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Rice Football: Owls add 2030, 2031 games with San Jose St

March 23, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has announced the addition of two games with San Jose State to its future schedule, a home/away pairing set to begin in 2030.

For the second time in the past month, Rice football has made an adjustment to its future nonconference schedule. In early March, Rice swapped out a 2023 road game with BYU in favor of a home contest against UConn. Next Rice will add a two-game slate against San Jose State.

Rice will host San Jose State on Sept. 14, 2030 and travel to San Jose on Sept. 20, 2031. Former WAC conference foes, Rice and San Jose State haven’t met since 2004, a game the Spartans won 70-63, setting an NCAA record for most combined points in a regulation game at the time.

The 2031 game is the furthest out game Rice has scheduled to date. They also have a road contest at Northwestern scheduled in the same year, but it will be played two weeks before the Owls take on the Spartans.

Future Rice Football Opponents

2022

9/3 – at USC
9/10 – McNeese
9/17 – Louisiana
9/24 – at Houston

2023

9/2 – at Texas
9/9 – Houston
9/16 – Texas Southern
10/7 – UConn

2024

8/31 – Sam Houston
9/7 – at LSU
10/5 – Army

2025

9/6 – at Louisiana

2026

9/5 – Army
10/10 – Houston Baptist

2027

9/4 – Boise State

2029

9/8 – Northwestern
9/15 – at Boise State

2030

9/14 – San Jose State

2031

9/6 – at Northwestern
9/20 – at San Jose State

Rice Football on the field

The Owls kicked off spring practices on March 8, practicing for one week before taking spring break and returning to the grass. Our Patreon subscribers get access to all our practice notebooks detailing everything from position changes to quarterback battles and more.

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Filed Under: Football Tagged With: Rice Football, Schedule

Rice Baseball 2022: Midseason State of the Program

March 23, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Baseball is more than a month into the 2022 season. Here’s where the program stands and what’s next for the Owls on the diamond this spring.

With one week of conference play already in the books and roughly 40 percent of the season complete, we’re finally starting to discover just what kind of team Rice baseball is becoming. The Owls own a 6-16 record but have won three of their last six and have played much better baseball as of late.

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Rice baseball head coach Jose Cruz Jr. says the team is “still creating a bit of a culture of what’s expected,” but remains encouraged by the progress he’s seen so far. In this midseason State of the Program, we’ll look at the highs, lows and everything in-between as we attempt to explain where Rice baseball is right now — and more importantly — where it might be going.

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Filed Under: Archive, Baseball, Premium Tagged With: Rice baseball

Texas A&M outlasts Rice Baseball in marathon midweek game

March 22, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball and Texas A&M played a marathon midweek game into the late hours of Tuesday night which went the way of the Aggies when it finally wound down.

It was clear from the start this wasn’t going to be a quick midweek reunion for two Lone Star state rivals. The last time Rice baseball and Texas A&M had met at Reckling Park had been their final game of the 2020 season before COVID-19 shut the sports world down later that week. Both teams made up for the long break with a four-hour, 27-minute ballgame, the longest of the season for the Owls.

Rice opened the scoring in the bottom of the first, courtesy of a wild pitch that allowed Austin Bulman to score from third, but not until seven Owls had come to the plate and Texas A&M had made a pitching change. Texas A&M would answer in the next frame, scoring four and forcing Rice to make a pitching change of their own.

The first two innings alone lasted more than an hour. Things wouldn’t speed up too much after that. Both squads would combine for four home runs, 23 total runs, 25 hits and 13 walks, providing plenty of traffic on the basepaths and very few short innings. 15 combined pitchers appeared in the nine-inning game.

For about half an hour, it felt like Texas A&M had broken things open with a fourth-inning grand slam that gave the visitors an 8-2 lead at the time. Despite the deficit, Rice baseball resolved to keep chipping away

Last Time Out : Takeaways from 2-1 Series Loss to UAB

The Owls scratched across a pair across to start the bottom half of the fourth inning. Then Nathan Becker delivered a bases-clearing double to get Rice within one. Benjamin Rosengard drove in the equalizer on the next at bat. Two and a half hours after they’d started, it was a brand new ball game.

Texas A&M would gain further margin down the stretch, tacking on six more runs over the course of the next two hours of action. Rice threatened on several occasions but was unable to produce a second six-run rally, falling at home by the final score of 15-8.

What it means | Rice can hang

Rice baseball doesn’t have the luxury of throwing out the first month of the regular season, but it’s abundantly clear they aren’t letting the rocky start linger. The Owls did enough over the course of the past week to prove they’ve got what it takes to turn things around start winning some baseball games. During Tuesday’s marathon, they proved they belonged.

Texas A&M came to Houston fresh off a weekend series win over No. 8 LSU. The Aggies aren’t a perfect team by any means and midweek bullpen games can get squirrely — this one did — but after Rice erased a six-run deficit and hung around with a variety of bullpen arms, it sure felt like the Owls were every bit the equal of the team visiting from College Station.

Rice spotted Texas A&M four runs after loading in the fourth, allowing the Aggies to load the bases without a hit, then ceding a grand slam. They dropped multiple balls in the outfield, although only one counted as an error. Even still, it wasn’t until Texas A&M put up a three-spot in the eighth to extend their lead to 14-8 that things truly felt somewhat secure.

For the better part of four hours, Rice baseball hung around. And if Rice can hang with Texas A&M, they can hang with Marshall, FAU and everyone else on their schedule.

ON DECK | Marshall

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Filed Under: Archive, Baseball Tagged With: game recap, Rice baseball

Rice Football 2022 Spring Practice Notebook 2: Depth Chart

March 21, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

The first Rice football depth chart of the spring has been released featuring several shakeups across the board at a variety of positions.

So the saying goes, a depth chart is worth the price of the paper it’s printed on. If that’s how we feel about these prescribed lineups in the regular season, we ought to put much less stock in their scribbles in the spring. It’s with that important caveat I share the first Rice football depth chart of the spring.

More: Rice Football Spring Notebook 1 – Introductions

There are a few things we can glean from these tiered position groupings, starting with who isn’t listed on the roster and venturing to the host of new faces that are cracking a Rice two-deep for the first time in their careers. And that’s before reinforcements show up in the form of graduate transfers this summer. With that in mind, here are five important takeaways from the Rice football spring depth chart.

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For those checking in for the first time, or those returning, a quick programming note. Special updates like this are reserved for our subscribers. Get access to all practice notes, features and more insights like this one when you subscribe on Patreon today.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Blake Boenisch, Bradley Rozner, Braedon Nutter, Cam Dillon, Chike Anigbogu, Clay Servin, Cole Latos, De'Braylon Carroll, DJ Arkansas, Elroyal Morris, Ethan Onianwa, Isaac Klarkowski, Isaiah Esdale, Joshua Williams, Jovoni Johnson, Kenny Seymour, Kirk Lockhart, Mike Leone, Myron Morrison, practice notes, Rice Football, Shea Baker, spring practice, TJ McMahon, Treshawn Chamberlain, Van Heitmann, Wiley Green

Rice baseball pushes UAB to the wire, but drops first C-USA series 2-1

March 20, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Baseball pushed UAB to the brink in a decisive rubber match but missed the chance of their first series win by the slimmest of margins.

THREE FOR THE ROAD | Rice baseball drops series 2-1

If two blowout victories in midweek games wasn’t a clear enough indication, a hard-fought opening weekend to conference play served as further proof this Rice baseball squad has turned the corner. Who knows what was said following a 10-1 Friday night shellacking at the hands of Texas Tech, but ever since, this has been a different ball club.

Last Time Out: Rice baseball blasts SFA and Sam Houston in midweek wins

Rice baseball won their first Friday night contest of the season and leaves the weekend feeling like they ought to have won the series. That’s tremendous progress for a team that was struggling to win singular games of any sort a few weeks ago.

“There’s something here,” Rice baseball head coach Jose Cruz Jr. said after the series. “We’re working it.”

Texas A&M comes to town on Tuesday after taking a weekend series from a ranked LSU squad, promising to challenge the Owls even further. But before we turn the page, a few takeaways from the weekend.

1. The bats are back in town

Following last a sweep at the hands of Texas Tech, Rice baseball was averaging 3.5 runs per game. There had really only been three solid performances at the plate through 18 games — An eight-run Sunday against Lamar, a seven-run midweek outing against Houston and nine runs in the series finale against Harvard. Every other outing was unremarkable, at best.

