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Rice Football: 2021 Blue-Gray Spring Game Review

April 2, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football spring practice wrapped up this week with the Blue-Gray Game. Final thoughts and takeaways from the last session of the spring.

What a difference a week can make. The last update came following the final scrimmage of the spring in which the defense dominated the offense from start to finish. The reversal came true on Friday night during the annual Rice Football Blue-Gray Spring Game. The offense went on to win 48-34, holding on to a commanding first-half lead.

The offense scored on five of their first seven drives, with Wiley Green and TJ McMahon each leading a pair of touchdown drives. Then the defense took charge, limited the offense to just three scoring plays over the final 12 drives, one of which came on a 65-yard touchdown bomb from McMahon to wideout Andrew Mason.

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For those that might have missed it, you can check out the initial depth chart reactions as well as the Week 1, Week 2, Week 3 and Week 4 practice notebooks. Not subscribed? The Roost will have you covered every step of the way this spring and beyond. Subscribers get access to all practice notes, recruiting updates and special features. Subscribe on Patreon and get access to it all today.

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Andrew Mason, Bradley Rozner, Brian Hibbard, Caleb James, Charlie Mendes, Collin Riccitelli, Gabe Taylor, Jalen Reeves, Jason White, Josh Pearcy, Jovoni Johnson, Khalan Griffin, Miles Adams, practice notes, Rice Football, Sean Fresch, spring practice, TJ McMahon, Wiley Green, Will Harrison, Will Martinez

Rice Football 2020 Special Teams Player of the Year: Charlie Mendes

December 24, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Charlie Mendes impressed in his debut season. The redshirt freshmen punter is our 2020 Rice Football Special Teams Player of the Year.

Before former Rice football special teams coordinator Pete Lembo left Houston to take a job with Memphis, he helped secure a commitment from punter Charlie Mendes. The California native was a member of the 2019 recruiting class who elected to come to South Main even though Lembo had moved on. That decision proved fortuitous for the Owls.

Mendes didn’t play a snap during his freshman year. His big leg caught an occasional eye in practice, but the Owls didn’t have need for the newcomer just yet. His time would come, though. After a year of waiting and learning, it was Mendes’ job to lose this spring. Not only did he keep the job, he put together an impressive season. Despite all the challenges that came with the bumpy road the Owls were forced to take, Mendes was steadfast.

When Mendes first stepped foot onto the turf at Rice Stadium in a live game the calendar had already blown past September into late October. Most teams around the country had played several football games, but Rice football was in the midst of their season opener against Middle Tennessee. Mendes took the snap and blasted a 58-yard bomb. Welcome to college, kid.

From that point onward, Mendes has been a fixture on Rice special teams. He averaged 42.8 yards per punt with a long of 59-yards. For those that don’t eat, sleep, and breathe punting statistics, the Owls’ redshirt freshmen punter had a good year. Perhaps not a Ray Guy Award-caliber season, but a surefooted debut in the midst of a season that was anything but normal.

Before the year began, special teams coordinator Drew Svoboda liked what he’d seen from the Owls’ new punter. “He’s got long levers,” he said, “He’s got great biomechanics to punt.” The 58-yarder out of the gate backed up those initial assertions. It also kept any competition from incoming transfer Collin Riccitelli at bay.

Most football fans don’t pay much attention to the punter unless there’s a misstep in a crucial moment. But the reliable foot of Mendes may have gone further under the radar than usual because of the bevy of riches the Owls’ have had at the punter position in recent years.

One of Mendes’ predecessors, Jack Fox, is a Pro Bowl punter in the NFL this season. After taking a redshirt season of his own following a stellar college campaign, Fox continues to wow with his leg. Following Fox at Rice was the tandem of Chris Barnes and Adam Nunez who pulled off one of the more spectacular shared punting seasons in recent memory, splitting the long distance and short-range duties.

And then there’s Mendes, who took over following that lengthy list of successful punting seasons and didn’t miss a beat.

On a per punt basis, Mendes put 42.9 percent of his punts inside the 20-yard line this year. Fox averaged 38 percent such punts during his three-year Rice career. Mendes put one of 21 punts into the endzone for a touchback. Nunez and Barnes had a touchback apiece in 2019. Fox averaged one touchback on roughly every 10 tries, twice the rate of Mendes.

As good as Rice has been on special teams in three years under head coach Mike Bloomgren, it hasn’t been nearly as smooth of a ride at any other facet of the third phase. Rice muffed punts in three consecutive games this year. Place kicking was good, albeit with a few notable, painful bad bounces. The Owls’ only return touchdown was called back via penalty. But punting, punting was never a problem. Because of Mendes.

Which brought to mind another conversation with Svoboda following spring practice. “When you’re back there punting in practice,” Svoboda said of Mendes, “a hundred guys seem to be staring at every punt, so it’s pretty easy to gain or lose credibility with your teammates pretty quick as a specialist. He rose to the challenge.”

Both in practice and when the lights turned on, Mendes delivered, again and again. He was named to the Conference USA All-Freshman team for his efforts. If the bar was high, Mendes held it there. The latest in a growing lineage of punters, he’ll have an opportunity to further engrave his place on the list in seasons to come.

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Filed Under: Football, Archive Tagged With: Charlie Mendes, Rice Football, The Roost Awards

Rice Football 2020: UAB Presser quotes, practice notes and injury news

December 10, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football seeks to finish strong against UAB on Senior Day. Here are the latest notes and press conference quotes from the week.

It was a great week for Rice football. Although fans are still riding high from the Owls’ historic road win against Marshall, the team has turned the page and has their attention focused squarely on UAB. For the first time this season, there will be fans allowed into Rice Stadium to see the contest in person.

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Head coach Mike Bloomgren spoke about the week that was and the task at hand. A few players chimed in as well. Then there’s the depth chart to get to, including some unfortunate injuries at key positions and some notes on what we might see on the field on Saturday.

Press Conference Quotes

“Because it’s such a big win, I probably let myself go an extra day with it. I probably went 48 hours instead of 24 hours enjoying it, because it is an absolutely huge win. But we know that that game, as good as we played, it won’t give us any points on the scoreboard. It won’t have a single stop on defense or a single interception. We have to go earn that this week.” – Mike Bloomgren on switching focus from Marshall to UAB

“UAB has a great offensive line. We’re gonna take the same things that we did last week, change up the scheme, and do the same thing this week. It’s no different. Whoever you put in front of us, that’s who we gotta go hit. So we gotta make it happen.”- Offensive lineman Jovaun Woolford on the UAB defensive front

“Awards come with wins. I think the biggest thing that I see when I see that I won that award is that we had a dominant team because I’ve had better individual performances but it doesn’t mean anything when you don’t get that W. The biggest thing that I’m excited about is that we got such a big team win.” – Linebacker Blaze Alldredge on being named C-USA Defensive Player of the Week

Depth Chart Notes

Here’s an updated depth chart from Rice football heading into the UAB game and some comments on a few notable additions and omissions as well as some injury notes:

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Filed Under: Football, Premium Tagged With: Andrew Mason, Antonio Montero, Austin Conrad, Austin Trammell, Blaze Alldredge, Caleb Chappelle, Charlie Mendes, Izeya Floyd, Jake Bailey, Jordan Myers, Jovaun Woolford, Jovoni Johnson, Juma Otoviano, Mike Collins, practice notes, Rice Football

Shutout and Shutdown: Rice football stuns undefeated Marshall

December 5, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

On a chilly Saturday morning, Rice Football stunned the college football world, knocking off an undefeated, ranked Marshall squad on the road.

For the first time since 1995, Rice football pitched a shutout. On that day 25 years ago, Rice blanked UNLV 38-0. Fast-forward to 2020 where the Owls have now held No. 15 Marshall off the scoreboard in the biggest win of the Mike Bloomgren era. Marshall had never been shut out at Joan C. Edwards Stadium. Now they have.

The last time Rice shutout a ranked opponent? October 22, 1960, when they beat No. 16 Texas, 7-0.

In some ways, the 2020 Owls’ 20-0 win over a ranked Marshall team came out of nowhere. But for those watching the program quietly add talent and take the right steps, it served as validation for three years of hard work. There will be plenty more to unpack from this win in the days to come, for now, a few immediate reactions from the Owls’ big win.

Playing against the odds

Rice had lost its last 32 games against ranked opponents entering their game against Marshall. If that wasn’t enough to qualify as adversity, the absences of quarterback Mike Collins, wide receiver Austin Trammell and linebacker Antonio Montero upped the challenge by a significant margin.

Depending on where you looked, Rice was somewhere between a 21 and a 25 point underdog on Saturday. They weren’t expected to keep it close, let alone contend. Surprise.

When the deck is stacked against you to that degree, you need two things: execution and luck. Rice got both on Saturday. They kept Marshall quarterback Grant Wells off balance from the start, forcing five interceptions.

On the luck front, they were extremely fortunate to receive the latest flag I’ve ever seen throw on a fake punt attempt. Charlie Mendes caught the snap and threw a deep shot down the left sideline. The ball fell to the turf, primarily because the Marshall defender was mugging the would-be Rice receiver. Initially, no flag was thrown, but after a brief conference, the officials changed their minds. Rice got three points off the reversal, extending their lead to two scores, 10-0.

A questionable fumble call against Jake Bailey in the second half and a missed field goal were two of the unluckier moments for the Owls, but for the most part, Rice took advantage of their opportunities and left themselves enough breathing room to overcome those obstacles.

Dominant defense sets the tone

Despite the odds, Rice was not intimidated. They did just about everything right to engineer the upset.

The Owls held on fourth down on Marshall’s opening possession. The forced turnover on downs marked the 13th consecutive game in which Rice had kept their opponent scoreless on their opening drive. Check.

They extended the defensive success by controlling the clock on offense and shutting out Marshall in the first quarter. Rice has yet to allow a point in the first quarter this season. Check.

You could tell the physicality and the effort was different. The defense featured a few creative blitz combinations, but for the most part, it was a strong game from the Rice defensive line against a vaunted Marshall offensive line.

Bloomgren said Marshall’s biggest strength was their ability to line up and “whip the dude in front of them”. Rice just didn’t let that happen. Quite the opposite, in fact. In every phase of the game, Rice football whipped Marshall.

If the play-to-play grind wasn’t enough, safety Naeem Smith delivered the knockout blow in his first action of the season, putting Rice ahead 20-0 on this pick-six.

PICK-SIX, NAEEM SMITH.pic.twitter.com/D2rNtLNHsw

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) December 5, 2020

Rice had six interceptions in 12 games last season. Blaze Alldredge, Josh Pearcy, Andrew Bird, Treshawn Chamberlain and Smith each had a pick on Saturday against a quarterback that had only thrown four in seven games this season.

Special, special teams

Rice muffed three punts in their first three games and suffered the infamous quadruple-doink against Middle Tennessee. That phase of the game had thwarted the Owls’ chances this season. Against Marshall, they were crucial to the Owls’ success.

Collin Riccitelli converted two of three field goals. Mendes’ execution of the fake punt pass set Rice up for a score. Mendes pinned Marshall deep on one of his few punts of the day. Then, with Marshall backed up in their own endzone, Bailey returned a punt to the Marshall to the Marshall 27 to set up another score.

The coverage units were lights out. When they did punt, Mendes was masterful. Apart from a missed field goal, this unit played some of their best football of the entire season.

Signature win

Months ago when we thought Rice football would be playing a full 12 game season, a bowl game was set as the expectation for this team. If the Owls could achieve that it would be proof the team was making progress and heading in the right direction.

When that schedule was scrapped, the means of evaluating progress became much more challenging. For one, we didn’t know how many games Rice would play this year. We didn’t know who those games would be against. And we didn’t know which players Rice would have. Losing Brad Rozner to an injury before the Owls first game compounded things even more.

But this win—knocking off a ranked opponent on the road without your starting quarterback and best wide receiver—proves “the process” as Bloomgren likes to call it, is working. Rice just beat the best team in Conference USA. They’ve proved they can do it. Now they need to show that effort and poise consistently.

Digging deeper (Subscribers only)

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Andrew Bird, Antonio Montero, Austin Trammell, Blaze Alldredge, Charlie Mendes, Collin Riccitelli, game recap, Jake Bailey, Kenneth Orji, Mike Collins, Naeem Smith, Rice Football, Treshawn Chamberlain

Rice Football 2020: Post Southern Miss presser and practice notes

November 3, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

There’s a lot going on in the world of Rice football. Here’s a rundown of the weekly press conference and an update from practice headed into the UTSA game.

The season is back in full swing and we’ve got a full slate of Rice football updates on deck for everyone this week. I’ll include a few snippets from today’s press conference here as well as updates from practice on Monday. The players were off on Tuesday for the Election.

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Press conference notes and quotes

Head coach Mike Bloomgren did note a few players of the week following the victory:

  • Defensive Player of the Game – Chike Anigbogu
  • Offensive Player of the Game – Austin Trammell
  • Special Teams Player of the Game – Charlie Mendes
  • Offense Scout Team Player of the Week – Caleb James
  • Defense Scout Team Player of the Week – TJ McMahon
  • Special Teams Player of the Week – Terreance Ellis

“Anytime you are giving up big plays the way we did in the first game, that’s never a good thing. I think we talked a lot about eliminating the big plays, keeping it in front of us, and I think the guys got the message and we played a lot better in those critical situations at the end of the half and on third down.” – Brian Smith on the what the defense did differently from game one to game two

It felt good to get a win, it really did. It felt great to get a win on Saturday. An incredible effort from start to finish from our guys. I think, really the opening kickoff all the way through the fourth quarter you saw a lot of strain, a lot of physicality. And I can’t say enough about how proud I am of that team for continuing to work the way they did.” – Bloomgren on the Owls’ first win of 2020

“Mike [Collins] is the biggest change. It’s the best play we’ve had out of a quarterback in our time here… Mike is changing the game for our football team. He’s giving everybody a chance to showcase their talent. And it sure doesn’t hurt that the offensive line and the blocking unit is giving him time as well. Everything’s working together, but if I were to identify one change, so far, it would be Mike Collins.” – Bloomgren on the biggest change in the offense from last year to this year

“Two games in, we’re in a good spot… I just don’t want to get too far ahead of ourselves I think we’ve got so much we can improve on right now. Yes, we’re better, but that was a pretty low bar. I want to see how good this offense can perform.” – Bloomgren on how the offense meets his expectations

Practice updates and Southern Miss takeaways

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Filed Under: Football, Archive, Premium Tagged With: Andrew Bird, Austin Trammell, Caleb James, Charlie Mendes, Chike Anigbogu, George Nyakwol, Jordan Myers, Juma Otoviano, Kirk Lockhart, Mike Collins, Miles Mccord, Naeem Smith, practice notes, press conference notes, Rice Football, Sean Fresch, Terreance Ellis, TJ McMahon, Tre'shon Devones, Treshawn Chamberlain

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