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2018 UAB Blazers Season Preview

August 24, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football meets the UAB Blazers, a relatively new foe in the middle of the 2018 season. What can the Owls expect from the newly reformed team?

Three years ago UAB football ceased to exist. The university decided it was in its best interested to shut down the football program. That left head coach Bill Clark without a job and a multitude of the Blazers’ fans extremely disgruntled. That frustration turned into action, and soon enough the football program was reinstated.

After a two-season hiatus, UAB returned to action in 2017. In Year One of the new era, UAB shocked many. They finished the year 8-5 (6-2 CUSA) with both conference losses by a combined four points. It’s safe to say that nobody is writing off the Blazers as newbies this year, including Rice.

Rice fell at home to UAB 52-21 last season. The loss dropped the all-time series record even at 3-3, setting up an interesting rubber game for the two teams at Legion Field this season. Here’s how the Blazers will look this 2018:

Offense

AJ Erdely will once again lead the offense in 2018. The Blazers’ quarterback made Conference USA history last season against the Owls, completing 20-of-21 passes, a 95 percent completion percentage. His season average of 60.7 percent was right in the middle of the pack in CUSA as were his 16 touchdowns and 2,331 passing yards. Erdely’s mobility should be a plus for the Blazers as well. Last year, excluding sacks, he picked up 539 yards on the ground and added 13 rushing touchdowns.

Complementing Erdely on the ground will be one of the most productive running backs in school history. Sophomore Spencer Brown ran wild last season, racking up 1,329 yards on the ground as he shattered Jordan Howard‘s freshman rushing record of 881 yards. Spelling him will be Fresno State transfer James Noble (54 carries last season compared to Brown’s 250).

In front of them returns one of the more experienced offensive lines in Conference USA. Outside of the loss of Chris Schleuger at left guard, the rest of the line is intact.

Wide receiver should be another area of strength for the Blazers. Leading wideout Andre Wilson should be in line for another big year, assuming he can transition smoothly to new offensive coordinator Bryant Vincent. Vincent joins the team for a second time after spending two years at South Alabama during UAB’s hiatus from football.

Behind Wilson, Collin Lisa and JUCO transfer Austin Watkins will be in the mix for sizable roles with several contributors from last season returning as well. On paper, this is one of the deepest offenses in the conference. UAB was the No. 5 scoring offense in CUSA last season and has the potential to take another step forward in 2018.

Defense

If the someone can step up and fill the void left by Tevin Crews the Blazers defense could be as powerful as their offense in 2018. The senior linebacker led the team with 102 tackles, led the team with two forced fumbles and tied for the team lead with three sacks. They also lose Shaq Jones who also had three sacks and led the team with 13 tackles for a loss.

Sliding in behind those are Stacy Keely and rising sophomore Thomas Johnson. Johnson made waves when he spurned Arkansas, Auburn, Clemson and LSU when he committed to UAB in 2017. After playing sparingly in the deep unit a season ago, he’ll be trusted with the starting weakside linebacker spot moving forward.

The linebacker position is the most inexperienced on the team, which bodes well for the rest of the defense as a whole. Three starters return on the defensive line, led by 6-foot-5, 340-pound tackle Anthony Rush. The road grader tallied nine tackles for a loss last year and added an interception at the line as well.

Rush will ease the pressure on a secondary that finished second in CUSA in pass defense a year ago. Replacing strong safety Jordan Petty won’t go unnoticed, but the mostly intact unit should pick up right where they left off. UAB never allowed more than 270 passing yards in any game last season and had a five game stretch in which they registered eight interceptions.

Schedule

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Filed Under: Football Tagged With: 2018 Rice Football Season Preview, Countdown to kickoff, Rice Football

2018 Old Dominion Monarchs Season Preview

August 23, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football will experience many firsts in the first year of the Mike Bloomgren era. They’re hoping one such first is their first win over the Old Dominion Monarchs.

Old Dominion has been a sneaky strong team since joining the FBS in 2014. The Monarchs came one win shy of a bowl berth last season, finishing 5-7. They hold  26-23 record in three seasons in Conference USA, headlined by a 10-win campaign in 2016. Several of those pieces remain on the team, although many have been supplanted with fresh talent.

Head coach Bobby Wilder enters his 10th season in Norvolk, Virginia having spanned the FCS and FBS eras of the school. During his tenure, the Monarchs are 22-9 at home and 11-18 away. That could suggest a strong finish; ODU has three-straight home games before ending their regular season on Nov. 24 against Rice on the road.

Rice and Old Dominion have met two times with the Monarchs holding a perfect 2-0 advantage in series history. Both games so far have been close, each ending in three-point victories for ODU. Here’s how the Monarchs will stack up entering 2018:

Offense

The Monarchs return the vast majority of their skill players from a year ago. Outside of former starting running back Ray Lawry and receiver Melvin Vaughn, the team is more or less intact from a year ago. That should be a good sign for ODU, but much of the burden of offensive improvement will rest on the shoulders of sophomore quarterback Steven Williams.

Reasons for optimism on that front are abundant. Williams was thrust into the fray midway through last season and had to learn on the fly. He started slow (0-6, 49.4 percent completions, four touchdowns and 11 interceptions in his first six games before ending with a bang (3-1, 68.1 percent completions, two touchdowns and no interceptions).

A step forward for Williams should push the receiving corps forward as well. Four of the Monarchs’ five leading receivers return this season and four of them averaged at least 11 yards per reception. Moving the ball downfield should be an area this offensive improves this season. Five returning starters on the offensive line should help to that end.

At running back senior Jeremy Cox should be next in line. He registered more rushing attempts that Lawry last year but wasn’t nearly as productive, averaging 4.2 yards per carry to Lawry’s 5.6 He does bring a more versatile skillset to the team, though. The 6-foot-4, 210-pound back moonlighted as an adequate pass catcher last season, catching 20 passes for 176 yards.

Defense

The defense also brings back a good amount of experience, starting up front on the defensive line. ODU was fourth in Conference USA with 31 sacks last season and lost just 5.5 of those sacks this offseason. The Monarchs have a pair of All-CUSA first team standouts on the line: defensive tackle Miles Fox and end Oshane Ximines.

If that line can generate pressure up front they’ll make things a lot easier for a secondary that had its issues a season ago. The Monarchs finished in the middle of the conference in passing yards allowed but registered only five interceptions while surrendering 18 touchdowns through the air. A veteran group led by strong safety Justin Noye and Justice Davila will be tasked with being more aggressive against the pass.

That leaves the linebackers. Marvin Branch and Jordan Young anchored the ODU defense in the middle last season, accounting for 96 and 85 tackles, respectively. They were also active against the pass, registering seven combined passes defensed.

If the defense can stay healthy, which was a problem for them at times last season, this could become one of the most improved units in Conference USA. Depth concerns prevent sky-high expectations, but the talent is definitely there for ODU in 2018.

Schedule

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Filed Under: Football Tagged With: 2018 Rice Football Season Preview, Countdown to kickoff, Rice Football

3 Days: Owls own 3 finishes inside top eight of final AP Poll

August 22, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has finished inside the top eight in the AP Poll three times in school history and inside the Top 25 nine times. Will they return to the polls any time soon?

When people discuss the ceiling for Rice football they often revert to lamenting the struggles the program has gone through in recent memory. It’s true, the 1-win campaign from a year ago was tough to stomach, but Rice football has put together several memorable campaigns, highlighted by three seasons in which the Owls finished inside the top eight of the AP Poll.

Rice landed right on the edge in 1946, finishing at No. 10 before breaking through a few years later. The incredible 1949 season prompted the construction of Rice Stadium in 1950 and has been recognized as the most successful team in school history. Rice football achieved a program-best No. 5 ranking that season, but it wasn’t long before Jess Neely has the Owls back near the top of the college football mountain.

After hovering around .500 for three years, Neely pushed the Owls back to No. 6 in the nation in 1953, capping off the year with yet another Cotton Bowl win. The 9-2 record marked the fourth time in school history that the Owls had won as many games, falling just shy of the Owls’ 10-win 1949 season.

Once more, after a three-season break from the national stage, Neely’s 1957 campaign broke into the upper echelon of the sport. That squad finished 7-4 with a loss in the Cotton Bowl. It also marked the last time that Rice would finish in the top 10 and the second-to-last time that the Owls would be ranked in the final AP Poll at all.

Outside of a 7-4 season that pushed the Owls as high as No. 7 before finishing at No. 17, Rice hasn’t come that close to finishing as a ranked squad. 10-win seasons in 2008 and 2013 both put the Owls to the edge, but untimely losses (including a Liberty Bowl loss following the 2013 campaign) kept the Owls on the outside looking in.

A Top 10 ranking isn’t as farfetched as it might sound. UCF’s storybook run last season that ended in a Peach Bowl victory over Auburn vaulted the Knights into the No. 6 spot in the final polls. That came just four years removed from a Top 10 finish under George O’Leary. Ranked teams at Rice are still within reach, as is the Top 10 if the Owls can put all the pieces together at the same time.

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Filed Under: Football Tagged With: Countdown to kickoff, Rice Football

2018 FIU Panthers Season Preview

August 21, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football dropped a close game to Florida International in Houston last season. Can they rebound with a win over the Panthers on the road in 2018?

Florida International is coming off one of the most successful seasons in school history. The Panthers tied a school-best eight wins in 2017 under the leadership of new head coach Butch Davis. Davis has now had eight wins in four consecutive seasons.

Once the head man at Miami and later North Carolina, Davis brought a career 64.8 winning percentage to FIU. That average, when applied to an entire season, comes out to roughly to eight wins per year. That was more or less the standard for Davis before he landed at FIU. He has two sub-.500 seasons in his head coaching career.

Eight wins won’t be enough at most Power 5 schools, but FIU welcomes the improvement. The Panthers were 4-1 in one-score games a year ago, including a 17-10 win over Rice in Houston.

The 2018 FIU squad has a lot of similar pieces. Here’s how the Panthers stack up this season.

Offense

FIU finished in the middle of the pack in Conference USA in terms of total offense averaging 25.6 points per game. The bulk of their 41 total touchdowns were generated by dual-threat quarterback Alex McGough, who leaves the school No. 2 in all-time passing yardage.

McGough threw for a personal best 2,798 passing yards last season, adding 17 touchdowns through the air and five more on the ground. Additional losses for the Panthers are star wide receiver Thomas Owens and starting running back Alex Gardner. Both players were yardage and touchdown leaders at their respective positions.

Although they have several holes to fill, the bulk of the depth returns in 2018. FIU brings back four receivers who caught 20 or more passes last year led Austin Maloney.

The Panthers are equally equipped on the ground. Napoleon Maxwell and Shawndarrius Phillips combined for 185 carries, 972 rushing yards and nine touchdowns last season. They’ll be able to split the rushing duties behind one of the most experienced offensive lines in college football. The Panthers return every starter up front led by All-CUSA guard Jordan Budwig.

If sophomore quarterback James Morgan, a transfer from Bowling Green, can be effective this unit will be one of the better squads in Conference USA.

Defense

The FIU defense doesn’t enter 2018 in as good of a position as the offense. The top four and seven of the top nine leading tacklers are not returning this year, leaving fairly significant questions at every level of the defense.

The biggest unknown lies in the defensive backfield. FIU finished 13th in CUSA against the pass last season, allowing a staggering 65.3 completion percentage. Not a single player who registered an interception for FIU returns and the only meaningful addition is Rutgers grad transfer Kiy Hester at free safety. Hester registered three picks for the Scarlet Knights.

An improved pass rush might be the best recipe for improvement on the back line and that’s something that could be possible this season. An infusion of talent is inbound in the form of Georgia Tech transfer Jordan Wood and 4-star JUCO defensive tackle Tayland Humphrey. The talent was impressive enough that last year’s leader along the defensive line, Fermin Silva has been freed up to play linebacker.

Silva will pair up with returning starter Sage Lewis. Those two finished first and third on the team in quarterback hurries last season and combined for seven tackles for a loss and 12 sacks.

Schedule

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Filed Under: Archive, Featured, Football Tagged With: 2018 Rice Football Season Preview, Countdown to kickoff, Rice Football

5 Days: Owls remain a perfect 5-0 against Alabama and Auburn

August 20, 2018 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football is undefeated against two of the most successful program in the history of college football, the Alabama Crimson Tide and the Auburn Tigers.

The SEC gets an abundance of respect for their year in and year out dominance. The Alabama Crimson Tide and Auburn Tigers have won six out of the last nine national titles. That’s an impressive feat, but there is one thing neither of those schools has yet to accomplish – beat Rice.

This isn’t a half-truth and Rice hasn’t survived the SEC juggernauts by avoiding them entirely. The Owls have played Alabama three times and Auburn twice, with all five games ending in Rice victories.

Rice first played Alabama in the Cotton Bowl on New Year’s Day 1954. The Crimson Tide had climbed as high as No. 5 in the polls that season, but Rice set them packing, emphatically. After allowing a first quarter touchdown, the Owls outscored the Tide 28-0 over the final three quarters. Dicky Moegle was the star, ripping off a pair of long touchdown runs of 79-yards and 95-yards, respectively.

The remainder of the meetings with both SEC foes came in regular season affairs. Rice beat Alabama again the following season in 1955 by a score of 20-0 and again in 1956, 20-13. All-time. Rice has outscored Alabama 68-19. Not many schools hold an advantage that significant in any margin against a team with such a storied history.

Auburn didn’t’ fair much better against Rice. Their pair of games came in back-to-back seasons. In 1937 the Owls won 13-7 before winning again in 1938 by a score of 14-0.

Rice has perfect records over 23 institutions. The inclusion of programs like the Virginia Military Institute, Centenary and Hardin Simmons on that list isn’t surprising. A perfect record against Alabama and Auburn and Colorado, Georgia, Washington and West Virginia for good measure) is a sweet slice of history for Rice football.

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Filed Under: Football, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Countdown to kickoff, Rice Football

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