The source for Rice sports news

  • Football
    • Recruiting
    • Offer Tracker
    • Roster
    • Schedule
    • NFL Owls
  • Premium
    • Patreon
    • Season Preview
    • Join / FAQ
  • Podcast
  • More
    • Store
    • News
    • Basketball
    • Baseball
    • About
    • Contact
  • Login

Quiet confidence permeates one of Rice Football’s biggest wins

October 20, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Thursday night Rice football posted a significant win in program history, but rather than respond with jubilation, the Owls responded with quiet confidence.

When the clock hit triple zeroes of Chapman Stadium, Rice football formalized a host of significant program achievements. The Owls hadn’t won a conference game by more than a touchdown since 2020. They hadn’t won a conference game by as many points (32) since 2013 and hadn’t won a conference road game by that margin since 2003.

By every estimation, this win was seismic — and it was — but the tone Rice football players and staff brought with them to their postgame media availability leaned much more toward serious than euphoric.

Head coach Mike Bloomgren, who has said now on multiple occasions, “the fun is in the winning,” seemed more focused than exultant.

He chuckled about quarterback JT Daniels’ rushing touchdown, just the second of his collegiate career. He praised the offense for controlling the clock, winning the time of possession battle 22:23 to 7:37 in the second half. He gave the defense its flowers for an explosive three-turnover first quarter.

But at no point during the discussion did the tone venture into anything that could be considered truly jubilant. Bloomgren was happy, sure. He stated on multiple occasions how proud he was of his players and his staff for their efforts. But the air was permeated with a businesslike, mission-accomplish aura.

“It just shows you when we play the way we’re capable of, we can do some real fun things,” Bloomgren summarized.

More: Rice football demolishes Tulsa in big program win

If the national television audience was surprised to see the Owls absolutely obliterate a team that was favored to beat them on their home turf, Bloomgren didn’t seem faced. It’s almost as if, despite the ebbs and flows it’s taken the program to get to this point, he expected it.

That approach was echoed by his players.

“It’s a big win for us, we’re of course excited, but we’re definitely not satisfied,” safety Gabe Taylor, who had a big interception on Thursday said. “We want more. We’re 4-3. That’s a good record, but we know we’re not supposed to be here. We’re just ready for Tulane next week.”

Running back Dean Connors, who rushed for three touchdowns and 120 yards on nine carries, addressed the upcoming game with Tulane, too. “It’s about stacking days, and we stacked three great days of work [at practice this week]. And I think to beat Tulane, who’s a really solid team, we’re going to have to do that all over again and do it better.”

From Bloomgren to the pair of veteran leaders, it’s almost as if the page had already been turned. And it wasn’t as if they’d taken the game they just finished for granted, they just knew they had bigger goals still to achieve.

Perhaps the real message Rice football hoped to send on Thursday night on ESPN went well beyond the final score. Sure, 42-10 is impressive and as Taylor put it, “I hope they were looking,” but what Rice football really wants people to know is this team is in a different place, mentally.

“This week, we proved a point,” Taylor said.

It’s hard for one singular game to be a referendum on the season as a whole. The Tulsa game likely won’t define the entire season, neither will the upcoming bout with Tulane.

But if Rice football has really found a way to lock in and carry themselves with the level of seriousness and focus it takes to play like they did on Thursday night, this program really could be different moving forward. Whether or not that continues rests on the shoulders of this team. Maybe, just maybe, they’re past wake-up calls and ready to take the next step. If so, Thursday night was a great first step.

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

Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 203 – 2025 Rice Football Opponent Previews: North Texas
  • What’s Next: Rice Athletics and the House Settlement
  • Rice Football Recruiting: EDGE Seth Clarke commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: MLB Owls Update – Jun 25

Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Dean Connors, Gabe Taylor, Mike Bloomgren, Rice Football

2023-2024 Rice Basketball Season Preview

October 20, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Anticipation is building for the 2023-2024 Rice Basketball season. What might be in store for the Owls as they enter the AAC in Scott Pera’s seventh season?

