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Rice Baseball: Previewing the Louisiana Tech series

April 26, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball made up significant ground against Middle Tennessee. They’ll seek to keep climbing the CUSA ranks against Louisiana Tech this weekend.

Listen online // Watch Friday (CUSA TV) // Watch Saturday (CUSA TV) // Watch Sunday (CUSA TV)

If Rice is going to make a move in Conference USA, the time is now. The Owls sit at 9-9 on the edge of a conference tournament berth. A series win over Louisiana Tech, who some consider to be the favorite to with the league, would be huge for this team as they enter the final stretch. Here’s how the Owls stack up against the visiting Bulldogs:

Projected Pitching Matchups

Friday – 6:30 pm: Matt Canterino (5-4, 2.97) vs Matt Miller (5-0, 2.95)
Saturday – 2:00 pm: Evan Kravetz (3-2, 4.18)  vs Logan Robbins (3-2, 6.31)
Sunday – 1:00 pm: Jackson Parthasarathy (3-6, 4.50) vs Logan Bailey (5-4, 5.88)

Louisiana Tech Pitching

The Bulldogs rank third in CUSA with a staff ERA of 4.45. Their 2.47 strikeout to walk ratio is eerily similar to the Owls’ own rate of 2.59. Aside from what should be a fairly even contest between Matt Miller and Matt Canterino on Friday night, Rice has the slight edge in the starting rotation.

It’s the bullpen that might give the Bulldogs the greatest reason for optimism. Jonathan Fincher has been almost unhittable out of the pen and brings a 1.03 WHIP into the weekend over 20 appearances. Braxton Smith has been another extremely reliable option, allowing no runs in six of his last seven appearances. If Louisiana Tech finds themselves in a jam, he could be the man called upon during multiple games this series to work around the trouble spots.

Louisiana Tech Hitting

The most intimidating facet of the Louisiana Tech lineup is its depth. The Bulldogs don’t have anyone on their team hitting .400, but they do have six regulars batting better than .270. No player is a home run king, but six guys have four or more on the season.

Outfielder Mason Mallard leads the way, sporting a glowing 1.018 OPS with a team-high 50 runs scored. He’s one of four Bulldogs to start each of the teams 41 games. The other three, outfielder Parker Bates, shortstop Taylor Young and designated hitter Steele Netterville are all well-rounded hitters. Netterville leads the team with 24 extra-base hits and seven home runs.

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Filed Under: Archive, Baseball Tagged With: Rice baseball

NFL Draft: Where does Jack Fox fit among teams looking for punters?

April 25, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The NFL Draft is Jack Fox’s first opportunity to catch on with a pro team. Which destinations are the best fits for Rice Football‘s former punter?

Jack Fox is looking to catch on with an NFL team. Whether that’s through the NFL Draft or as a free agent, Fox is going to be in an NFL camp this summer. Where that camp will be held remains an unknown. Fox has been in contact with roughly a dozen teams since the NFL Combine.

More: Jack Fox’s journey from a small school in Missouri to the NFL Draft

The Los Angeles Chargers current punter is signed on a short-term futures contract, but they aren’t the only team which will be looking earnestly for an answer at the position in this draft class. Painting with an extremely broad brush, here’s a rough approximation of which landing spots would set Fox up for the most success, both in the near term and the future.

Unlikely to be in the market (10 teams)

These 10 teams have secured some of the best punters in the league and have them under contract until at least 2022. All of these contracts were signed in 2017 or later and carry multi-million dollar values. These teams might bring on a free agent punter for some workouts, but the chances of a newcomer supplanting these 10 is less likely than some of other opportunities.

  • Los Angeles Rams – Johnny Hekker, under contract until 2023
  • New Orleans – Thomas Morstead, 2023
  • Tennessee – Brett Kern, 2023
  • Tampa Bay – Bradley Pinion, 2023
  • Dallas – Chris Jones, 2022
  • Carolina – Michael Palardy, 2022
  • Seattle – Michael Dickson, 2022
  • Green Bay – JK Scott, 2022
  • Oakland – Johnny Townsend, 2022
  • Jacksonville – Logan Cooke, 2022

Neutral (12)

The group below is where the realm of possibility starts to grow significantly. This group is largely a tick below the best of the best. NFL teams are always looking to improve at every position, opening the door open to competition. Any punter who is drafted or signs with one these teams is going to have a fair shot to win the job.

