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

Rice Football: 2020 Spring practice closing thoughts

March 22, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football snuck in six spring practices before they were canceled by Conference USA. Here are a few things we learned and questions still unanswered.

My notebook is an organized mess every time Rice football practice is underway. I have notes from each session I attend. Those range from individual moments that impressed me to far-reaching questions that I’ve yet to reach a conclusion. Sometimes coaches or players can shed light on my queries, other times they’re left to ruminate until next session, next week, or longer.

More: Erica Ogwumike talks end of season, Rice career on The Roost Podcast

Rice is fortunate they got to practice at all. Several Conference USA teams called off all sessions before they ever stepped foot on the field. There are a lot of question marks scribbled in the pages from the Owls’ six spring practice sessions. In this case, some clarity is better than none.

Depth Charts

I hesitate to put out defined depth charts, especially from spring ball. Players are cycling in and out, some are learning new positions. The alignment of the team on any one play varies tremendously. Starters are easier to determine. Backups are … well, an exercise best guessing. With that caveat, take these words as being scribed in pencil.

Rice Football First Team Offense

QB | Collins OR Johnson
RB | Otoviano
WR | Trammell, Rozner, Pitre
TE | Myers
OL | Servin (LT), Garcia OR Sheriff (LG), Klarkowski (C), Baker (RG), Woolford (RT)

Rice Football Second Team Offense

QB | McMahon
RB | Montgomery OR King
WR | Knipe, Bailey, Palmer
TE | Bull OR Bradley
OL | Ferraro (LT), Riddle (LG), Baker (C), Floyd (RG), Peterson (RT)

Offensive depth chart notes

I hate OR designations, but I really do believe there are several open spots on the offense right now. Quarterback is the most obvious. If Rice football had to play tomorrow, I’d bet Mike Collins is the guy, but it’s close. That’s not to say he stole the show this spring — he and JoVoni Johnson were both solid — but I like Collins’ combination of size and elusiveness. I’m still looking to see who can make more consistent plays downfield between those two. The more accurate passer could win the job in fall camp.

Cam Montgomery looks really good. Really good. Rice had a deep backfield last year and Montgomery fumbled away some of his opportunities, leaving him buried on the bench. He’s probably the fastest player on the team right now (or at least in the top five). He’ll be the third down and pass catching back. There’s plenty of room for Jawan King to carve out a role as well.

Not much changed on the pass catching front outside of some good plays from sophomore tight end Jack Bradley. He was on a very short list of true freshman that played every game. They’d like to see him more involved this year. August Pitre had a great showing, too. He was much more aggressive in the air, fighting for the football and winning one-one-one matchups.

On the offensive line, it’s encouraging to see Izeya Floyd running with the twos. So far, the transition seems to be going well. Klarkowski as the starting center surprised me a bit, but I attribute that more to the need for answers at guard. If someone emerges there, Baker more than likely moves back to center. JoVaun Woolford is an impressive human being. If he adds another 15 to 20 pounds this offseason he’s going to be a huge asset at the tackle spot.

Rice Football First Team Defense

DL | Schuman, Hubbard, Carrol, Orji
LB | Alldredge, Montero
CB | Devones, Thornton
Saf | Smith, Nyakwol, Chamberlain

Rice Football Second Team Defense

DL | Doddridge, Enechukwu, Garcia, Page
LB | Morrison, Grammer
CB | Bird, White
Saf | Calderon, Lockhart, Richardson

Defensive depth chart notes

The defense looks pretty cookie cutter from how Rice football ended last season. De’Braylon Carroll will slide up into a starting spot replacing the departing Myles Adams. Kenneth Orji will become the full-time man at rush end with Anthony Ekpe gone. The rest of the first team is essentially unchanged.

Myron Morrison has entrenched himself as a rotation player at linebacker. The coaches love his work ethic and he made several big plays this spring. He and Garrett Grammer will back up Antonio Montero and Blaze Alldredge.

