the chains. He found Kobie Campbell in the endzone three players later to finally get Rice football on the board.

Given the pressure he was working under, Warner faired fairly well in his Rice debut. He completed 27 of 44 passes for 227 yards. He threw one touchdown and two interceptions, although the second was an afterthought with the game result well in hand.

Bloomgen seemed to concur, suggesting not all the fault fell on Warner’s shoulders. “I’m not sure he had time to play like he’s capable of playing,” Bloomgren said.”

Had he not been on the field, things likely would have gone much worse for the home team. We’ve seen what happens to a good team without a quarterback in recent years around South Main. At the very least, Warner showcased himself to be AAC-caliber, not something that can be said for every position on this team right now.

The defense had their gaffes. The running game was non-existent (2.6 yards per carry against a team that allowed 4.3 yards per carry a year ago). Warner and the pass rush were the positives from a night filled with horrors for the hometown crowd.

What it means

This team was talking about contending for a conference championship throughout the offseason and into fall camp. Those aspirations can officially be put on pause until they figure out some glaring issues from their season opener. Was this the seemingly annual hiccup where Rice got beat by an inferior opponent and they’ll be ready to go next week? It’s possible. But there’s not a lot from what we saw on the field Saturday to suggest this team is AAC-ready.

It doesn’t really matter if Sam Houston is improved, and to what degree they’ve progressed in their second season at the FBS level. This game was meant to be the game where the Owls established they’d taken the next step on a long-enduring build. Getting to six wins, or more, starts with winning home games you’re favored in by more than a touchdown. It doesn’t mean the Owls can’t rebound, but they’ve opened the door for questions that wouldn’t have been there if they’d just found a way to mozy to a boring 21-17 win.

The Texas Southern game can’t come soon enough. And fortunately for Rice, Houston looked just as embarrassing in their opening game against UNLV. This season is far from over and there are some manageable games ahead. But if there wasn’t a fire under this team and this coaching staff coming into the year, there’d better be now. Winning every game was never in the cards, but losing like that can’t happen again.

“We’re gonna watch the film. It’s going to suck watching it,” captain Josh Pearcy said after the game. “But, you know, we’ll treat it with that next play mentality and move on the next week.”

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Braylen Walker, EJ Warner, game recap, Josh Pearcy, Matt Sykes, Rice Football

Rice Football: Behind enemy lines with a SHSU Insider

August 30, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Sam Houston State is next up on the 2024 Rice football schedule so we’re going behind enemy lines with Bearkats insider Ben Sorrells from the Kat Fund.

Bearkats insider Ben Sorrells from Sports of SHSU and the Kat Fund was kind enough to stop by and answer a few questions about the upcoming matchup between Rice Football and Sam Houston State. The answers below should shed some light on the Owls’ upcoming opponent.

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

Rice Football 2024: SHSU Game Week Practice Report

August 29, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football opens the season against Sam Houston State, their first home opener in six years. Here’s what we learned from the Owls at practice this week.

After practicing against guys wearing the same colored jersey for weeks, everyone around South Main is ready for Rice football to kick off its season this coming Saturday against Sam Houston. That includes some somewhat unexpected starters, a few key transfer pieces nursing injuries and a few new tech toys for head coach Mike Bloomgren and his program to incorporate into their new reality.

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Freshmen on the Two Deep and in the game?

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: AJ Padgett, AJ Stephens, Braylen Walker, Chad Lindberg, Drayden Dickmann, Drew Devillier, EJ Warner, Ephraim Dotson, Faybian Marks, Gabe Taylor, Graham Walker, Lamont Narcisse, Matt Sykes, Peyton Farmer, practice notes, Rawson MacNeill, Reese Keeney, Rice Football, Shawqi Itraish, Taji Atkins, Thai Chiaokhiao-Bowman

Rice Football 2024: Sam Houston St. presser quotes and depth chart

August 27, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Next up for Rice football: the season opener against Sam Houston State. 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 past few weeks of practice and looked ahead at their upcoming matchup with Sam Houston State at home.

More: Game Preview: Rice Football vs Sam Houston State

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

.@RiceFootball head coach Mike Bloomgren opens his first midweek presser of the season assessing the tragic events on campus on Monday. pic.twitter.com/Jt7mN2bAx2

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) August 27, 2024

 

“I think KC Keeler is a very, very good football coach. I think that’s very evident by every place he’s ever been. You don’t have to look any further than the five games that they lost last year by one score and they were so close on so many of those things. And so again, they’re building a great program.”– Mike Bloomgren on Sam Houston and coach KC Keeler

“We’ve kind of got a depth chart we believe in. We’ve got some twos and even some threes that can help us. That’s what’s going to be hard is getting an airplane big enough to take everybody to our road games, so that we can have the ones that deserve to play on special teams, play on special teams and then ones on [offense and defense] as well.” – Mike Bloomgren on the Rice football roster

“There is a lot of strategy. It changes a lot of things from an analytic standpoint, certainly the end the game scenarios and the number of times a team can get the ball back. I told our team don’t be surprised at all for a team to get two possessions, now, if they get the ball outside of two minutes. So you could be up by 14 and not be incredibly comfortable, unless you’re going to be in a position to end the game in a four-minute drive for the offense or get another takeaway on the defense. So it’s going to extend games.” – Mike Bloomgren on the two minute timeout

“My path was a little less clear than most. I wasn’t as constantly developed at the same spot. I was moved back and forth. I worked with a couple different position coaches but never once did I feel like there was anything other than the highest desire for me to be a successful human being in this program and player and I feel like I’m proud to be the person I am right now because of the people around me and the coaches and the leadership and the players that helped me get to that point.” – Defensive tackle Izeya Floyd on his path at Rice

“It’s just been so fun to grow with them since I got here, just trying to work together, find our best chemistry that we can so when we do go on the field we have the success that we all want. It’s been really cool to get a lot of guys step up and grow from the spring and even to fall camp, just different guys that you’ve seen the progression that they’ve made every single day in the work that they’ve put in and just can’t wait to get the ball in those guys hands and let them roll and have a front row seat to watch it.” – Quarterback EJ Warner on getting to know the Owls’ receiving corps

Depth Chart

Rice Football

Depth Chart Notes

If you’ve been following the coverage on the site this summer, there shouldn’t be a ton of surprises. If you haven’t go ahead and remedy that first by subscribing to The Roost here to get access to all our premium content the rest of the way. That said, there are a few things that stand out from this first pass of an official depth chart, particularly on the offensive side of the ball.

First, Drew Devillier was named backup quarterback over AJ Padgett, who has struggled in camp this fall. We hinted that Padgett falling down the depth chart might be a possibility, but it’s still somewhat unusual to see a true freshman beat out two veterans out of the gate.

Bloomgren called the decision one that his staff “didn’t take really likely, anytime you’re going to put a freshman as your No. 2 quarterback over guys who have played in football games” but made it clear that the numbers backed up Devillier as the better option and that Bloomgren was “really, really impressed not just with how he studied and how he processed, but also his cool demeanor.”

The wide receiver room is the other area of note. Drayden Dickman’s rise throughout camp has catapulted him ahead of Kobie Campbell in the ranks. That’s a good sign for an up-and-coming player like himself. Bloomgren made it seem as if Matt Sykes and Rawson MacNeill were neck and neck and would rotate fairly evenly at the X spot. As for the Z position, Braylen Walker is an intriguing riser to watch.

Stay tuned for further updates this week with the latest on the injury front as well as a deeper look at how the receiving corps might be used in Week 1.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: EJ Warner, Izeya Floyd, press conference notes, Rice Football

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