  • Baltimore – Sam Koch, 2021
  • Detroit – Sam Martin, 2021
  • Cleveland – Britton Colquitt, 2021
  • Washington – Tress Way, 2021
  • Kansas City – Dustin Colquitt, 2021
  • Atlanta – Matt Bosher, 2021
  • Arizona – Andy Lee, 2021
  • Indianapolis – Rigoberto Sanchez, 2021
  • New England – Ryan Allen, 2021
  • Miami – Matt Haack, 2021
  • New York Giants – Riley Dixon, 2021
  • Philadelphia – Cameron Johnston, 2020

Favorable spots (10)

These 10 teams seem to be in the market for a replacement at the position. Some have been actively looking for their options while others haven’t openly expressed interest but could use an upgrade.

  • Pittsburgh – Jordan Berry, 2021
  • New York Jets – Lac Edwards, 2021
  • Chicago – Pat O’Donnell, 2021
  • Houston – Trevor Daniel, 2021
  • Denver – Colby Wadman, 2021
  • Cincinnati – Kevin Huber, 2021
  • San Franciso – Justin Vogel, 2020
  • Minnesota – Matt Wile, 2020
  • Buffalo – Cory Carter, 202
  • Los Angeles Chargers – Ty Long, 2019
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Filed Under: Football, Archive Tagged With: jack fox, NFL Owls, Rice Football

NFL Draft: New wave of Owls hopes to join Rice’s list of NFL draftees

April 24, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The NFL Draft will get underway on Thursday night as Jack Fox and several former Rice football players wait to hear their name called.

Beginning with John Slyvester in 1936, there have been 140 Rice Football players selected in the NFL Draft. The Owls have had seven first round selections, most recently running back Earl Cooper, taken by the San Francisco 49ers in the 1980 NFL Draft.

Rice has nine former players active in the NFL right now. Four of them were drafted, Christian Covington (6th round), Luke Wilson (5th), Phillip Gaines (3rd), Vance McDonald (2nd). The other five earned their spot as undrafted free agents. It’s not the easy route, but several Owls have done it — and earned second contracts.

Although several Rice players hope to pursue an NFL future, Jack Fox presumably has the best chance to hear his name called with one of the 254 selections. If he is picked, Fox will become the first Rice football player drafted since Christian Covington was selected by the Houston Texans in 2015.

Other Owls like Aston Walter, Graysen Schantz and Giovanni Gentosi will most likely look to sign with a team as undrafted free agents. Each participated in Rice football’s 2019 Pro Day and have had various opportunities to work out in front on NFL teams. For now, though, the long wait begins.

TV schedule

  • Round 1 – Thursday, April 25, 8:00 p.m. ET
  • Round 2-3 – Friday, April 26: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Round 4-7 – Saturday, April 27: 12:00 p.m. ET

All rounds are available to watch on ABC, ESPN, NFL Network.

Here’s every Rice football player drafted since the NFL Draft took on its current seven-round format in 1994.

RkYear▼LgRndPickTmPlayerPos
12015NFL6216HOUChristian CovingtonDT
22014NFL387KANPhillip GainesDB
32013NFL255SFOVance McDonaldTE
42013NFL5158SEALuke WillsonTE
52012NFL7211TENScott SolomonDE
62011NFL7254HOUCheta OzougwuDE
72009NFL5152HOUJames CaseyTE
82009NFL5144JAXJarett DillardWR
92003NFL5142CLERyan PontbriandC
102003NFL6176JAXBrandon GreenDE
111997NFL5152PHIN.D. KaluDE
121994NFL245ATLBert EmanuelWR
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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: jack fox, NFL Draft, NFL Owls, Rice Football

Rice Baseball: Evan Kravetz seeks to end senior season on high note

April 23, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball pitcher Evan Kravetz thought he’d be pitching out of the bullpen this year. Instead, he’s become a staple in the starting rotation.

The 2019 Rice baseball season was met by many with guarded optimism. The Owls had hired energetic coach Matt Bragga from Tennessee Tech and had seemed to have enough pitching to be competitive from game to game. The supposed pitching strength relied on the arms of Matt Canterino and Addison Moss, arguably the best one-two punch in Conference USA.

That duo never materialized as expected. Moss was scratched from opening weekend with injury concerns, opening up the door for someone else to make a start in the rotation. That someone would end up becoming senior southpaw Evan Kravetz.

“I found out like two days before the opener,” Kravetz recounted, following his career-best 13 strikeout performance against Middle Tennessee over the weekend. His seven-inning, one-hit gem helped secure a series win and would eventually lead to the first home sweep of the Matt Bragga era at Rice.

Win or lose, good or bad, Kravetz maintains he’s thankful for the opportunity. “Every Saturday I pitch like I don’t know if there’s going to be another Saturday to pitch on, so I’m just going to keep doing that and trying to win games,” he said.