There’s a pretty clear delineation from the first and second teams in the secondary, but the top 10 guys are solid. Rice is bringing in some talented playmakers in the secondary, but this shouldn’t be a situation where anyone is forced to play early from necessity. They’ll have to earn it, which they very well might do.

The defensive line is a spot to monitor. I loved what I saw from Kebreyun Page, and Ikenna Enechukwu has been steadily improving from last season until now. I’m not sure about the defensive end spot. Joshua Pearcy and Jacob Doddridge both took some time there during the spring.

Special Teams

There are a few certainties on special teams.

  1. Austin Trammell will be the punt returner
  2. Stanford transfer Collin Riccitelli will be the place kicker
  3. Charlie Mendes will be the punter
  4. Cam Riddle will be the long snapper

There really won’t be any competition whatsoever at those four spots. That leaves kickoffs and the holder as the only real question marks. Those auditions will continue into the fall.

Unanswered questions

1. Who is going to be the starting quarterback?

Collins and Johnson separated themselves this spring, but neither “seized the job” as coach Bloomgren has often wished of his quarterbacks. They’re both great on the ground with Collins getting a slight edge because of his size. Johnson may not be injury prone, but he’s slimmer and did get forced out of his start against Marshall last year with an injury. I still think we could have one guy before the season opener, but don’t expect the competition closed before a week or two of fall camp.

2. Which offense will Rice run?

The way Rice lined up against Army was night and day different from how they played against Middle Tennessee. Bloomgren will stick to his guns and run the football, but he’s not going to discount the success they found through the air. The offensive line might be the key determinant in how Rice attacks on offense. But we still don’t know how that unit will be pieced together quite yet.

3. Where are the gaps that incoming players need to fill?

In previous springs, it’s been fairly evident where the team needs an impact player. Given the little sample size this time, it’s hard to know which of the incoming signing class is going to have the clearest path to playing time.

I have a hunch someone is going to emerge from the running backs. Kobie Campbell and Khalan Griffin are special talents that could impact the game on special teams or as offensive weapons. On defense, I want to see what happens in the secondary. Can someone like Lamont Narcisse work his way onto the field? That might depend on a few factors. On both sides of the ball, we’ll have to wait and see what happens in the fall.

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

Recent Posts
  • Rice Baseball blows past PVAMU at home
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR David Kasemervisz commits to Owls
  • Hickson gem propels Rice Baseball to series win over Charlotte
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR Artis Cole commits to Owls

Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Adam Sheriff, Andrew Bird, Antonio Montero, August Pitre, Austin Trammell, Blaze Alldredge, Bradley Rozner, Brandt Peterson, Cam Montgomery, Cam Riddle, Charlie Mendes, Clay Servin, Cole Garcia, Collin Riccitelli, De'Braylon Carroll, Derek Ferraro, Elijah Garcia, Garrett Grammer, George Nyakwol, Isaac Klarkowski, Isaiah Richardson, Izeya Floyd, Jack Bradley, Jacob Doddridge, Jaeger Bull, Jake Bailey, Jashon Palmer, Jason White, JaVante Hubbard, Jawan King, Jordan Myers, Jovaun Woolford, Jovoni Johnson, Juma Otoviano, Kebreyun Page, Kenneth Orji, Kirk Lockhart, Mike Collins, Myron Morrison, Naeem Smith, Prudy Calderon, Regan Riddle, Rice Football, Shea Baker, TJ McMahon, Tre'shon Devones, Treshawn Chamberlain, Trey Schuman, Tyrae Thornton, Zane Knipe

Rice Football 2020: Spring Practice Day 1 Notes

February 25, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

The first day of Rice football spring practice is in the books. It’s too early to draw any definitive conclusions, but the groundwork is being laid for the fall.