There’s a buzz around Tudor Fieldhouse these days as Rice Basketball prepares for its first season as members of the AAC. After years of gradual improvement under seventh-year head coach Scott Pera, the Owls hope the 2023-2024 season will be a breakthrough year where they prove to themselves and their new conference mates the Rice program is on its way up.

“I think it’s our deepest group and our most talented group,” Pera told The Roost as the Owls tipped off preseason practices, working to establish a new rhythm with a roster that will boast some important new faces in addition to return leaders Rice fans have come to appreciate.

Subscriber content.<br /> Please login to see the full post or visit our Patreon page.

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.

Sorry! This part of content is hidden behind this box because it requires a higher contribution level ($10) at Patreon. Why not take this chance to increase your contribution?
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 203 – 2025 Rice Football Opponent Previews: North Texas
  • What’s Next: Rice Athletics and the House Settlement
  • Rice Football Recruiting: EDGE Seth Clarke commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: MLB Owls Update – Jun 25

Filed Under: Archive, Basketball, Premium Tagged With: Rice basketball, Season Preview

Rice Football flips script, soars past Tulsa

October 19, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football earned a prime-time win on Thursday night, forcing three turnovers on their way to beating Tulsa on the road to move to 2-1 in AAC play.

The defense started the night strong with three turnovers in the first quarter, buying time before the offense exploded for 35 points. Both sides did enough to secure a much-needed victory over Tulsa on the road on ESPN.

The win was the Owls’ largest conference road win since 2003 and their first double-digit conference win of any kind since 2000. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Mine!

Rice football lost the turnover battle last time out, giving UConn the ball four times. With no takeaways of their own, that proved to be a recipe for disaster in a game the Owls would go on to lose. Flipping that script was a central talking point during the bye week, but it’s one thing to talk about forcing more turnovers and it’s another thing entirely to do what they did on Thursday night.

Gabe Taylor intercepted Tulsa’s first pass attempt of the evening. Then, following a turnover on downs, Rice ended another drive with a forced fumble with Jojo Jean knocking the ball away from quarterback Braylon Braxton into the arms of teammate De’Braylon Carroll. Josh Pearcy joined the fray on the next series, punching the ball out again, this time for Myron Morrison to recover.

Coming into Thursday night, Rice had forced two turnovers in their past 12 quarters of play, one apiece against South Florida and East Carolina. They surpassed that total in a single quarter against Tulsa, helping propel themselves to a 14-0 lead.

The Owls seem to have leaned all the way into a havoc-centric defensive scheme. They’ll give up chunk plays and set up looser coverage at times to ensure they keep the ball in front of them. If they compliment it with tackles for loss – they had seven against Tulsa — and turnovers, that might just get the job done.

Instant Rice and Ball Control

Alongside the explosive start by the Rice defense, the offense delivered several succinct scoring drives. The first was a two-play, 70-yard drive thanks to this breakaway touchdown run by Dean Connors:

Dean Connors says bye, bye!https://t.co/flrZlh4DdK

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) October 19, 2023

Then another via a two-play, 53-yard drive concluded by this dart from Daniels to McCaffrey:

This throw from Daniels to McCaffrey is ridiculous. An absolute bullet. Can't defend that. pic.twitter.com/P5jgKxQfft

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) October 19, 2023

Rice entered this game as the top offense in the AAC in 30+ yard plays per game. That’s a stark difference from the team that had leaned on lengthy, 10+ play, clock-controlling drives in years past. When you have someone as capable as JT Daniels at quarterback, you might as well put his arm to good use. Rice is certainly doing that this year.

In fact, Daniels has completed a 30+ yard pass to 10 different pass catchers so far this season.

It’s also worth noting Daniels was not at his best early on . He finished the game completing 65 percent of his passes, but he started 5-of-13. Several of his throws went long, overshooting open receivers on plays that could have turned into significant gains. But that’s part of what makes the explosive plays so big.