Staying the course

It doesn’t look like Kravetz is in any danger of missing out on a start any time soon. He leads all Rice pitchers with 77 strikeouts, one more than staff ace Matt Canterino who entered the season as a consensus Top 5 round prospect in the upcoming MLB Draft.  Kravetz had made four starts at Rice prior to this season. He’ll come close to matching his previous total career innings pitched at Rice (90.1) this season if Rice makes it to the conference tournament.

Coach Bragga was effusive in his praise following Kravetz’s latest performance. “[He’s] been awesome,” Bragga declared. “It’s been phenomenal the year he’s had.” Rather than stop there, Bragga asserted Kravetz might not be done when his days at Rice are over. “I’ll be shocked if they (Kravetz and Matt Canterino) don’t both go in the top 10 rounds come [the MLB Draft]”

All Kravetz wanted was an opportunity. He got his chance and made the most of it.

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

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Filed Under: Baseball, Archive Tagged With: Evan Kravetz, Rice baseball

Jack Fox ready for his next chapter and the NFL Draft

April 22, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

It was November 7, 2014 and the Ladue Horton Watkins Rams trailed Webster Groves 28-6 at halftime in the Missouri state playoffs. Jack Fox, the quarterback for the Rams, was nearing the completion of his high school career — it wouldn’t end that night. That’s because Fox was asked to do something out of his comfort zone in a high leverage situation. He rose to the occasion.

As the Rams mounted their second half comeback, Ladue Horton Watkins head coach Mike Tarpey saw an opportunity. With the Rams’ opponents crashing on one side of the line, Tarpey dusted off the quarterback option and called it toward the opposite boundary. The play was scarcely used. It wasn’t remotely integral to their offense. Still, with the fate of the season on the line, Fox took the snap, took off, and didn’t stop running until he was standing in the endzone.

Ladue Horton Watkins would win the game and go on to finish 12-2 that season after a deep playoff run. Fox was the hero. Not just because he had the big play, but because he was always the guy who made the big play. For Fox, dependability has always been a reality. Coach Tarpey, who saw Fox up close in person for four years, knows that better than most.

From day one, Tarpey knew Fox was different. “Other coaches would comment about your kicker,” he said. In his 19 years of coaching that’s not something he’d heard very often. The small school was filled with two-way players. Everyone wore multiple hats, but none seemed to warrant as much attention as the guy doing the kickoffs.

Special from the start

Tarpey called Fox “an athlete that can also punt and kick”, adding that Fox was the kind of person who could completely compartmentalize the game, wiping negative plays from his short term memory in order to focus on the task at hand. Tarpey used words like “deliberate”, “methodical” and “perfectionist” when it came to how Jack Fox attacked the game.

That focus and level of detail gave way to a college scholarship. In the fall of 2015, Fox traded one blue uniform for another and transitioned permanently to a special teamer at Rice. He handled kickoffs during his freshman season, but quickly expanded his role to extra points and his first collegiate field goal against North Texas.

The following season Fox became the Owls’ punter, taking over for James Farrimond who had begun his own senior year on the Ray Guy Award watch list. Fox had big shoes to fill, but no matter the stage, things never seemed too big for the eager specialist.

Fox averaged 40.7 yards per punt with a long of 58 yards that season, improving his average to 44.2 yards in 2017 with a career-best 62-yard boot. That wasn’t enough for Fox, who applied the same taciturn commitment to his craft every week. Not a “rah rah” vocal leader, per se, Fox led by humble example, grinding away to be the best version of himself he could be. He hadn’t yet begun to realize what might come if he continued to improve his game. He was just determined to get better.

Things took off when special teams coordinator Pete Lembo was hired from Maryland the spring prior to Fox’s senior year. A previous head coach at several stops in the northeast, Lembo had coached several specialists who’d taken their shots at the NFL. By his own admission, none of them, save perhaps Ray Guy award finalist Scott Kovanda at Ball State, measured up to the pure talent Fox possessed.

Lembo’s insertion into the special teams’ room gave Fox structure. That order helped Fox clear his head and focus on the intricacies of punting and kicking. The Rice specialists watched film of themselves, other collegiate specialists and NFL greats. Lembo helped Fox break down what elite punting ought to look like and Fox translated those lessons to the field.

The impact of Lembo’s guidance was readily apparent in Fox’s breakout 2018 season. The year began with a walk-off win over Prairie View A&M, spearheaded by five field-flipping punts by Fox and his first-ever game-winning field goal as time expired. It only got better from there. Fox would lead Conference USA with an average of 45.5 yards per punt, 31 punts inside the 20-yard line, 26 punts of 50 or more yards with a long of 76 yards against North Texas.

