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Conference USA Football leads the way with 4-2 finish in bowl games

January 2, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Conference USA football represented themselves well in the 2018 postseason, finishing 4-2, the best record in the Group of 5.

Rice football wasn’t in the postseason in 2018, but the Owls saw several of Conference USA’s bowl teams firsthand last season. Middle Tennessee, North Texas, UAB, Marshall, FIU and Louisiana Tech represented CUSA in bowl games, finishing 4-2. Rice played four of those squad and will play the other two in 2019.

Conference USA finished with a 66.7 winning percentage in bowl games, the best record of any conference in the nation. Here’s how each CUSA squad’s bowl appearance turned out:

New Mexico Bowl (Dec. 15) – Utah State 52, North Texas 13

North Texas won sixth of their first seven games and three of their final six. One of those four losses was a blowout at the hands of an extremely talented Utah State team which was receiving votes in the most recent AP Poll. Even without head coach Matt Wells, who moved on to Texas Tech, the Aggies proved to be too much for the Mean Green.

R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl (Dec. 15) – App State 45, Middle Tenn. 13

App State, too, was without its head coach. Scott Satterfield is the new head man at Louisville, but that didn’t seem to matter much in the New Orleans Bowl. Mountaineers’ wide receiver Malik Williams threw two touchdown passes. If that doesn’t sum up how bad of a day at the office it was for MTSU, I’m not sure what will.

Cheribundi Boca Raton Bowl  (Dec. 18) – UAB 37, NIU 13

UAB’s storybook ceiling finished with a blowout win over a strong Northern Illinois team. The Blazers finished with a program-best eight wins in 2017 and improved on that in 2018, winning 11 games. Entering the offseason head coach Bill Clark received several Coach of the Year recognitions and a raise, which makes him the highest paid coach in the conference.

Bad Boy Mowers Gasparilla Bowl (Dec. 20) – Marshall 38, USF 20

Marshall dropped the hammer on one of the most bizarre seasons in college football history. South Florida started the year 7-0 with wins over two Power 5 teams (Illinois and Georgia Tech). The Bulls lost their last six games and never came close to beating Marshall.

Makers Wanted Bahamas Bowl (Dec. 21) – FIU 35, Toledo 32

FIU won a back-and-forth shootout in what was the most exciting CUSA bowl game. After a Christian Alexander touchdown pass to Sterling Palmer gave the Panthers a 14-10 lead the two teams traded six more scores. Both teams scored in the final 45 seconds, but FIU clung to a 3-point lead, emerging with their ninth win, the best mark in school history.

Sofi Hawai’i Bowl (Dec. 22) – Louisiana Tech 31, Hawai’i 14

Hawai’i kept things close until Louisiana Tech exploded for three touchdowns in the third quarter. Warriors’ quarterback Cole McDonald was benched for his struggles midway through the second quarter and Bulldogs’ quarterback J’Mar Smith and company put this game to bed before the fourth quarter rolled around and McDonald was put back into the game.

Here’s how the rest of the conferences and independent teams fared:

Power 5

SEC: 6-5*
ACC: 5-5*
Big Ten: 5-4
Pac-12: 3-4
Big 12: 4-3

Group of 5

Conference USA: 4-2
Mountain West: 3-2
Sun Belt: 3-2
American: 2-5
MAC: 1-5

Independents: 2-1

*pending National Championship Game between Clemson and Alabama

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Filed Under: Football, Featured Tagged With: Conference USA football

Owls in the NFL – Week 17

January 1, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has nine alumni currently active on NFL rosters. Here’s how the NFL Owls fared in their respective Week 17 games.

Chris Boswell, K (Steelers) – Boswell missed the Steelers 2018 regular season finale with a groin injury. His replacement, Matt McCrane connected on all three of his field goal attempt and an extra point, accounting for 10 of the Steelers’ 16 points in their win over the Bengals. Pittsburgh missed the Playoffs.

Bryce Callahan, CB (Bears) – Callahan was placed on injured reserve after breaking a bone in his foot against the Los Angeles Rams. The Bears defeating the Minnesota Vikings in Week 17 and will host the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles in the Wildcard Round.

Christian Covington, DE (Texans) – Covington was credited with one tackle and one quarterback hit in the Texans’ Week 17 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars. Next week the Texans host the Colts in the Wild Card Round.

Phillip Gaines, CB (Browns) – Gaines missed the last four games of the Browns’ season with an injury. The Browns lost their Week 17 game to the Ravens.

Vance McDonald, TE (Steelers) – McDonald was targeted six times in the Steelers’ Week 17 loss. He caught three of those passes for 39 yards including a long of 22-yards, Pittsburgh’s second-longest reception of the day. McDonald caught 50 passes for 610 yards and four touchdowns this season, all career bests.

Andrew Sendejo, S (Vikings) – Placed on injured reserve after missing extended time following a groin injury. The Vikings’ missed the Playoffs.

Jordan Taylor, WR (Broncos) – On the PUP list following off-season surgery. The Broncos missed the Playoffs and have since fired head coach Vance Joseph.

Luke Wilson, TE (Lions) – Wilson missed the Lions’ final game of the regular season. His season ends with 13 receptions for 87 yards. This was the first season of his professional career in which he did not record at least one touchdown.

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

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Filed Under: Football, Archive Tagged With: NFL Owls, Rice Football

Rice Football: 3 Resolutions for 2019

January 1, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football made encouraging progress in 2018 in the first year under Mike Bloomgren. Here are three resolutions for the Owls on the gridiron in 2019.

1. To finish off another strong recruiting class

When asked about his 2018 recruiting class in fall camp head coach Mike Bloomgren said he didn’t think there was a miss in the group. On one hand, that feels a lot like coachspeak, but after seeing the season play out how it did, he might be right.

Rice’s depth chart will be filled with underclassmen again this year, but there’s still plenty of room for impact players at the right positions. The Owls signed 17 players in the early signing period. They still have room for several more before the 2019 class is in the books.

2. To not have to play the backup backup backup backup quarterback

Injuries are a part of every football season, but few seasons play out as unfortunate on the injury front as the Owls’ 2018 campaign. Rice lost Shawn Stankavage and Evan Marshman to injury during the year. Jackson Tyner and Sam Glaesmann were bumped down the depth chart for performance and scheme considerations leaving freshman Wiley Green as the next man up when “next man up” was called against FIU.

Entering 2019, Green and Marshman will battle it out for the starting position. Green is probably the frontrunner at this point, but regardless who takes the first snap of the season, Rice would like to not have to find their next starter working with the scout team at the start of the New Year.

3. To win more games

At risk of stating the obvious, the end goal of this game is to win. Rice tallied two victories in 2018, bookending their season with wins over Prairie View and Old Dominion. Two wins is the new floor for the Owls in 2019 and Mike Bloomgren himself said “we will not put a ceiling on this team at any point… what we will do is talk about how we’re going to work.”

The “process” has been talked about for a full year at South Main. 2019 will be Year 2. It won’t be the finished product by any means, but the wheels have been turning long enough for the results to start flowing and they will. Rice had close calls in games against Houston, Hawaii, North Texas and UTEP, among others. If the Owls play more complete games in 2019 the wins will come.

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WBB: Owls riding high entering conference play

December 31, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Women’s basketball finished off a strong non-conference slate and looks forward to CUSA play beginning in the new year.

The Rice Women’s Basketball team began the 2018-2019 season strong, rounding out a 9-3 record in non-conference play with a road win over Incarnate Word on Saturday. The Owls have held serve against the vast majority of their opponents, with their three losses all coming at the hands of quality teams.

Rice lost a pair of mostly competitive games to Texas A&M and UCLA, both NCAA Tournament teams last year, as well as a road contest against a North Carolina squad which could make a postseason bid of their own in March. A win in one of those games would have been big, but the effort the Owls put forth is an encouraging start.

As far as individual efforts go, Erica Ogwumike picked up right where she left off last season. The Owls leading scorer averaged 17.9 points per game last season and has matched the same scoring clip so far this year, averaging 17.9 points and 11.2 rebounds per game. She’s scored in double-digits in all but one of the Owls’ first 11 games with six double-doubles.

Joining Ogwumike in the everyday lineup has been senior Nicole Iademarco and freshman Jasmine Smith. Lauren Grigsby has been important off the bench, averaging 9.7 points with 15 steals, second most on the team. It’s been a true team effort with 10 players averaging 12 or more minutes per game.

The Owls will get a few days off for the New Year before CUSA play starts with a pair of road trips. They take on Southern Miss on Jan. 3 and Louisiana Tech on Jan. 5 before returning home for their first conference home game on Jan. 10 against UTSA.

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Filed Under: Basketball, Archive, Women's Athletics Tagged With: Rice Women's basketball

Owls drop Conference USA opener to North Texas

December 30, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice basketball gave one of the best teams in Conference USA, North Texas, a serious scare before running out of gas in both squad’s first conference game of the season.

With just under five minutes remaining in the first half Rice led the 12-win North Texas Mean Green by 11 points at Tudor Fieldhouse. It seemed like the holiday break had done this team some good and the Owls were clicking on both sides of the ball. Then North Texas ended the half on a 17-1 run, flipping the script and putting Rice in comeback mode. They never recovered.

A five-point deficit widened over the second half. When the final buzzer sounded, Rice had fallen by the final score of 103-87.

Streaky shooting went in favor of the Mean Green in this one. The Owls’ opponent connected on seven of their last eight shots in the first half and five of their first six shots in the second half. Those two runs coincided with 12 consecutive misses from the field for Rice.

Entering the game with a 5-8 record, Rice needed to show they were ready for a tough conference slate. The loss is discouraging, but outside of one bad 10-minute stretch of play, the Owls stood toe-to-toe with one of the conference’s best teams. They’re going to have to play a full 40 minutes if they want to turn those “almosts” into wins, but this was a positive first step.

Player of the game – Robert Martin

Chris Mullins has been the engine who makes this offense go, but his 10-point, four assist effort was overshadowed by Robert Martin’s monster game. In three prior games against North Texas, Martin combined for 12 total points. On Saturday the junior forward had a magic touch. He knocked down 9-of-11 shots and all 12 of his free throw attemps, tallying a career-best 35 points.

Up Next – Southern Miss

Rice stays home for the next conference tilt, hosting Southern Miss (8-5) on Thursday, Jan. 3. Tip off is scheduled for 3 p.m. Southern Miss is coming off their first CUSA game, a loss to Louisiana Tech.

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