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Rice Football Recruiting: Breaking down the 2020 signees – Offense and Special Teams

December 20, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2020 Rice Football Recruiting class features a ton of talent on the offensive side of the ball and a potential multi-year starter on special teams.

Quarterback (2) – Mike Collins (TCU), TJ McMahon (JUCO)

During Mike Bloomgren’s first season at Rice, Shawn Stankavage, Jackson Tyner, Evan Marshman, Parker Towns and Wiley Green took snaps at quarterback. 2019 was marginally better — Green, Tom Stewart and JoVoni Johnson were the primary options. The continuous theme in those jumbled lists is the inconsistency. Rice hasn’t had one singular guy they can count on at the most important position on the field.

Mike Collins is arguably the most high-profile addition this staff has brought in at the position. He won three state titles in four years in Connecticut and set the state record for touchdown passes. Then he bounced around from Penn to TCU. He’s a talented passer with FBS starting experience, something the Owls haven’t had in the past three classes. Most importantly, he’ll be here for the spring, giving him ample runway to learn the offense, a luxury neither Stankavage or Stewart were afforded.

Also an early enrollee, McMahon is less heralded, but an intriguing prospect nonetheless. He’s got a lot of raw talent and a clutch gene that’s been largely missing from the Rice quarterback room recently. Watch the first play of his junior highlights. Anyone can look good on one highlight-reel play, but the poise and playmaking ability McMahon shows are on another level.

Whether it’s one of those two, Green or Johnson who wins the job, Rice should have competent quarterback play next season. Bloomgren says he can rest happily, knowing that “for the first time since we’ve been here, whoever is going to be the starting quarterback is on campus in the spring.” If the defense maintains there stellar performance, that might be enough to flip some of those close losses to wins.

Running Back (2) – Kobie Campbell, Khalan Griffin

The running back room was arguably the deepest position group on offense last season, but they’ll have to replace Aston Walter, Nahshon Ellerbe and Charlie Booker next season. The 2020 Rice football recruiting class needed at least one potential producer. They got two.

Kobie Campbell is a guy who is deceptively powerful for his 5-foot-7 stature. He runs with a vengeance, but it’s his burst that should interest Owls the most. His ability to kick it into high gear at a moment’s notice is impressive. He has the ability to make one cut, hit the hole and pick up yards in bunches. He’s a swiss army knife who can do it all.

More: Breaking down the Rice Football recruiting 2020 defensive signees (UPDATED)

The other addition at the position didn’t play running back in high school. Khalan Griffin was a dual-threat quarterback who frequently made video game-esque runs seem easy. An injury cost him the latter portion of his senior season, but the Owls’ interest never wavered. Once he’s back to full health he’s going to be a difference-maker at the next level, one that offensive coordinator Jerry Mack went out of his way to identify as a player who “will find himself on the field sooner rather than later.”

This is a spot where Rice would probably consider adding a transfer, provided they find the right one.

Wide Receiver (1) – Andrew Mason

The immediate future at wide receiver seems particularly strong, but the depth is a bit lacking. Austin Trammell and Brad Rozner will be the 1A and 1B in this offense next season. Who else emerges from the rest of the pack remains to be seen. We saw a nice cameo from Zane Knipe at the tail end of the 2019 season as well as scattered plays here and there from Jake Bailey and August Pitre.

Andrew Mason has as good of a chance to see meaningful playing time quickly as any of the non-Trammell/Rozer options currently on the roster. The 5-foot-10 wideout is a dominant playmaker who can make people miss in space and haul in stunning catches when the ball gets to his general vicinity.

How dominant is Mason? In a game against eventual 10-2 Arkansas state champion Pulaski Academy this season, Mason went off for eight touchdowns, tying a Tennessee state record that had stood since 1994. Slowed with a cast on his left hand, Mason wasn’t originally supposed to play in the game at all, let alone be the key cog in a massive win.

After a few touchdowns, it didn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out Ravenwood was going to throw the ball to Mason. The opposing defense knew exactly where the ball was going. They just couldn’t stop it. Mason can win over the top, across the middle and everywhere in between. He’s a potential game-breaker and a star in the making of an impressive 2020 Rice Football recruiting class.

Tight End (1) – Nate Kamper

Not all tight ends are created equal. The Owls know that better than most. Although you’ll only see one position listed, there are a few different specialized roles that are best suited for different kinds of players.

Rice relied on three tight ends to play the bulk of the snaps last season — Jordan Myers, Jaeger Bull and Jack Bradley. All three of them profile more so as blocking tight ends than downfield threats, combining for 38 receptions total in the past two seasons. They can catch ball, but that’s not their primary function while in the game.