When you’re missing your shots, even a few big gains can generate all the points you need. And when you’re locked in, the touchdowns arrive in bunches. Daniels finished the evening with 342 passing yards, two touchdowns and one, big win.

But it was how the Owls ended the night that was equally impressive. Their first three scoring drives took less than a minute. Their last two were both 13-plus plays and 8:00+ minutes. Dean Connors provided the exclamation point, running in a third touchdown on his nine-carry, 120-yard night.

It was a complete offensive performance, mixing the quick strike with relentless efficiency, by far their best outing of the year.

Special teams up and down

After a horrendous special teams day against UConn, the Rice coaching staff elected not to make any significant changes to personnel for this game. The results weren’t quite as disastrous — no turnovers were committed — but it wasn’t a great outing either. Results were decidedly up and down.

Conor Hunt’s first punt traveled just 37 yards and set Tulsa up with great field position. His next kick was near-perfect though, pinning Tulsa inside their own five-yard line on a perfect hanging kick that gave his coverage team plenty of time to get under the ball.

Punt returner Sean Fresch made a dangerous decision to field a punt in the final seconds in the first half, but made the catch off the bounce cleanly. He then delivered a 20-yard return to start the second half, getting Rice out of the shadow of its own endzone.

Enoch Gota booted the opening kickoff of the second half out of bounds but otherwise didn’t allow any returns. Rice did not attempt any field goals, but Tim Horn connected on all five extra-point tries.

Needed it. Got it.

Before the game, ESPN ran an interesting blub with their pregame commentary. They gave Rice a 37 percent chance to reach six wins as things currently stood. Those odds were set to nearly double should they beat Tulsa. Their win on Thursday elevated their current win total to four with a game left against Charlotte (who was a touchdown underdog to an ECU team Rice beat a few weeks ago).

As we learned against UConn, there are no gimmies with this team, not yet. But, Rice should be set up to have more than a puncher’s chance at a second-straight bowl season with two wins in their final five games. The road ahead is tough — defending AAC champion Tulane comes to Rice Stadium next weekend — but it’s tangible. And it won’t require a Herculean performance to get there.

“It just shows you that when we play the way we’re capable of, we can do some really fun things,” head coach Mike Bloomgren said postgame.

Rice needed this game. They absolutely had to have this game. And they found a way to win. We’ve watched this team mature over the course of the past few seasons and the past seven games. They’re proven they can beat anyone if they don’t beat themselves. Too often that seems a popular football cliche. This team is living it out, this time on national TV.

“I don’t think so,” Bloomgren chuckled when asked if he could have envisioned a better primetime performance. “What a great platform and I felt they used it really well.”

Rice football is its own worst enemy. On Thursday, they were their biggest advocates. A team playing that well can hang with anyone. The Owls just need to find a way to make sure that squad that won on the road shows up again next Saturday and each Saturday from this point onward.

Digging deeper

Every week we’ll have a stat, storyline or key learning from the game reserved for our subscribers. Haven’t joined yet? Sign up here:

Become a Patron!

Getting off the field

Sorry! This part of content is hidden behind this box because it requires a higher contribution level ($10) at Patreon. Why not take this chance to increase your contribution?
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 203 – 2025 Rice Football Opponent Previews: North Texas
  • What’s Next: Rice Athletics and the House Settlement
  • Rice Football Recruiting: EDGE Seth Clarke commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: MLB Owls Update – Jun 25

Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: game recap, Rice Football

Rice Football 2023: Tulsa Game Week Practice Report

October 17, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football is off the bye and headed to Tulsa for a prime-time conference game. Here’s what we learned from practice this week.

Following two weeks of prep, Rice football is on its way north to play Tulsa in what has the makings of a pivotal AAC game for both squads. The Owls got started on their game plan last week and added the finishing touches over the last several days, including some hotly contested special teams battles and some potential playing time risers over the last several practices.