A full complement of players took the field on Monday for the first day of Rice football spring practice. The complete roster lists 79 players, more than enough to field two full units on both sides of the ball. Some positions will be deeper than others, but the Owls have reached enough bodies to make significant strides this spring.

Head coach Mike Bloomgren likes where the team is at entering the spring, particularly on defense. “I love where our defense is…” he said. “I love that coach [Brian] Smith has them in the mindset that nothing they did last year is going to make a single play for them this year. Everything’s got to be earned again. I can’t wait to see what they can build over there on that side [of the ball]”.

Bloomgren did make sure to mention that the Owls return 20 of 22 players on the defensive two-deep depth chart. That’s the best in the nation in terms of returning defensive production.

Quarterbacks

In a somewhat surprising move, there were no “OR” designations on the first Rice football depth chart of the spring. The quarterbacks, listed from top to bottom:

  1. JoVoni Johnson
  2. Mike Collins
  3. TJ McMahon
  4. Wiley Green
  5. Evan Marshman
  6. Parker Towns

A true No. 1 is far from being finalized, but the decision to put Johnson atop the pack was intentional. “He gained a lot of our trust,” Bloomgren said. “He earned the right, in my opinion, and coach [Jerry] Mack’s opinion, to be on top. So he’s taking those [first team] reps.”

After Johnson, Collins and McMahon have clearly separated themselves from the rest of the group. It would be surprising if one of those three isn’t named the opening day starter for the Owls in the fall. The value of having Mack in the quarterback room as well as having all three starting options on campus for the full duration of spring cannot be understated.

Offensive line

Bloomgren spent the majority of the first practice in the trenches with the offensive line. Injecting his extensive experience into that group will be crucial as the Owls look to reconfigure their front five on the fly.

Rice loses Brian Chaffin, Justin Gooseberry and Nick Leverett. The first reps of spring ball featured this revamped first team line:

LT – Clay Servin
LG – Adam Sheriff
C – Isaac Klarkowski
RG – Shea Baker
RT – Jovaun Woolford

Baker at the guard position probably says more about the uncertainty at that spot than it does about the center position. Klarkowski’s work last season in emergency duty had staying power. “I don’t know if we think of him as a walk-on anymore,” admitted Bloomgren, who showed no qualms about him starting the spring with the first team.

Rice has two full lines this spring as opposed to six or seven healthy bodies at the position at this time last year. The tackle spots seem more or less locked down, but the remaining options on the interior could position themselves for a bigger role in the fall with a good showing over the next few weeks.

Injuries

It seems like having 100 percent of the roster fully healthy at the same time is all but impossible. The Owls are relatively healthy, but these four players are expected to miss all of spring ball.

  • Robbie Blosser
  • Jake Bailey
  • Bennett Mecom
  • Trey Schuman

The absence of Jake Bailey is probably the most notable. Trey Schuman is in line to regain his starting role in the fall. He’s somewhat of a more known quantity. Bailey’s absence from the spring will make things a bit more complicated in a wide receiver room that’s starting to get a little more crowded.

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

Recent Posts
  • Rice Baseball blows past PVAMU at home
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR David Kasemervisz commits to Owls
  • Hickson gem propels Rice Baseball to series win over Charlotte
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR Artis Cole commits to Owls

Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Adam Sheriff, Clay Servin, Isaac Klarkowski, Jake Bailey, Jovaun Woolford, Jovoni Johnson, Mike Collins, practice notes, Rice Football, Shea Baker, TJ McMahon, Trey Schuman

Rice Football: 10 Takeaways from 2019 season

January 15, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2019 Rice Football season has come and gone. Spring ball will be here soon, but first a look back at what we learned about this team last season.

The 2019 college football season ended with purple and gold confetti falling from the rafters of the New Orleans Super Dome. Rice Football will host the defending champion LSU Tigers at NRG Stadium in 2020. Before we get there, a few observations about what we learned about the Owls this season and what might need to change moving forward.

