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Rice Football runs all over Charlotte in must-win game

November 18, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football went on the road in a must-win situation and came away with the victory, running all over Charlotte spurred by terrific defensive play.

Playing with a backup quarterback for the second week in a row, Rice football took care of business and won on the road. The victory over Charlotte served as payback from last season’s loss and sets Rice up in a familiar situation. If they can win in the final game of the regular season they’ll clinch bowl eligibility. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Have a day, Defense

Charlotte scored 33 points and 38 points in their last two games, respectively. The Rice defense compiled a first-half shutout and they did so despite the Rice offense turning the ball over twice and losing one of their premier pass rushers, Coleman Coco, to a targeting penalty.

One quick aside on targeting — let’s get rid of the rule. The penalty has been called three times in the Owls’ last three games and the hit Coco gave on Charlotte quarterback Jalon Jones was probably the least egregious of the three. Yet Coco was ejected, the other players weren’t. This randomness in officiating needs to stop.

And even still, the Rice defense persevered. They held Charlotte to seven points for the game and 2.8 yards per play. There wasn’t ever a moment when it felt like the 49ers found any sort of rhythm on that side of the ball, despite Rice playing without Coco, without linebacker Chris Conti and with a limited Tre’shon Devones.

“I thought the defense was the story of the day. No matter what situation they got put in, they found a way to get off the field except for one time,” head coach Mike Bloomgren said. “Our guys just competed and fought their butts off.”

Rice was minus two as a team in turnover margin against Charlotte (and minus three until the last possession in mop-up time). The 49ers offense still only mustered one score, and it took an interception return inside the redzone and a pass interference penalty that gave them the ball inside the five to get that much.

Playing against an offense that didn’t feature a top four quarterback in the AAC, the Rice defense looked stout. What that means for their year-long stature isn’t that relevant anymore, but it does bode well for the unit as they prepare for an undermanned FAU team at home next weekend. This defense is good, maybe not elite, but definitely stout enough to get the job done if the offense can carry its own weight.

The Dean Connors Show

Connors touched the ball 19 times on Saturday and averaged 9.7 yards per touch. His 19 carries were the most by a Rice running back this year. His 184 yards broke his own career-best outing against Tulsa, where he rushed for 120 yards on nine carries.

“That was a motivated kid who always has a chip on his shoulder. You know how I feel about Dean Connors,” Bloomgren said. “But this one was special for all of us. To have their defensive coordinator Ryan Osborn call him out by name and say they’re going to account for Dean Connors and know where he is and stop him. I don’t know that they were able to stop him today and that’s because he ran possessed. He played the game the right way.”

The only underwhelming part of his performance was a fumble late in the second quarter. But again, thanks to the Rice defense, the Owls weren’t hurt by the miscue. The fumble came on Connors’ first touch since the Owls’ opening drive of the second quarter. Somehow Rice managed to call 11 plays without getting the ball in Connors’ hands.

Connors wasn’t bothered by the miscue. He built on his strong first half performance with a dominant second half showing. He was instrumental in the Owls’ 13-play, 75-yard drive that burned 7:17 off the clock and iced the game. Connors touched the ball six times on that drive, seven if you count a 25-yard run taken off the board via a holding penalty.

Quarterback-proofing the Rice offense remains a work in progress

Following years of quarterback tumult, there have been a few moments this season when the Rice offense performed at a high level without its starting quarterback on the field. There were some of those on Saturday, most of which involved the Owls getting the ball into the hands of their playmakers and letting them make plays rather than leaning on their passer.

Freshman Chase Jenkins operated the offense at a high level in the second half against SMU. This time it was AJ Padgett whose afternoon was a mixed bag of good and bad. Whether they should have or not is an open question, but the Rice coaching staff clearly trusted Padgett to run the full offense. At times he rewarded them — like the final fourth down touchdown heave — at others, he didn’t.

“That’s not the best of AJ. We’ve got to find a way to be able to get it on gameday, to get the best of him, because it’s really good,” Bloomgren acknowledged. “There’s week over week in game growth, for sure, but we’ve got to play a little cleaner than that.”

Padgett led five scoring drives and ran the ball in himself twice, but his two interceptions were unforced errors that could have been much more costly had the Rice defense not been playing at such an elite level.

Yes, having JT Daniels is always the preferred option, but this is now the second time in the past three games Rice has proven they can move the ball and score without an all-time program great like Daniels on the field. They’re better with Daniels, but they’re not dead in the water without him. A few weeks ago that was a much more palpable concern.

One more

Rice football head coach Mike Bloomgren reminded the assembled media during his press conference this week the Owls entered the year with three primary goals: win the conference, make a bowl game and win that bowl game.

“We’re not going to win the conference championship,” Bloomgren stated then. “And neither are 12 other teams in the American.” The remaining two goals are still on the table. And they became even more tangible after Saturday’s victory over Charlotte.

It’s been a bumpy ride, but Rice football is one game away from bowl eligibility. If Rice can beat FAU next weekend, head coach Mike Bloomgren will become just the third coach in the history of the program to take the Owls to back-to-back bowl games. As the Owls’ headman fights to prove the program is making progress, that piece of potential history looms large.

Bloomgren understands what’s at stake. Last year his team lost at North Texas, reaching bowl eligibility as a five-win team. That loss came on the heels of two prior losses and came with a team not playing it’s best football of the season at that point. The Owls looked much better on Saturday than they did down the stretch a year ago.

“We understand what’s at play this week and how big of a deal this game’s going to be. It’s huge,” Bloomgren said. “I would expect these guys to prepare like they never have for a football game — and we really don’t need that — I just need them to do the process the way they’ve been doing it all year because they’ve prepared the right way. Now I need them to go perform like they did today and we’ll all be really happy with those results.”

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Rice Football 2023: SMU Game Week Practice Report

November 2, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football hosts SMU this week in their lone matchup as AAC members. Here’s what we learned from practice this week.

Much was made of the return of the rivalry between Rice football and SMU when Rice announced their move to the AAC, but with SMU departing for the ACC this offseason, the Owls will only get this one crack at the Mustangs before they separate conferences once again. With several Dallas natives on the roster, Rice hopes to make this game count.

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This week’s roundup focuses on adjustments along the defensive line, the emergence of a potential pass-catching weapon for the offense and some thoughts on this very important matchup.

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.

The status of Josh Pearcy

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Rice Football 2023: South Florida Game Week Practice Report

September 21, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football hits the road for their first-ever AAC game against South Florida. Here’s what we learned from practice this week.

Hoping to be 3-1 for the first time since 2001, Rice football heads to Florida to take on USF and first-year head coach Alex Golesh this weekend. The Owls had plenty of film to review following the Texas Southern win and had a few changes to make as a result.

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This week’s roundup focuses on how Rice football plans to address the tempo USF plays with as well as some potential personnel decisions at linebacker and running back that could be intriguing as the team prepares for Week 4.

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Tempo, tempo, tempo

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Rice Football 2023: Houston Game Week Practice Report

September 7, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football comes home this week to play the Bayou Bucket rivalry game against Houston. Here’s what we learned from practice this week.

This week was spent refining some things as Rice football prepares for its 2023 home opener, an important intra-city rivalry game with Houston. The Owls came close a year ago and believe they have what it takes to get over the hump this time around.

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This week’s roundup focuses on a shakeup at one offensive possession, some learnings from the Texas game and some healthy updates as the team readies for Week 2.

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What’s going on at wide receiver?

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Texas overwhelms Rice Football as the Owls fall in lopsided opener

September 2, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football delivered the first blow, but it was Texas that had the last laugh as the Longhorns overwhelmed the Owls in the trenches to hand them a season-opening loss.

The final score might not have been completely indicative of the intensity of Saturday’s season-opening matchup between Rice football and Texas. The Owls kept things close through the first half until the defense ran out of gas, worked to the max under the sweltering Austin heat as the Owls’ offense struggled to get into gear. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Throw the first punch

You couldn’t have drawn it up much better than this. Texas received the opening kickoff, picked up a couple of yards and found itself facing a fourth-and-two from its own 33-yard line. Rather than play it safe, the Longhorns rolled the dice. The Owls overwhelmed quarterback Quinn Ewers in the backfield and forced a short throw, turning Texas over on downs on their first possession.

“That’s something that doesn’t really surprise us,” linebacker Myron Morrison said postgame. “We consider ourselves one of the best short-yardage defenses in the country.”