Kamper falls into the latter category of tight end. He’s the kind of player you can line up in the slot or inline and ask to go downfield. His tall (6-foot-6), 200-pound frame makes him a potential problem down the seam, an area where he excelled in high school. Robert French and Jonathan Sanchez were two players penciled into this role for the 2019 season. Neither seized the job.

Kamper has the ability, he’ll just need some time in the weight room.  He’s a raw talent, with a lot more football to learn. But he has all the traits to be a game-changer for the Owls in the middle of the field. Bloomgren said “he’s just scratched the surface of where he’ll be as a football player.”

Offensive Line (5) – Mike Leone, Braedon Nutter, Trey Phillippi, Adam Sheriff (JUCO), Jovaun Woolford (Colgate)

Most every Rice football recruiting class is going to include a heavy dose of offensive lineman. The Owls brought in three transfers at the position last season, all of which started when healthy. They’ll have to fill all three gaps this time around, making the additions of experienced players like Jovaun Woolford and Adam Sheriff big pickups for this group.

In an ideal world, true freshmen won’t crack the starting lineup for a program like Rice which will remain committed to keeping the cupboards stocked at that position. Rice would prefer to do what they did this season where they were able to play and redshirt members of the 2019 class like Isaac Klarkowski, Hunter Jones and Regan Riddle. That’s most likely the role many of these guys will fill next year.

Mike Leone and Trey Phillippi are the names to keep an eye on among the high school additions. Beyond their prototypical frames, they fill a need at the tackle spot. Amplified by the potential departure of Uzoma Osuji and the exit of grad transfer Justin Gooseberry, Rice needed this duo. The Owls didn’t bring in a true tackle in their last class, instead adding several high-caliber interior players who could be in the mix this season. Which brings us back to these tackles.

More: The Roost Podcast – 2019 Rice Football end of season awards

Bloomgren said Leone, who had Power 5 offers from ACC and Big 12 schools, “has all the tools to be a big-time offensive tackle in our conference. Standing 6-foot-5 and tipping the scales at 270 pounds, how quickly he assimilates into the offense in the fall will be an intriguing storyline to watch. He’s a guy who could be the potential heir to the left tackle spot following Clay Servin.

Phillippi is similar. His reach and ability to bend set him apart as an elite athlete with his hulking frame. These are top-end players. With grooming, these two could be bookends on the Rice line for years to come. Both will see the field in at least a redshirt capacity this season.

Kicker (1) – Collin Riccitelli (Stanford)

Chris Barnes is out of eligibility and heir apparent Zach Hoban is in the Transfer Portal. That left an opening at the place kicking spot which Rice will fill with Stanford transfer Collin Riccitelli. Although the math works out well enough, Rice had actually zeroed in on Riccitelli much sooner. Rice began their due diligence as soon as he entered the portal last fall.

Riccitelli was a career backup at Stanford, but the coaching staff is confident he’ll have a successful career at Rice. He didn’t ride the bench for lack of ability, rather he sat behind Jet Toner, the all-time leading scorer in Stanford history and a back-to-back All-Pac12 selection. Special Teams coordinator Drew Svoboda gave a nod to former Ohio State transfer turned LSU superstar Joe Burrow. Nobody is promising Heisman Trophies, but the expectations for Riccitelli are reasonably high.

The staff believes they’ll be able to secure a medical hardship waiver for an earlier season in Riccitelli’s career. That would give him two years to play two seasons at Rice.

Last update: Feb. 5, 2020
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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Football Recruiting, Premium Tagged With: Adam Sheriff, Andrew Mason, Braedon Nutter, Jovaun Woolford, Khalan Griffin, Kobie Campbell, Mike Collins, Mike Leone, Nate Kamper, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting, TJ McMahon, Trey Phillippi

Rice Football Recruiting: 2020 Class has program-shifting talent

December 19, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2020 Rice Football recruiting class is full of special talents and game-changing players, two things which could become increasingly more common at South Main.

A lot can change in a year. On the heels of a two-win season, the 2019 Rice Football recruiting class finished No. 11 in Conference USA. There was optimism the Owls were in the midst of righting the ship, but the recruits hadn’t fully bought in, not yet. One year later, Rice is on the verge of history.

“The Flight Class of 2020 is currently on pace to be the highest-rated class in school history,” head coach Mike Bloomgren said as he kicked off a press conference introducing the program’s newest signees. The Owls’ Top 5 class is already the best since 2013. If they can climb into the top three, a manageable task considering the transfer targets still in play, it would be a program first.

Bloomgren didn’t shy away from those external benchmarks on Wednesday. Yes, the numbers are easier to mention when they’re in your favor. But they’re also tangible proof from the outside that others see the transformation currently underway at South Main. “What I think they show is our ability to go recruit against other people that maybe we haven’t been able to recruit against [in the past],” Bloomgren said.

More: 5 Takeaways from the 2020 Rice Football recruiting class

The difference between the No. 11 class and the No. 5 class is seismic.

The 2020 Rice Football class includes two players in Andrew Mason and Sean Fresch with legitimate 4.3 speed. Kobie Campbell isn’t far behind.

A pair of offensive lineman in Trey Phillippi and Mike Leone who Bloomgren described as potential superstars with “uber-high ceilings.”

55-sack man Jalen Reeves, the potential successor to 2018’s leading sack-man, Anthony Ekpe

17 three-star players, 9 of which were identified by the staff prior to receiving a rating

The list goes on and on. “This class is special,” Bloomgren remarked, knowing the truth behind his words could carry a power beyond what it did a year ago when the Owls turned a bottom-5 class into big-play wide receiver Brad Rozner, interception leader Naeem Smith and Pro Football Focus All-Freshman Third Team selection De’Braylon Carroll. The 2019 class wasn’t perfect, but it produced program-altering players who made a difference in year one. 2020 should be even better.

Naturally, Bloomgren was happy with his haul. “I love this team. I love these players,” he said. “And I think that we’ve got a bunch of guys in our program working really well, really hard right now and I think we’re injecting some more talented individuals. And I’m excited about that.”

He should be. The defense got reinforcements. The offense picked up a host of trench warriors and a slew of game-breaking skill position players. The gaps that existed last week were filled, and filled with some of the most talented players Rice has signed in a long time. It’s one recruiting class, but it’s also the indication of a step change at South Main. From this point onward, Rice football will be built differently. Better pieces should lead to better results.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Football Recruiting, Premium Tagged With: Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting

Rice Football Recruiting: 2020 Early Signing Period Expectations

December 17, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The Owls will sign their first members of the 2020 Rice Football Recruiting class this week during the Early Signing Period. Here’s what to expect.

The Early Signing Period starts tomorrow, marking the first signing opportunity for the 2020 Rice Football Recruiting class. The Owls started this process months ago, with safety Plae Wyatt the first to commit in February. Since then 17 additional players have jumped on board #FlightSchool20. You can view the full commitment list with player profiles here.

In the past week, Rice has picked up three commitments from transfers. Quarterback TJ McMahon and offensive lineman Adam Sheriff have chosen the Owls from the JUCO ranks. Offensive lineman Jovaun Woolford will come to South Main as a graduate transfer from Colgate.

Rice Football Recruiting

How we got here

As it currently stands, the 2020 Rice Football Recruiting class is the fifth highest-rated class in Conference USA, per 247 Sports. That’s one spot shy of the Owls’ No. 4 class in 2007, the highest-rated class in program history since 247 began compiling rankings in the early 2000s.

Credit is due to the entire Rice staff, who have proven themselves to be astute evaluators of talent. Every current commit is rated three-stars by 247, but nine of them were unrated players at the time of their commitments.

Rice didn’t cherrypick from a list of established recruits, they found the talent themselves and let the rating services catch up. Rice football recruiting director Alex Brown, who was hired in April, has done an incredible job setting the stage and pulling the strings for what promises to be a tremendous crop of players.

What to expect this week

As of now, there aren’t any players currently commitment that have indicated they won’t sign this week, that includes former TCU quarterback Michael Collins, the most recent commitment prior to the Early Signing Period. Otherwise, the Owls will continue to pursue their remaining targets into the spring. The 18 already in the fold should make it official during the Early Signing Period.

Many are having signing day ceremonies at their schools. Khalan Griffin and Sean Fresch will sign at 10:30 a.m. Plae Wyatt will sign at 2:45 p.m. Others will send their letters in throughout the day. Make sure to follow us on Twitter and follow our live blog during the day for updates.

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Rice Football Recruiting: Owls ramping up as Early Signing Period nears

December 11, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2020 Rice Football recruiting class is coming together. The Owls added two commitments this week and are in pursuit of several additional targets.

December marks the busiest weeks of the recruiting calendar. The Owls paid visits to nearly every member of the 2020 Rice Football recruiting class over the past week while simultaneously preparing to host additional waves of new recruits.

Rice Football Recruiting

Entering the weekend, every member of the 2020 class was a high school senior. With football seasons done and school year’s wrapping up, several potential transfer targets made their way to Houston. Rice walked away with two commitments from transfers — JUCO quarterback TJ McMahon and former Colgate offensive tackle Jovaun Woolford. Several other players were impressed by what they saw from the Owls.

Names to Know

OL – Witt Mitchum

Near the top of the list of outstanding targets is Tennessee offensive tackle Witt Mitchum. Rice offered Mitchum in November. Since then he’s picked up offers from Georgia Southern, UConn, Kansas State and Kansas. His recruitment is blowing up, but Rice is hanging in with him for the long haul. Mitchum is originally from San Antonio and those Texas ties might help the Owls in this fight.

OL – Mike Leone

Leone has been a priority for a while now, staying in close communication with the staff despite being tucked away in New Jersey. He’s coming down to Texas for a visit, skipping over opportunities much closer to home to come to South Main. Building the offensive line pipeline is crucial for this program, making the importance of Leone’s visit tremendous.

OL – Adam Sheriff

If the addition of Woolford earlier this week didn’t make it abundantly clear, Rice will always be on the market for experienced production on the offensive line. Sheriff spent last season at Butler Community College and has three years of remaining eligibility. He’s being courted by a few other C-USA schools like North Texas and Western Kentucky.

What’s Next?

In addition to some new targets, Rice will have the majority of their non-transfer commits on campus this coming weekend. Most of the local commits have been back for a few games during the year, but the out-of-state additions have had fewer chances to get back to campus. Despite the distance, the class has remained close. They’re looking forward to all getting back together.

As of right now, I expect Rice to sign at least a dozen, if not more, of their current commits during the Early Signing Period, which starts on Wednesday, Dec. 18. That will leave a handful of additional spots to lock down prior to National Signing Day in February, similar to how the team filled out their 2019 class a year ago.

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Rice Football 2019: Quarterbacks, redshirts and UTEP practice notes 🔒

November 29, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football wants to close out its 2019 season on a high note. The Owls haven’t slowed down as the work through Thanksgiving week to prepare for UTEP.

It’s hard to believe we’ve almost reached the end of the Rice football regular season. Be sure to check out the game preview and this week’s podcast. Here are some of the most notable takeaways from practice this week.

Development of the offense and game-planning for the second half

The emergence of Bradley Rozner has been crucial over the last month of the season. Being able to throw the ball up to him on third down and watch him win one-on-one battles has changed the Rice offense. “[Rozner has] really given our offense another threat that we didn’t really know we had early,” wide receivers coach Mike Kershaw admitted. “[Rozner has] really helped us … stretch the ball down the field, flip the field.”

Rozner’s growth has been a boon to the rest of the receiving corps as well. Austin Trammell had more than six receptions for just the second time this season in the win over North Texas, including a wide-open 31-yard gain on third down in the second half.

The Roost Podcast | Episode 19 — North Texas recap and UTEP Preview

Trammell has noticed the added space, saying “It’s nice having more options and be able to make plays down the field.” Even still, the team captain has higher aspirations for himself and this offense. “We just can’t get complacent,” he said of the second half scoring droughts, which by the time the team takes the field against UTEP, will have grown to 35 days without a point scored after halftime.

As for new wrinkles, we might see against UTEP, the speed of Zane Knipe should get more opportunities to flash. Kershaw called him “a different type of weapon,” adding that, “that’s rare to have a guy that has that type of speed [at Rice].”

Quarterback

Bloomgren confirmed during his Tuesday press conference that Tom Stewart would remain the starter for the final week of the regular season. He has taken the majority of the reps with the first team early in the week and performed well. His deep ball continues to be an asset to his game and he’s proven comfortable in the offense.

As good as Stewart has been, there’s a good chance we still see JoVoni Johnson on Saturday. The reps Stewart hasn’t gotten with the one’s have been held for Johnson, who’s worked primarily with a read-option and more run-centric packages.

The running game with Johnson seemed to be the best thing the offense had going for it before the bye. Instituting some of those plays, particularly during any second half stalls could be extremely beneficial. Two quarterbacks shouldn’t be the norm, and I think Bloomgren and his staff will be judicious about how and when they employ their second signal caller against UTEP. They’ve had plenty of learning opportunities.

Redshirt watch

Rice has already begun to shuffle in some of their younger players as the season has progressed. There wasn’t a sudden deluge of new faces when Rice reached the last four games of the year, rather the staff has done a good job of getting many of the freshmen experience in meaningful moments.

These players have played in their allotted four games. I wouldn’t expect we see any of them on Saturday: Jacob Grams, Kebreyun Page, Cole Garcia, Josh Pearcy, Joshua Landrum, Miles McCord, and Brandt Peterson.

Black Friday

As for those who have played in fewer than four games, there should be several players who get into the game in some form or fashion.

On offense, keep an eye on the aforementioned JoVoni Johnson as well as running back Juma Otoviano (game time decision), wide receiver Zane Knipe and walk-on offensive lineman Isaac Klarkowski. On defense, Chike Anigbogu and Izeya Floyd were both singled out by members of the coaching staff this week as players who could see bigger roles.

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Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Austin Trammell, Bradley Rozner, Chike Anigbogu, Isaac Klarkowski, Izeya Floyd, Jovoni Johnson, Juma Otoviano, Rice Football, Tom Stewart, Zane Knipe

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