The good

1. The Rice defense is the real deal

The Owls held eventual top-10 Baylor scoreless in the second half and jumped out to a 20-0 lead 0n North Texas, eventually beating the Mean Green on the back of some spectacular defensive plays. They shored up their most glaring deficiency, the long ball, and found a way to limit some of the most prolific passers in Conference USA. A year removed from finishing 11th in total defense against C-USA foes, Rice improved to sixth in 2019.

2. This team has star power

Not only has Mike Bloomgren retooled the roster with D1-caliber players, but he’s also added names that people outside of South Main will know. Players like Austin Trammell, Bradley Rozner, Blaze Alldredge and Treshawn Chamberlain are stars in Conference USA. All earned postseason honors of some sort, with Alldredge being named first-team All C-USA by the conference and Pro Football Focus. Better still, all are slated to return next season.

3. The Owls have hit on the vast majority of their transfer targets

With the exception of offensive lineman Andrew Mike, a transfer from Florida in Bloomgren’s first season, Rice has hit home run after home run in the Transfer Portal. They’ve gone three-for-three with JUCO additions (Alldredge, Rozner and Naeem Smith) and gotten game-winning production from graduate transfers across the offense. There should be more additions on this front in the coming weeks.

4. The 2020 schedule gets a lot easier

Rice football gets Army at home next season while swapping out a slate of three Power 5 opponents for LSU, an FCS school (Lamar) and Houston. It’s plausible the 2019 team could have won at least a couple of additional games against the 2020 schedule, and Rice returns the vast majority of their overall production.

5. Rice proved they can win with offense and with defense

Rice beat North Texas with suffocating defense, keeping one of Conference USA’s best quarterbacks out of the endzone. A week later they beat UTEP with offense, rallying from a halftime deficit to win on the road. As good as the defense was, this team wasn’t one-dimensional in their wins.

Areas of concern

6. Inconsistent quarterback play remains a problem
  1. Shawn Stankavage
  2. Jackson Tyner
  3. Evan Marshman
  4. Wiley Green
  5. Parker Towns
  6. Tom Stewart
  7. JoVoni Johnson

Throw in wildcat quarterback Juma Otoviano and you’ve got way too long of a list. Rice hasn’t managed to keep the same hands under center for an entire season yet since Mike Bloomgren arrived at South Main. Awful injury luck has been a component of the quarterback quandary, but poor play has been equally culpable. If Rice football is going to take the next step, finding ONE passer for 2020 is a must. They’ll have a few to choose from: Green, grad transfer Mike Collins and JUCO transfer TJ McMahon.

7. The rest of the receiving corps never broke out

Rice is never going to post numbers akin to the spread offenses that have become ubiquitous with today’s spread offenses. That said, the ratio of pass catching options skewed to an extreme this season. Only two Rice receivers (Bradley Rozner and Austin Trammell) caught at least 20 passes. August Pitre third with 17, less than 1.5 per game. Jake Bailey was limited to a part-time role. Zane Knipe wasn’t healthy. None of the pass catching tight ends we’d hope to see materialized into consistent options. Whoever plays quarterback will need more than two options in the passing game.

8. The offensive identity seems uncertain

The Rice offense that started the season 0-9 looked fairly foreign from the version that ended the season 0-3. A lot of the core concepts were there, but the influence of offensive coordinator Jerry Mack was undeniable. Mack said after the season they’d retain as much of that simplicity as possible, but Bloomgren was careful to note they weren’t going to throw out the playbook either. What that means for 2020 is anybody’s guess.

9. It’s hard to consistently hit on transfers

Last year Rice brought in seven transfers who were expected to compete for starting jobs. Each of them — Tom Stewart, Naeem Smith, Bradley Rozner, Brian Chaffin, Justin Gooseberry, Nick Leverett and Charlie Booker — either started or were important contributors. The hit rate was as close to 100 percent as could have been reasonably expected. Doing that well in the transfer market for two years in a row is really hard to do.

10. Expectations are rising

Two wins in Bloomgren’s first season was okay. Three wins, and the fashion in which they came, were proof the Owls were headed in the right direction. 2020 is when everything is supposed to come together. The staff expects to be in a bowl game next winter, and that’s probably the baseline for the trajectory this team has set through two seasons.

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

Recent Posts
  • Rice Baseball blows past PVAMU at home
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR David Kasemervisz commits to Owls
  • Hickson gem propels Rice Baseball to series win over Charlotte
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR Artis Cole commits to Owls

Filed Under: Football, Archive, Featured Tagged With: August Pitre, Austin Trammell, Blaze Alldredge, Bradley Rozner, Brian Chaffin, Charlie Booker, Jake Bailey, Jovoni Johnson, Justin Gooseberry, Naeem Smith, Nick Leverett, Rice Football, TJ McMahon, Treshawn Chamberlain, Wiley Green, Zane Knipe

Rice Football Recruiting: Breaking down the 2020 signees – Offense and Special Teams

December 20, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2020 Rice Football Recruiting class features a ton of talent on the offensive side of the ball and a potential multi-year starter on special teams.

Quarterback (2) – Mike Collins (TCU), TJ McMahon (JUCO)

During Mike Bloomgren’s first season at Rice, Shawn Stankavage, Jackson Tyner, Evan Marshman, Parker Towns and Wiley Green took snaps at quarterback. 2019 was marginally better — Green, Tom Stewart and JoVoni Johnson were the primary options. The continuous theme in those jumbled lists is the inconsistency. Rice hasn’t had one singular guy they can count on at the most important position on the field.

Mike Collins is arguably the most high-profile addition this staff has brought in at the position. He won three state titles in four years in Connecticut and set the state record for touchdown passes. Then he bounced around from Penn to TCU. He’s a talented passer with FBS starting experience, something the Owls haven’t had in the past three classes. Most importantly, he’ll be here for the spring, giving him ample runway to learn the offense, a luxury neither Stankavage or Stewart were afforded.

Also an early enrollee, McMahon is less heralded, but an intriguing prospect nonetheless. He’s got a lot of raw talent and a clutch gene that’s been largely missing from the Rice quarterback room recently. Watch the first play of his junior highlights. Anyone can look good on one highlight-reel play, but the poise and playmaking ability McMahon shows are on another level.

Whether it’s one of those two, Green or Johnson who wins the job, Rice should have competent quarterback play next season. Bloomgren says he can rest happily, knowing that “for the first time since we’ve been here, whoever is going to be the starting quarterback is on campus in the spring.” If the defense maintains there stellar performance, that might be enough to flip some of those close losses to wins.

Running Back (2) – Kobie Campbell, Khalan Griffin

The running back room was arguably the deepest position group on offense last season, but they’ll have to replace Aston Walter, Nahshon Ellerbe and Charlie Booker next season. The 2020 Rice football recruiting class needed at least one potential producer. They got two.

Kobie Campbell is a guy who is deceptively powerful for his 5-foot-7 stature. He runs with a vengeance, but it’s his burst that should interest Owls the most. His ability to kick it into high gear at a moment’s notice is impressive. He has the ability to make one cut, hit the hole and pick up yards in bunches. He’s a swiss army knife who can do it all.

More: Breaking down the Rice Football recruiting 2020 defensive signees (UPDATED)

The other addition at the position didn’t play running back in high school. Khalan Griffin was a dual-threat quarterback who frequently made video game-esque runs seem easy. An injury cost him the latter portion of his senior season, but the Owls’ interest never wavered. Once he’s back to full health he’s going to be a difference-maker at the next level, one that offensive coordinator Jerry Mack went out of his way to identify as a player who “will find himself on the field sooner rather than later.”

This is a spot where Rice would probably consider adding a transfer, provided they find the right one.