Rice would get three points for their efforts, picking up one first down before turning to Tim Horn who booted through a 42-yard field goal to give the underdogs the lead. Head coach Mike Bloomgren had mentioned this week that he didn’t believe the game would be too big for his team this time around and that certainly seemed to be the case from the opening whistle.

Rice entered the second quarter trailing 7-3 and went into halftime down 16-3. In both instances, Rice was very much so in the game and had given Texas reason to be concerned, at least on one side of the ball. This was a matchup that hadn’t been interesting in the second half in the last several meetings. Rice kept the game in reach at the halftime whistle.

Defense makes its mark

How about that defense? This unit lost Ikenna Enechukwu, Trey Schuman, Quint Titre, George Nyakwol and others from last year’s squad and somehow looked even more dangerous. The front seven engineered two fourth-down stops in plus territory in the first half and gave Ewers all he could handle, racking up two sacks and several more near misses that still managed to impact the game. Coleman Coco and De’Braylon Carroll noticeably impacted the game.

Texas was a five-touchdown favorite on Saturday largely because oddsmakers believed the Longhorns would be able to move the ball. Texas did that to some extent — the Longhorns finished with 458 yards gained — but the Rice defense never lost its composure and seemingly always bounced back following a big Texas gain.

Through the air, Sean Fresch and Tre’shon Devones kept the ball in front of them and prevented Ewers and Texas from connecting on home run balls down the field. Instead, Texas was forced to do much of its damage after the catch.

Although the box score won’t be kind to the defense after surrendering 37 points, when field position and the lack of help from the Owls’ offense is taken into account, it’s hard to walk away from this one not feeling largely positive above this side of the ball. There were missed tackles, missed assignments and missteps, but the defense was not the problem on Saturday, far from it.

Oof, Offense, Oof

While the defense rose to the occasion, the offense was largely stuck in quicksand throughout the game. Handed so many opportunities by their counterparts on the other side of the ball, quarterback JT Daniels and company did little to return the favor. His Rice debut was largely underwhelming, he completed 14 of 26 passes for 149 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

In the aftermath, Bloomgren pumped the brakes on putting the all blame on his quarterback, and for good reason. The Texas defensive line had its way with the Rice offensive line from start to finish, flustering Daniels and making him through with hands in his face and arms on his jersey. “You can’t evaluate quarterbacks like that,” Bloomgren said.

The unit had the opportunity to go back to the drawing board at halftime but came out of the gates with a false start on the first snap of the half which proceeded a quick three-and-out. The ensuing drive did move the chains once, but a fourth-and-one stop by the Texas defense turned the ball over on downs.

In many ways, that short yardage stop, an area the Owls have found tremendous success in during recent years, typified the Owls’ largest offensive problem on Saturday: the trenches. Plain and simple, Rice was simply outmanned up front. They had no answer for the sheer power of the Longhorns inside and it completely crippled their offensive attack. “The best quarterback in the world needs something,” Bloomgren said of the protection. “There were a lot of times I didn’t feel he had those opportunities today.”

Rice football won’t face many teams with the combination of size and strength Texas possesses up front this season. Before writing this unit off entirely, let’s see how they fair against a more evenly matched front.

Onto the next

It would have been a remarkable, unforgettable beginning to the season had Rice football done the unthinkable and upset a ranked Texas team on the road to begin the 2023 season. Those dreams have passed, and Rice is on to what the Owls hope to be the more representative portion of their schedule.

Oddsmakers aren’t infallible, but Saturday’s matchup with the Longhorns should be the only time this season Rice will be an underdog but four or five touchdowns — a margin the Owls managed to cover. No, from this point onward, every game is not only winnable, but victory should be achievable without herculean means.

Rice gave Texas a scare, stayed relatively healthy and got a good look at what will likely be the most talented opposition they’ll face this season. Now it’s time to move on. All eyes are now on Houston as Rice readies for a rematch of a game that went down to the wire last season and is anticipated to be extremely competitive once again.

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Count ’em

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Recent Posts
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  • Rice Football Recruiting: WR Artis Cole commits to Owls

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Blake Boenisch, Braylen Walker, Chibby Nwajuaku, Coleman Coco, De'Braylon Carroll, DeMone Green, game recap, Jovoni Johnson, JT Daniels, Kobie Campbell, Rawson MacNeill, Rice Football, Sean Fresch, Tre'shon Devones

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