When things clicked, the Owls’ offense exploded. Beginning with a 19-run outburst against SFA on Tuesday, Rice would score 13 against Sam Houston on Wednesday and tallies of eight, six and eight runs against UAB. Rice baseball averaged a whopping 10.8 runs per game in those five contests.

This is lightyears ahead of anything the Owls have put forth at the plate so far this season and it’s risen from a collective step-change across the breadth of the lineup. If Rice can hit like this, they’re going to continue winning games.

2. Secret weapon Matthew Linskey

Perhaps no player on the entire Rice baseball roster has elevated their game to the same degree as closer Matthew Linskey. The sophomore hurler appeared in 10 contests last season and finished with a 7.15 ERA. He had 12 strikeouts and 14 walks in 11.1 innings. He had some good outings, but he wasn’t anywhere near the shut-down pitcher he’s become this season.

“I think he understands his body,” Cruz Jr. said. “There’s been a few adjustments made on his mechanics and he’s really become a force for us, which is great for us.”

So far in 2022, Linskey has already worked a stretch in which he retired 14 out of 16 batters with strikeouts. Entering the season, he had never retired the side with three-straight K’s in his career. He’s done that twice already this season and accrued three strikeouts in exactly 1.0 inning of work on four separate occasions.

3. Playing better baseball

It hasn’t always been a masterclass in how baseball should be played, but the simple face of the matter is this: Rice baseball has won three of five — and they nearly walked it off on Sunday — after sputtering to a 5-13 start to the regular season. And beyond the final box scores, the Owls simply looked like a different team this week.

Cruz Jr admitted dropping the series was disappointing, but he seemed cognizant of the overarching growth saying that he thinks the Owls are finally “finding their groove when it comes to the lineup, the roles and rhythm. Which is great.”

There’s more to work on. The Rice pitching staff looked vulnerable on too many occasions this weekend, giving up 17 hits in the Sunday finale. Even though they won it, the Rice defense still compiled another five-error game, their third of the season. Those need to be cleaned up, but the Owls have something solid to build on.

THE PLAY BY PLAY

FRIDAY | Rice 8 – UAB 7

There was nothing conventional about the opening game of the series which started as a pitcher’s duel and ended as a slugfest. Cooper Chandler put up zeroes on the mound for the Owls through six innings, collecting seven strikeouts in what was undoubtedly his best outing in a Rice baseball uniform.

Rice took the lead early via three home runs, one from Austin Bulman and two from Aaron Smigelski. Up 4-0, Rice surrendered six runs to the Blazers in the top of the sixth before punching back with four runs of their own in the bottom of the frame.

With Rice leading 8-7, closer Matthew Linskey would enter with one out in the top of the eighth and work a five-out save to notch the Owls’ first Friday night win of the season.

SATURDAY | UAB 10 – Rice 6

There were moments when it felt like Saturday’s game would be a mere reprisal of the Friday night affair. UAB put up the first crooked number of the day in the third inning, scoring three to break a scoreless start by both sides. Rice took the lead with a four-run fourth, riding a series of RBI singles and one sac fly to pull ahead.

Unlike Friday, though, Rice didn’t have enough in the tank on the mound or the plate to hold that advantage. UAB ripped the lead right back in the fifth and extended their advantage to 10-6 in the eighth, roughing up Brandon Deskins and Reed Gallant in the process. UAB would hold on to win by that score

SUNDAY | UAB 9 – Rice 8

The theme of unraveling pitching staffs and crooked numbers continued into the rubber game of the series. Both teams swapped single runs in the first inning. UAB would take a brief 2-1 lead heading into the fifth before expanding that edge to 6-1 as they drove Rice starter Parker Smith from the ballgame.

Down, but not defeated, Rice answered with a four-spot in the seventh inning, aided by the fourth home run from Smigelski on the weekend. The two sides would trade runs in the next two innings and UAB’s skipper would get tossed. It would finally come down to a bases-loaded, no-out situation in the bottom of the ninth. Rice needed three runs to win or two to tie. They got one, falling 9-8.

ON DECK | Rice baseball vs Texas A&M (Tues), at Marshall (Fri-Sun)

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Filed Under: Baseball, Featured Tagged With: Aaron Smigelski, Austin Bulman, Brandon Deskins, Cooper Chandler, Matthew Linskey, Parker Smith, Reed Gallant

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