Wide Receiver (1) – Andrew Mason

The immediate future at wide receiver seems particularly strong, but the depth is a bit lacking. Austin Trammell and Brad Rozner will be the 1A and 1B in this offense next season. Who else emerges from the rest of the pack remains to be seen. We saw a nice cameo from Zane Knipe at the tail end of the 2019 season as well as scattered plays here and there from Jake Bailey and August Pitre.

Andrew Mason has as good of a chance to see meaningful playing time quickly as any of the non-Trammell/Rozer options currently on the roster. The 5-foot-10 wideout is a dominant playmaker who can make people miss in space and haul in stunning catches when the ball gets to his general vicinity.

How dominant is Mason? In a game against eventual 10-2 Arkansas state champion Pulaski Academy this season, Mason went off for eight touchdowns, tying a Tennessee state record that had stood since 1994. Slowed with a cast on his left hand, Mason wasn’t originally supposed to play in the game at all, let alone be the key cog in a massive win.

After a few touchdowns, it didn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out Ravenwood was going to throw the ball to Mason. The opposing defense knew exactly where the ball was going. They just couldn’t stop it. Mason can win over the top, across the middle and everywhere in between. He’s a potential game-breaker and a star in the making of an impressive 2020 Rice Football recruiting class.

Tight End (1) – Nate Kamper

Not all tight ends are created equal. The Owls know that better than most. Although you’ll only see one position listed, there are a few different specialized roles that are best suited for different kinds of players.

Rice relied on three tight ends to play the bulk of the snaps last season — Jordan Myers, Jaeger Bull and Jack Bradley. All three of them profile more so as blocking tight ends than downfield threats, combining for 38 receptions total in the past two seasons. They can catch ball, but that’s not their primary function while in the game.

Kamper falls into the latter category of tight end. He’s the kind of player you can line up in the slot or inline and ask to go downfield. His tall (6-foot-6), 200-pound frame makes him a potential problem down the seam, an area where he excelled in high school. Robert French and Jonathan Sanchez were two players penciled into this role for the 2019 season. Neither seized the job.

Kamper has the ability, he’ll just need some time in the weight room.  He’s a raw talent, with a lot more football to learn. But he has all the traits to be a game-changer for the Owls in the middle of the field. Bloomgren said “he’s just scratched the surface of where he’ll be as a football player.”

Offensive Line (5) – Mike Leone, Braedon Nutter, Trey Phillippi, Adam Sheriff (JUCO), Jovaun Woolford (Colgate)

Most every Rice football recruiting class is going to include a heavy dose of offensive lineman. The Owls brought in three transfers at the position last season, all of which started when healthy. They’ll have to fill all three gaps this time around, making the additions of experienced players like Jovaun Woolford and Adam Sheriff big pickups for this group.

In an ideal world, true freshmen won’t crack the starting lineup for a program like Rice which will remain committed to keeping the cupboards stocked at that position. Rice would prefer to do what they did this season where they were able to play and redshirt members of the 2019 class like Isaac Klarkowski, Hunter Jones and Regan Riddle. That’s most likely the role many of these guys will fill next year.

Mike Leone and Trey Phillippi are the names to keep an eye on among the high school additions. Beyond their prototypical frames, they fill a need at the tackle spot. Amplified by the potential departure of Uzoma Osuji and the exit of grad transfer Justin Gooseberry, Rice needed this duo. The Owls didn’t bring in a true tackle in their last class, instead adding several high-caliber interior players who could be in the mix this season. Which brings us back to these tackles.

More: The Roost Podcast – 2019 Rice Football end of season awards

Bloomgren said Leone, who had Power 5 offers from ACC and Big 12 schools, “has all the tools to be a big-time offensive tackle in our conference. Standing 6-foot-5 and tipping the scales at 270 pounds, how quickly he assimilates into the offense in the fall will be an intriguing storyline to watch. He’s a guy who could be the potential heir to the left tackle spot following Clay Servin.

Phillippi is similar. His reach and ability to bend set him apart as an elite athlete with his hulking frame. These are top-end players. With grooming, these two could be bookends on the Rice line for years to come. Both will see the field in at least a redshirt capacity this season.

Kicker (1) – Collin Riccitelli (Stanford)

Chris Barnes is out of eligibility and heir apparent Zach Hoban is in the Transfer Portal. That left an opening at the place kicking spot which Rice will fill with Stanford transfer Collin Riccitelli. Although the math works out well enough, Rice had actually zeroed in on Riccitelli much sooner. Rice began their due diligence as soon as he entered the portal last fall.

Riccitelli was a career backup at Stanford, but the coaching staff is confident he’ll have a successful career at Rice. He didn’t ride the bench for lack of ability, rather he sat behind Jet Toner, the all-time leading scorer in Stanford history and a back-to-back All-Pac12 selection. Special Teams coordinator Drew Svoboda gave a nod to former Ohio State transfer turned LSU superstar Joe Burrow. Nobody is promising Heisman Trophies, but the expectations for Riccitelli are reasonably high.

The staff believes they’ll be able to secure a medical hardship waiver for an earlier season in Riccitelli’s career. That would give him two years to play two seasons at Rice.

Last update: Feb. 5, 2020
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
  • Rice Baseball blows past PVAMU at home
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR David Kasemervisz commits to Owls
  • Hickson gem propels Rice Baseball to series win over Charlotte
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR Artis Cole commits to Owls

Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Football Recruiting, Premium Tagged With: Adam Sheriff, Andrew Mason, Braedon Nutter, Jovaun Woolford, Khalan Griffin, Kobie Campbell, Mike Collins, Mike Leone, Nate Kamper, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting, TJ McMahon, Trey Phillippi

Rice Football Recruiting: 5 Takeaways from 2020 Early Signing Period

December 18, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The Owls signed their first members of the 2020 Rice Football recruiting class this week, setting the stage for an exciting future at South Main.

1. The 2020 Rice Football recruiting class could be the best ever

Recruiting rankings are inherently subjective. If NFL front offices can’t nail their draft classes with several years of college tape, it’s understandable for high school projections to be equally askew. While the projectability of individual players varies, the aggregate measures do a pretty good job of demarcating classes. For example, the top four 2020 classes entering the early signing period? Clemson. Alabama. LSU. Ohio State.

Rice Football RecruitingWhen the early signing period began, Rice had the No. 4 recruiting class in Conference USA before being bumped down to No. 5 by the  afternoon. Since recruiting rankings were first compiled in the early 2000s, the program has only one Top 4 class (2007). The average Rice class has checked in about eighth, and that includes times when Conference USA only had 12 teams.

Mike Bloomgren’s first class was the No. 12 class in C-USA. Last year’s class was No. 11. Assuming Rice picks up a few additional pieces between now and National Signing Day in February, the Owls will be in the range of their best class in school history. That won’t spot the Owls any points in their games, but the more talent you have on the field, the better your record tends to be.

2. Rice can win big battles

Rice flipped offensive lineman Mike Leone from Yale this week, but winning battles against the Ivy League isn’t the only area of growth for this staff. On Wednesday, the signed members of the 2020 Rice Football Recruiting class held offers from some of the following schools:

  • LSU
  • Colorado
  • NC State
  • Syracuse
  • Maryland
  • Pittsburgh
  • Boston College
  • Kansas State
  • Kansas
  • Houston
  • SMU
  • Tulsa

The Owls beat out established Power 5 teams and some of the best Group of 5 programs in the country. They went head to head with programs across the nation with established recruiting strategies and won enough battles to field an impressive class. Rice might not sign a slew of 5-stars any time soon, but the Owls have proven they can get the playmakers to campus.

