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Rice Football: First Third of the Season Grades

September 19, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Here’s our Rice football report card for every position group through four games, doing our best to provide an honest assessment of the Owls so far.

A Thursday night tilt against Charlotte gives Rice football a chance to catch it’s collective breath on Saturday and rest up before a suddenly pivotal game against Navy this coming weekend. It’s also marks the completion of the first third of the season’s game, providing a natural check-in point on the program as head coach Scott Abell works to rebuild it in his image.

From the starting quarterback to the secondary, here’s our evaluation of where things stand through four games and one standout at each position who deserves some extra recognition.

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.

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  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 213 – Rice Football rolls past Charlotte
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  • American Conference Football 2025: Week 4 Roundup
  • Rice Football: First Third of the Season Grades

Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Aaron Turner, Alex Bacchetta, Andrew Awe, Chase Jenkins, Daveon Hook, Drayden Dickmann, Enoch Gota, Khary Crump, Marcus Williams, Michael Daley, Omari Porter, Peyton Stevenson, Plae Wyatt, Quinton Jackson, Rice Football, Tony Anyanwu, Ty Morris

Rice Football Races Past Charlotte in Prime Time

September 18, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football improved to 3-1 for the first time since 2001, dispatching the Charlotte 49ers in a prime time win on national television.

With the nation watching, Rice football put their gun-choice option offense on display on Thursday night, grinding out a road win over Charlotte in head coach Scott Abell’s American Conference debut. The Owls improved to 3-1 on the season.

“It’s exciting. It shows the world, it shows everyone that it’s different this year for Rice,” said senior linebacker Andrew Awe. “A lot of times [in the past] when we were down, we were down and out. But this year it’s different. We’re a contender for conference this year. We play hard every snap.”

Awe’s 11 tackles led the team and paced a defense that racked up six sacks and nine tackles for a loss. Turning in another solid performance in which many were, understandably, fixated on the new offense. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Hello, America

Rice football was the standalone game on Thursday night on ESPN, giving anyone slightly curious about the Owls’ new offensive scheme the chance to flip on the game — on their TV, not via a streaming service — and take in the option attack. Rice did not waste the opportunity to showcase it.

After allowing a field goal on defense, the Rice offense took the field and calmly marched 75 yards down the field in nine plays, churning through 4:26 on the clock and ending in the endzone. Rice attempted just two passes, the second of which was a pop pass over the top of the run-hunting defense for a score.

Good luck staying run-committed when @RiceFootball can sneak in a pass in the right moment… pic.twitter.com/MA5ydSJzHK

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 19, 2025

Charlotte entered the game allowing more than 4.5 yards per carry against FBS opponents, so there was expectation that Rice would be able to find success on the ground. On the opening drive, it was Quinton Jackson who ripped through the defense and drove the offense down the field. Quarterback Chase Jenkins would enter the fray a few drives later, cutting back for a massive 34-yard scamper just before halftime.

Chase Jenkins with a house call! pic.twitter.com/dJexoicq4P

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 19, 2025

For those onlookers who wanted to see what this Rice football offense could be, those two drives showcased it at its best. However…

With the Good, Comes the Bad

A run-first offense looks brilliant when it works, but what happened between the Owls’ first half touchdown drives showcased the dangers that come with building an offense that often eschews the passing game. Those two scoring drives accounted for 15 plays and 150 yards, but they were bookends to three consecutive three-and-outs — nine plays, 14 yards.

The difference between 10 yards per play and roughly 1.5 yards per play was palpable.

Abell didn’t seem overtly concerned. He mentioned they’d tried more triple option concepts on those drives that didn’t work before pivoting to different components of the offense. “It’s kind of just football, right?” Abell remarked. “At time they’re going to stop us. They’re going to force us to punt. And that’s okay. We’ve been good on special teams all year. We’ve been good on defense.”

And while it wouldn’t ever be used as an excuse, it’s hard not to connect Charlotte’s consecutive scoring drives to open the second quarter with a Rice defense given very little breathing room by it’s counterpart on the other side of the field. Charlotte ran 40 plays before halftime. Rice ran 24. That’s too many plays to ask a defense to defend without missing a step.

More: Join the Conversation on The Roost Discord

The negative play is a very real threat to this offense. Rice had a second-half drive torpedoed with a holding penalty that put them in second and long. They settled for a 55-yard field goal, which Enoch Gota pushed just right. That’s not a special teams problem; that’s a flaw inherent to this offense.

Offense Clicks and Finds Redemption

Fortunately those woes would prove to not be fatal on Thursday. Rice opened the second half with a 75-yard touchdown drive to go up by two scores and was much more successful moving the sticks in the second half.

After closing the second quarter with a touchdown drive, they marched down the field to open the third quarter with another 75-yard scoring progression. They outscored Charlotte 14-3 in the middle eight, seizing control of the game.

“We did a good job responding before the first half ended and we came out in the third quarter rolling,” running back Daelen Alexander said. “I think we showed in the third quarter what we can do with the offense, fully.”

Once again, after a slower start, the final stat sheet looks rather impressive for the Rice offense. The Owls had three different players with at least 70 yards rushing and probably could have stretched those totals further if they hadn’t ratcheted things down in the final frame. Quinton Jackson rushed for 80 yards. Alexander and 73 yards and two touchdowns. Jenkins ran for 71 yards and a score. All three averaged north of 6.7 yards per carry.

He Just Wins

Scott Abell was hired because he’d won at places where it was historically hard to win. There was tremendous optimism (and expectation) that he’d be able to bring winning to South Main, but even the most ardent believers probably didn’t see this coming. With the win over Charlotte on Thursday, Rice improved to 3-1 the season. It’s the first 3-1 start for Rice football since 2001.

But that’s not all. Abell became the first coach to open their Rice tenure 3-1 since Bo Hagan did so in 1967. The win was the first win Rice football has ever had in their American Conference opener, falling in their first two tries since moving to the league. In fact, Rice hadn’t won a conference opener on the road since 2017.

The statistics like that are plentiful. They all painted slightly different variations of a reality that’s becoming more believable with each passing weekend. Rice football might just be in a different place than they’ve been in quite some time and Abell is the unquestioned catalyst.

“I’m not surprised, but I am very proud of this team and this group,” Abell said. “I’m proud of where we are. I’m not surprised, and for those who are seeing this for the first time, we’re just at the beginning of this. Stay tuned. There’s more to come. And I look forward to what’s next for us.”

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Getting Off the Field

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Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 213 – Rice Football rolls past Charlotte
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  • American Conference Football 2025: Week 4 Roundup
  • Rice Football: First Third of the Season Grades

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Andrew Awe, Chase Jenkins, Daelen Alexander, game recap, Khary Crump, Marcus Williams, Quinton Jackson, Rice Football

Rice Football 2025: PVAMU Game Week Practice Notes

September 11, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football looks to bounce back this week against Prairie View A&M. Here’s the latest from the practice field.

Refining execution and continuing to build muscle memory in the existing scheme remained the focal point of Rice football practices this week. Head coach Scott Abell is trying to balance a level of simplicity that allows the offense to go fast with the right tweaks to counter the things defenses are apt to throw their way in the coming weeks.

More: PVAMU Presser and Depth Chart Notes

This update digs into how the program preps for defensive game plans against them, what Rice needs to work on with the offense and some individual standouts and injury notes.

Anticipating the Opponent

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Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 213 – Rice Football rolls past Charlotte
  • Rice Football 2025 Game Preview: Navy
  • American Conference Football 2025: Week 4 Roundup
  • Rice Football: First Third of the Season Grades

Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Alex Bacchetta, Bailey Fletcher, Chase Jenkins, Chibby Nwajuaku, Daveon Hook, Khary Crump, Plae Wyatt, practice notes, Rice Football

Rice Football Falls to Houston in Home Opener

September 6, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football fell to Houston in their last chance to lay claim to the Bayou Bucket Trophy for sometime. The Owls are 1-1 on the season.

After soaring to a 1-0 start in the debut of head coach Scott Abell against Louisiana, Rice football came back to ground level on Saturday in a rivalry game defeat at the hands of the Houston Cougars. With no current games on the schedule between the two crosstown teams, Houston will hold on to the Bayou Bucket, for now. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Pre-Injury Secondary Shows Out

In the season opener against Louisiana, it was the Rice football defensive line that stole the show. Cajuns’ quarterback Walker Howard barely completed 10 passes and was sacked three times. On Saturday against Houston, it was the secondary that made their bid for the most dominant unit on a stacked defensive side.

Corners Khary Crump and Omari Porter each had pivotal breakups that snuffed out Houston drives. Safety Jack Kane had a hit that separated his would-be receiver from the football and Porter closed out the next drive with a diving stop which was nearly picked off. And all of that happened in the first quarter.

More: Key Rice Football Recruiting Targets on Campus for Houston Game

Rice did register three sacks, so the front did find success in this game too, but the secondary was on another level, providing Houston quarterback Conner Weigman with no clean looks and plenty of tight windows. Even on his most accurate balls, Rice defensive backs made plays on the ball and kept the Houston offense in neutral with six breakups spread across four defenders.

Weigman didn’t do serious damage through the air until a 74-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter. That score came against a backup corner following an injury to starter Khary Crump, who left the field on a prior series. That Rice was playing aggressively on the back end at the time given the two-score deficit didn’t help the situation. Crump’s injury will be one to monitor, but the secondary as a whole still played very well.

Offense Struggles with Cougars’ Front

While the defense delivered yet another masterclass, the offense took some time to get in gear. More than anything else, Houston’s athleticism proved much more arduous to overcome than anything the Owls had seen to this point. The Cougars routinely beat the Owls to the edges and kept contain, pushing the Rice offensive line inward and meeting ball carriers in the backfield.

Head coach Scott Abell seemed less phased by the talent differential than the Cougars’ approach.

“In the first half they came out in a defense we didn’t really prep for which is not abnormal for us, but in a year where we’re transitioning to a new system, we didn’t adjust very well,” Abell said. “They controlled the line of scrimmage because of that, that pretty much that whole first half.”

More: Join the Conversation on The Roost Discord

Any advantages the Owls hoped to gain from their unique offensive attack were lessened by the Cougars’ ability to overcome a slower first step with speed and power. The Rice offense went three-and-out on its first three drives before it was able to adjust, pivoting to a more steady diet of screen passes to stretch the defense for it’s power running game on the inside.

“Last week we saw a defense that lined up how we prepped and it was clean,” Abell said. “Our guys executed really pretty well all game last week. This was almost a polar opposite. I didn’t think we excuted very well from the get-go. Even when we found momentum, we couldn’t keep it. We gotta figure that out and that starts with me.”

Rice would get on the board for the first time thanks to those deft modifications, cobbling together a 14-play, 47-yard drive, consummated by an Enoch Gota field goal. The Owls were making progress on the ensuing drive before being stopped short on fourth and one as running back D’Andre Hardeman was met in the backfield before he ever had a chance to make positive yardage.

Fortunately for Rice football, they won’t face many teams with this level of talent again this season. However, the Houston is a far cry from the upper-tier of talent in this sport. That Rice was able to move the ball on long scoring drives in the second and fourth quarters proves there’s more potential in this offense still untapped, but the level of consistency was far from adequate.

Limited Offense Leaves Little Room for Error

The sum total of the defensive dominance and offensive trudging nearly netted Rice football a halftime lead in their most coveted home contest of the season. Instead, fate would ensure it was Dean Connors — who spent the last three seasons donning Blue rather than Red in this rivalry game — who took a handoff 54 yards to paydirt in the final seconds of the first half.