In a few short months, Fox had gone from scarcely entertaining professional football to being in rooms with NFL coaches and personnel on a regular basis. It’s been a whirlwind, one that Fox acknowledges he didn’t see coming.

A cavalcade of awards

Although it might have come as somewhat of a surprise to him, it wasn’t to his coaches. Tarpey knew Fox would be special coming out of high school. Lembo echoed those observations, “He’s a junkie,” Lembo said, “That’s part of why I’m optimistic that he’ll make it [to the NFL]. At that level, you gotta live it.”

” He’s a junkie. That’s part of why I’m optimistic that he’ll make it [to the NFL]. At that level, you gotta live it.”

Live it, Fox has. As a testament to his incredible senior season, Fox was awarded Rice Football’s George R. Martin Award, given annually to the team’s most valuable player. Not only the Rice football MVP, Fox was named the Conference USA Special Team’s Player of the Year, the first punter to ever win the award. To top it all off, Fox finished as a semi-finalist for the Ray Guy Award, given to the nation’s best punter.

Not one to sit back and bask in his own success, Fox kept working. He represented the Owls at the East-West Shrine Game, where he blasted a 57-yard punt in front of NFL coaches and scouts. From there he traveled to Indianapolis for the NFL Combine, came back to Houston for Rice Football’s 2019 Pro Day, and spent the last few weeks of April doing individual work outs for several NFL teams.

Lembo, who’s continued to keep up with Fox throughout the entire process, remains confident Fox is on the right track. “The great thing about what I’ve been seeing from Jack,” Lembo noted,  “is that he’s been treating those opportunities just like any other work out. That’s what you gotta be to make it at that level. You gotta be consistent.”

Throughout his years of development as both a football player and a person, perhaps no word better describes Fox than that: consistent. Whether it was stepping up to the plate in the key moments of a high school football game, the game-winning field goal over Prairie View A&M or the countless field-flipping bombs he launched to keep his 2-10 team in games, Fox has never waived.

Head coach Mike Bloomgren ran out of new adjectives for Fox’s repeated wondrous performances about midway through the 2018 season. Instead of inventing new praise, Bloomgren started to stick to a repeated epithet: “Jack Fox is a stud.”

That’s Jack. He’s the best who refuses to cease his own efforts to become even better. He’s been so busy perfecting his craft, his big moment, coming in the next few days, has almost snuck up on him.

When asked about what it’s going to feel like come draft time, Fox offered a nonchalant grin and an honest reply. “I haven’t thought about it yet,” he admitted. “I feel like there’s these steps — I had the season, then the Shrine Game, then the Combine, then the Pro Day, so I really haven’t had a whole lot of time to think about anything other than that.”

His apparent easygoing disposition is genuine. The way he describes it, “kicking and punting is definitely a big personality thing.” Whether it’s a certain level of quirkiness or an abnormal attention to detail and a process-oriented perspective, Fox is the total package. And even if he wasn’t, he’d work at it until he was. Because that’s who Jack Fox is.

Nowhere to go but up

The former All-Conference high school quarterback became one of college football’s best punters, and he did it in four years. If the past eight years have been any indication of what the future holds, Fox is going to build on this foundation and continue to improve. He might get drafted, he might not, but Jack Fox is going to do everything within his power to kick in the NFL, a notion which is still a bit surreal for the small-school kid from Missouri.

Making a roster as an NFL specialist isn’t easy, neither is being drafted. Conversations with NFL teams have given Fox a feel for his future. Ultimately, though, he still doesn’t know what the NFL Draft holds for him. All he can do right now is enjoy the process.

“This whole thing is really cool,” Fox revealed with a twinge of angst in his voice, “It’s been really exciting, but I’m ready to know where I’m going to go and kinda start focusing on the next chapter of the whole thing.” That next chapter remains a mystery. From the Combine to his workouts, Fox has spoken with nearly every NFL team. He’s established better relationships with some, but has yet to receive any guarantees.

With days leading up to the biggest moments of his football journey, Fox doesn’t know what to expect. “I wonder about where I’m going to go. I don’t really know,” Fox said, “Hopefully I get drafted, but if not it sounds like I’m going to get an opportunity [as a free agent].”

Few punters have more ability than Jack Fox, but he’s made it his mission to ensure no one outworks him. So far the results speak for themselves.

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

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Filed Under: Featured, Football Tagged With: jack fox, NFL Owls, Rice Football

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