3. Rice doubled down on the two biggest positions of need

The defense remains mostly intact entering 2020, putting an added focus on the offense for this recruiting cycle with quarterback and offensive line the two positions under the most scrutiny. It’s no secret Rice has had a revolving door at the quarterback spot for each of the past two seasons.

Signing two signal callers in the same class is unconventional, but it’s a step Bloomgren and the staff believed they needed to take. “Durability is a big part of playing that position,” Bloomgren said, stressing the injury problems of the Rice starters and the value of having depth in the room.

To achieve that goal, Rice signed former TCU quarterback Mike Collins and Cerritos JUCO quarterback TJ McMahon, both of which will enroll early in time for the spring. One of those two, or incumbents JoVoni Johnson and Wiley Green will win the starting job next season, and possibly beyond. At this point, it’s hard to say there’s an obvious frontrunner, but the depth from No. 1 to No. 4 is unequivocally the strongest it has been since Bloomgren and his staff arrived. The players are there. The challenge now is to find “the guy” and stick with him.

Losing three grad transfers on the offensive line made finding ready-to-play talent in the trenches imperative. Rice fulfilled that need with four new additions, two high school signees (Mike Leone and Trey Phillippi) and two transfers (Jovaun Woolford and Adam Sheriff).

Woolford should step in and start immediately. Sheriff is another guy who will likely have an inside track. Both will enroll in January and be on campus for the spring. Those two, alongside younger players already on campus like Isaac Klarkowski, Cole Garcia, Regan Riddle and Derek Ferraro, should make up for a strong front five, however the coaching staff chooses to deploy them.

4. The national recruiting strategy works

The 2020 Rice football recruiting class includes players from sea to sea. The Owls went and nabbed Mike Leone, who projects as a multi-year starting tackle from the East Coast. On the same day, they signed Cerritos JUCO quarterback TJ McMahon from California. Altogether, Rice signed players from Texas, California, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, New York, Pennsylvania and Tennessee.

If there’s a player with that can help Rice win, they’re going to find them. In the past few seasons, Rice has signed players from 7-man programs, small schools with barely more than enough players to field all 22 positions and national powerhouse programs. There is no place off limits and that’s made for some of the most impressive additions the Owls have seen in several years.

5. There’s room for more

Rice signed 17 players on Wednesday. Don’t expect the Owls to slow down. This class still has room for several new additions before National Signing Day in February. There will be a handful of more high school signees over the next several weeks. The Transfer Portal should provide plenty of candidates as well.

Last year they loaded up with several grad transfers in the latter portion of the recruiting calendar. Offensive lineman Brian Chaffin and fullback Reagan Williams were added after the early signing period was complete. So were former quarterback Tom Stewart and running back Charlie Booker from Harvard and Justin Gooseberry from Ouachita Baptist. All five of those players either started or played significant minutes for Rice in their only seasons on campus.

More: The Roost Podcast – 2019 Rice Football end of season awards

Rice signed 10 transfers during their 2019 class. They have four transfers in the fold already and at least a half dozen more spots to fill. Expect the Owls to find a few more impact players to bolster a class already teeming with talent. Bloomgren alluded to there being some potential impact additions who could become Owls over the course of the next month.

TLDR: the fireworks aren’t done yet. There’s more to come from the 2020 Rice Football recruiting class.

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

Recent Posts
  • Rice Baseball blows past PVAMU at home
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR David Kasemervisz commits to Owls
  • Hickson gem propels Rice Baseball to series win over Charlotte
  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR Artis Cole commits to Owls

Filed Under: Football, Featured, Football Recruiting Tagged With: Adam Sheriff, Jovaun Woolford, Mike Collins, Mike Leone, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting, TJ McMahon, Trey Phillippi

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • Next Page »
  1. Item 1
  2. Item 2
  3. Item 3
  4. Item 4
  5. Item 5
  • Rice Football
  • Rice Basketball
  • 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