What made twinge touchdown of Connors’ touchdown all the worse was the proceeding clock stoppage which may have subtly encouraged its coming. Following a facemask which set Houston back inside its own 20-yard line and an eight yard run. Rice head coach Scott Abell called a timeout with Houston facing second and 15. Rather than run the clock out and go into halftime down three, Houston pushed the ball, getting a first down at the 42-yard line. Connors scored three plays later.

Decisions like whether or not to call a timeout to get the ball back often get lost in the churn of variance that comes with every college football game. That the teams were separated by so small a difference than one breakaway play could be the difference.

If nothing else, it made Weigman’s nine-yard touchdown run in the third quarter made it clear a near-perfect game from other phases wasn’t going to be enough without some sort of pulse on offense. A pick-six off a deflected pass in the fourth made that emphatically clear. The final score made the game appear much more one-sided than it was for the majority of three-plus quarters, but the result speaks for itself.

1-1

Starting the 2025 season with games against a Sun Belt favorite and a Big XII team was a rude awakening for an offense still in its infancy, but it’s hard to deny a 1-1 start against the caliber of opponent the Owls have played to this point is anything other above par. Two touchdown underdogs in each game, that Rice was able to move through this stretch at .500 with a home-game looming against an FCS opponent is unequivocally a good start.

“If you would have asked me back in mid-August… I probably would have said okay,” Abell acknowledged. “But we weren’t [1-1], we were 1-0 and I’m really disappointed we’re not 2-0 because that’s the expectation. Are kids are disappointed and that score is not indicative of what that game was like.”

That Rice hired Abell for his offensive wizardry which has only produced 23 total points isn’t something he’s shying away from. Finding more consistency and more success becomes that more important as the season progresses.

“There’s your 10 Million Dollar question,” Abell said, addressing the quandary of replicating the offensive boost his team found briefly in the middle of the third quarter.

“We kinda went back to the basics. We kinda went back to the simple things that I though our guys could execute against a defense that we really hadn’t replicated in practice and encouraged them to play fast. And we did. We lined up in our base two formations. We played really fast there and kind of kept it simple and that’s what it looked like. Which is exciting, but we gotta be able to handle some complexity and that we did not handle tonight.”

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So You Want to Throw the Football

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  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 213 – Rice Football rolls past Charlotte
  • Rice Football 2025 Game Preview: Navy
  • American Conference Football 2025: Week 4 Roundup
  • Rice Football: First Third of the Season Grades

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Chase Jenkins, game recap, Jack Kane, Khary Crump, Omari Porter, Rice Football

Rice Football 2025: Louisiana Game Week Practice Notes

August 28, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

The first Rice football game of the Scott Abell era is upon us and the Owls are ready to go. Here’s the latest from the practice field this week.

The (unofficial) Rice football depth chart has mostly worked itself out. Chase Jenkins has started to put his mark on the offense and a few individual standouts have warranted notice in the last few days before the season opener.

Jenkins insists this team is ready to go and is as locked in as they could be before such an important game.

Rice Football Preseason Preview: Check out the rest of the series here.

“It’s us versus anybody else,” he said this week. “I feel like we go to each game, home or away, wherever we play — we could play in a parking lot — we’re going to go out there with the same mindset each time and go out there and play our best and play our game and then the result will show.”

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This update provides some more insight into Jenkins’ evolution in the offense, who will fill out the depth chart behind him and a few more notes as the team prepares for the first game of the season in a few days time.

Chase Jenkins is ready to roll

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Recent Posts
  • The Roost Podcast | Ep 213 – Rice Football rolls past Charlotte
  • Rice Football 2025 Game Preview: Navy
  • American Conference Football 2025: Week 4 Roundup
  • Rice Football: First Third of the Season Grades

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