Subscriber content.<br /> Please login to see the full post or visit our Patreon page.

This week’s roundup focuses on those potential changes over the bye week, what the Owls might do differently from a personnel standpoint and as always, a few injury notes, both good and bad.

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.

Bye week adjustments

Sorry! This part of content is hidden behind this box because it requires a higher contribution level ($10) at Patreon. Why not take this chance to increase your contribution?
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 203 – 2025 Rice Football Opponent Previews: North Texas
  • What’s Next: Rice Athletics and the House Settlement
  • Rice Football Recruiting: EDGE Seth Clarke commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: MLB Owls Update – Jun 25

Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Aquantis Clemmons, Ari Broussard, Ashton Ojiaku, Beau Barton, Boden Groen, Chase Jenkins, Chris Bruce, Chris conti, Conor Hunt, Daelen Alexander, Daveon Hook, DJ Arkansas, Elijah Mojarro, Elroyal Morris, Gabe Taylor, Jack Bradley, Jojo Jean, JT Daniels, Justin Williams, Marcus Williams, Matt Sykes, Myron Morrison, Peyton Stevenson, Plae Wyatt, practice notes, Rawson MacNeill, Reese Keeney, Rice Football, Tim Horn, Tyson Flowers

Rice Football 2023: Tulsa presser quotes and depth chart

October 17, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football visits Tulsa this week. Here’s what Mike Bloomgren had to say about the matchup at hand 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 bye week and looked ahead at their upcoming matchup with Tulsa.

Listen Now: The Roost Pod – Breaking down Rice Football vs UConn

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

“We know that we’re going into Tulsa to play a very good team, a well-coached football team led by coach Kevin Wilson. A team that’s in a very similar spot to where we are. They’re 3-3. They probably came out of their last game feeling like they could have and should have won that game, so very similar spots.”– Mike Bloomgren on the Tulsa game

“I think you see a lot of coach Wilson’s fingerprint on what they do. I think they play very physical and very tough, so that’s what they do best, is there style of play, if you will.” – Mike Bloomgren on Tulsa’s strengths

“We had really good practices where we got some good technique work with our coaches in some individual periods. Came out and got a couple periods of early Tulsa practice and then we turned it into a young guys scrimmage.” – Mike Bloomgren on how the Owls utilized the bye week

“I feel like definitely with the bye week we had a lot more time to refind our identity, really find that tough, aggresive, fly-around-team that we know that we are. To be able to come back and regroup and play for eachother, finding that again was a great opportunity to do over the by week.” – Defensive end Joshua Pearcy om defensive improvements during the bye week

“There team is a run team. So what do they get all summer? They get runs. So they’re probably going to be a good run-stopping team. That’s one thing that we’re trying to improve as an offensive line, our consistency in run-blocking. So that’s one thing we’ve been honing in on and trying to improve.” – Offensive lineman Brant Banks on what the offensive line hopes to improve this week

Depth Chart

Rice Football

Depth Chart Notes

There were no official changes to the Rice football depth chart this week, but that’s been a common occurrence so far this season. There could be a few fairly meaningful deviations from what’s been posted given injuries and the special teams mishaps from last week. We’ll have more updates on the latest on the plan for Thursday shortly for subscribers.

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

Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 203 – 2025 Rice Football Opponent Previews: North Texas
  • What’s Next: Rice Athletics and the House Settlement
  • Rice Football Recruiting: EDGE Seth Clarke commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: MLB Owls Update – Jun 25

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

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 137
  • 138
  • 139
  • 140
  • 141
  • …
  • 589
  • Next Page »
  1. Item 1
  2. Item 2
  3. Item 3
  4. Item 4
  5. Item 5
  • 2025 Rice Football Season Preview, Rice Football
  • Jack Ben-Shoshan, Rice Baseball
  • Rice Baseball, David Pierce
  • Rice Football
  • “He’s a Bulldog”: Parker Smith’s Journey to Rice Baseball Ace
Become a patron at Patreon!
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter