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Rice Football stuns UTSA with fourth quarter rally

October 12, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Down to their final seconds, EJ Warner hit Matt Sykes to elevate Rice Football over UTSA in a “do or die” moment for the Owls’ season.

As Rice football left the field following pregame warmups and started the trek up the ramp to the Brian Patterson Center, the jumbotron featured three lines of white text on a blue background: “Stop the run. Win third down. Win turnover battle.” Rice has keys to victory every week, but they’re typically recorded by head coach Mike Bloomgren for the broadcast prior to the game.

That technology didn’t work this week and the recording was never made. Instead, an assistant asked Bloomgren for the objectives before the game which were relayed to the booth for the world to see. Those three objectives set the tone for what was to follow, a game the Owls absolutely had to find a way to win.

Sixty minutes of game action later, Rice football emerged victorious, beating UTSA for the first time since 2014. The win snapped an eight-game losing streak to the Roadrunners and served as the Owls’ first AAC win of the 2024 season. The victory also marked the first time Rice football had come from behind to win a game in the fourth quarter since defeating UAB in October 2022. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game, starting with those stated objectives:

Stop the run

UTSA running backs did not have a good night against Rice. A swarming Owls’ front held Roadrunner backs to 24 attempts for 64 yards, a dismal 2.7 yards per carry. Unfortunately for Rice, that wasn’t the full story. UTSA managed to cobble together a decent amount of production on the ground, primarily on scrambles from quarterback Owen McCown.

Like Rice gunslinger EJ Warner, McCown isn’t known for his legs. That didn’t stop him from running for a career-best 53 yards on the ground. It wasn’t quite a vintage Frank Harris performance, but it was good enough to extend drives and make Rice pay when they weren’t able to get him on their pressures. UTSA wide receiver Devin McCuin took a jet sweep off the edge for 21 yards on their first offensive possession, but that was more or less it for the Roadrunners’ ground game.

On the other side of the ball, Rice’s running game was seldom used, but effective when called upon. The poor per-carry numbers were ameliorated by exceptional results and a wonderful day through the air. Despite only running the ball 17 times, the Owls had two rushing touchdowns, one from Dean Connors and another from Warner, his first rushing score in his career.

The first rushing touchdown of EJ Warner's career!pic.twitter.com/ZwYDoqRHbf

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) October 13, 2024

Win third down

Each offense had its highs and lows on third down. UTSA faced a lot of third and mediums and third and longs, averaging 6.6 yards to go on third downs. Those advantageous situations for the Rice defense ended as they should have with the Owls’ coverage holding up and UTSA leaving the field without a fuss. On more than one occasion,

In the first half, UTSA was 3-for-8 on third down with two conversions coming on third and one runs. Rice stymied another third and short run on the third conversion and a whistle was blown, however instead of calling progress dead, the official declared the whistle an accident and awarded UTSA another try. UTSA converted through the air and would go down the field to score their first touchdown of the night.

Prior to UTSA’s furious fourth quarter barrage, Rice managed to hold the Roadrunners to 5-of-14 on third down in the first three quarters. UTSA went 3-for-4 in the fourth, nearly costing Rice the game.

As for the Rice offense, they were up and down on those key downs, going 1-for-5 in the first half. Connors converted on the ground on third and one followed by Sykes converting through the air, but a fumble rendered that moot and went down as a failed conversion in the box score. Warner struggled with accuracy on a couple of occasions but made it count on the first third-down attempt of the second half, hitting Dean Connors for a go-ahead 69-yard touchdown pass, Warner’s longest as a Rice Owl.

Warner –> Connors –> SIX!pic.twitter.com/onJjsh28Kv

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) October 13, 2024

Rice finished the game 4-for-12 on third down, well below their season average of 36.5 percent. It was fitting, though, that the Owls’ last offensive play came on third. Rice didn’t get many of them, but the ones they did convert changed the game. This third down connection between EJ Warner and Matt Sykes was the biggest of the season and won Rice football this game.

Matt Sykes and Superman have never been seen in the same room! The game winner from No. 8!pic.twitter.com/mZRh602sFw

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) October 13, 2024

What made that moment even more surreal was who caught the pass. Matt Sykes checked himself into the hospital on Monday evening. He missed practice on Tuesday and Wednesday and wasn’t released and cleared to return to the field until Thursday. Jokes were being made of him being raised from the dead and Sean Fresch wasn’t integrated into the offensive gameplan in any capacity until it became possible, if not likely, that Sykes wouldn’t be able to go.

Sykes’ emergence as Warner’s go-to guy has been an incredible journey to follow. In the Owls’ most dire moment, it was No. 8 who came through.

“That was a must-do, do-or-die moment, so I had to come down with it,” Sykes said after the game, calling the catch “an amazing feeling.”

Bloomgren was even more effusive in his praise of the Owls’ newfound savior. Sykes “Literally won the game with a guy draped all over him with a ball that he had to have,” he said of  Sykes. “Just intense focus on and finish the catch.”

Win the turnover battle

On the Owls’ first offensive play, EJ Warner dropped back and targeted Dean Connors who had broken past his defender and was wide open streaking down the middle of the field. Connors should have had a walk-in, 94-yard touchdown. Instead, it was an incomplete pass and second down. That missed opportunity proved even more painful a few plays later when Matt Sykes had the ball knocked out of his hands on a third down catch, fumbling the ball to UTSA in Rice territory.

Tyson Flowers nearly leveled the margin himself, deflecting a ball with UTSA backed up inside its own 10-yard line. Had he reached the play a split-second quicker, he very well might have had a walk-in touchdown. The Owls finally got their takeaway on the final play from scrimmage. Blaise Tita fell on the final UTSA lateral snuffing out any comeback attempts and securing the win.

Win the game

With a little more than two minutes remaining in the game, it looked like Rice football had blown it. A 10-point fourth quarter lead had evaporated and the Owls were staring down the barrel at a stunning 1-5 start. For them to rally and find a way to win this game, given the circumstances, was incredible.

“We talk about Rice fight never dies, what a great example of that in the way our team just kept fighting,” Bloomgren said. “They just kept swinging.”

There’s no doubt the outlook for this season is much rosier with this win. They’re not out of the woods yet and have a long way to go to turn one win into a winning streak, but things would have been rather dire had the Owls officially crossed the midpoint of the season two losses away from being eliminated from bowl eligibility.

Losing back-to-back conference home games would have been even harded to swallow, especially considering how much more daunting the road ahead appears. Rice football goes to Tulane next week then heads to Storrs, CT to take on UConn before games against Navy (at home) and Memphis (on the road).

That’s a gauntlet of three of the top five teams in the conference and three of their next four games on the road. If there’s any way to squint at the current iteration of the season and not call it a failed campaign, Rice absolutely had to find a way to get this one against UTSA. Now hope lives on for another week.

The new uniforms were exciting and inspiring. The play on the field backed them up. Rice football rocked their Luv-Ya-Blue jerseys to a perfect moment on Saturday. Now it’s UTSA that’s feeling blue, not the Owls.

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Thanks for the yards, but don’t count on it

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The Roost Podcast | Ep 187 – Rice Football succumbs to Charlotte

September 30, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football fell to 1-4 on the season and heads to the bye week reeling after a crushing loss to Charlotte.

Four FBS games and four FBS losses. It’s been an abysmal start to the Rice football season which reaches a bye week in desperate need of a reset. What went wrong against Charlotte and can any of it be fixed? We discuss and commiserate.

You can find previous episodes on the podcast page. For now, give a listen to Episode 187.

Follow @TheRoostPod

Episode Notes

DCTF

The Roost Podcast is now part of the Dave Campbell’s Republic of Football Podcast Network. You’ll still get the same content with the same hosts, but now under the DCTF banner.

Homefield

We’re thrilled to partner with Homefield Apparel, the premier proprietor of college football clothing. First-time buyers can use the code ROOST for 15% off their order. The Owls hoodie is a personal favorite as is the Luv-Ya-Owls shirt. Make sure you check out the brand-new sailor hat (pictured below) as you shop the Rice collection or pick up something else (or both)!

Patreon

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Recapping Rice Football vs Charlotte

  • Losing games on the margin
  • Offensive woes, defensive busts and special teams errors
  • A game Mike Bloomgren had to have
  • No real easy button to push
  • Bye week to-dos

Where can you find us?

The Roost Podcast is part of the Dave Campbell’s Republic of Football Podcast Network. You can find this podcast and all of our partner podcasts on Apple, Spotify and wherever you get your podcasts.

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

Recent Posts
  • Rice Football: APR Path to Bowl Eligibility Unlikely
  • Know Your Foe: Rice Football vs South Florida
  • Rice Women’s Basketball Routs Morgan State
  • Rice Women’s Basketball Edges Illinois State in OT

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Podcast Tagged With: game recap, podcast, Rice Football

Rice Football squanders fourth-quarter lead in loss Charlotte

September 28, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football had their chances to put the game away against Charlotte, but couldn’t close when it mattered most. The Owls are 1-4.

A 10-0 halftime lead was not enough as Rice football fell by a single point to Charlotte at home on Saturday night. In the final two minutes, Rice had chances to win the game on offense, but couldn’t convert a third and short. They had a chance to win on defense, but allowed a go-ahead touchdown in the final minute. They had the chance to win with special teams, but a last-second kick sailed wide.

“I think I’ve given this speech a few too many times this year,” Bloomgren said at the podium following the Owls’ fourth loss in five games. “We performed better than we have been, but when the crunch time was here in that fourth quarter we failed in all three phases and Charlotte made more plays.”

Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Trust your playmakers and let them produce

In the highest leverage moments, it’s the stars that have to shine. For Rice football right now, that means the most critical offensive moments should involve Dean Connors and EJ Warner and/or Matt Sykes. They’re not the only talented playmakers on this offense but that trio has largely been at the forefront when that offense is moving the ball well.

Warner overshot a makeable touchdown pass to Sykes on the Owls’ first possession but redeemed himself soon afterward with a nice dish to Jackson for the opening score. Connors had more rushing yards on his first touch of the game than Charlotte did in the entire first quarter.

Now, this reality comes with a very real, and very important caveat: your playmakers have to produce.

Warner hasn’t overcome his tendency to elevate throws downfield. He overshot Sykes on multiple third downs in the first half. Sykes was better this week than he was against Army a week ago, but his lack of consistency has been part of what’s gummed this offense up at times. Both have played better as the season progresses, but each would (correctly) admit they have room to grow.

Dean Connors has been and continues to be the most valuable man on this side of the ball. He only touched the ball seven times in the first half; that’s not enough. He finished with 16 touches for the game and 135 yards of total offense. Your best offensive weapon — and Connors is most certainly that — needs more of the ball.

“We got other good backs. We don’t want to just wear Dean out. If you tell me Dean is going to get 20 to 30 touches every game, that’s probably the right number,” Bloomgren said after the game. “16 total touches? Would you wanna program a few more for him? Absolutely. He’s a really good player, but the flow of the game was going the way it was.”

Rice does have other good backs, but 16 is not 30. It’s not 20 either.

Rice racked up 463 yards of total offense, their highest total against an FBS opponent yet this season. It’s not a particularly impressive number on the whole, but it’s a step in the right direction. Those playmakers have to get things going if this offense is ever going to come close to the ceiling it’s shown in previous years.

Bring out the depth

So much of the discourse this offseason around the Rice football roster centered on the depth the Owls’ had accumulated in Bloomgren’s seventh season. Unfortunately, the only way to truly evaluate that depth is to have it forced into action. The results have been mixed when former twos and threes have been thrown into the first with the first units this season, but Saturday’s win against Charlotte probably doesn’t happen without some important contributions from former backups being asked to step up.

The offense line, featuring just two players in the same position they played on opening day, consistently opened up holes for the running game. Both Dean Connors and Taji Atkins got to the second level on plays that were blocked well. Although he took a few shots, Warner wasn’t sacked.

Likewise, the defense churned out some big plays from lesser-known faces. Peyton Stevenson and made consecutive plays to help stonewall a Charlotte drive in the second quarter. Daveon Hook led the team in tackles. Mutombo had the interception and followed it with a sack. None of those three were on the two-deep against Sam Houston in Week 1.

The go-ahead fourth quarter touchdown was scored by Elijah Mojarro, who wouldn’t have been on the field had Boden Groen been healthy.

What an incredible play call by the offensive staff.

What an incredible effort from Elijah Mojarro.

CLUTCHpic.twitter.com/tJFlC0kTDZ

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 29, 2024

Obviously, the Owls would love to have as many of their starters back on the field as possible. A bye week with extra rest will help those efforts, but even if reinforcements do arrive, this depth matters. Especially if Rice wants to make good on some of their preseason aspirations and get things turned around.

Unfortunately, the reliance on depth has it’s downsides too. Kicker Enoch Gota missed his first do-or-die attempt of his young career, turning what could have been a celebratory night into another painful defeat.

The defense gets some of its swagger back

The Rice offense got a big play from Dean Connors but didn’t put any points on the board in the first quarter, turning the ball over inside the redzone and punting on their ensuing possession. That put the onus on the defense to make sure they kept their team in the game.

Aided by favorable field position on a few occasions, the defense delivered one of their better starts to a game this season. Blake Boenisch didn’t suit up on Saturday, but the Owls still held Charlotte to 1.2 yards per carry in the first quarter. The safety room was as depleted as it’s ever been under head coach Mike Bloomgren, but they limited Charlotte quarterback Trexler Ivey to 5-of-10 passing for 35 yards on the 49ers’ first three offensive series.

The Charlotte never got in gear under Trexler Ivey. When they did finally get the ball across the 50-yard line midway through the second quarter they were swiftly turned away by this interception from defensive lineman Joseph Mutombo, who has seen an elevated role in the defense partly because of the slew of injuries in front of him.

Joseph Mutombo with the big INT in the first half. pic.twitter.com/4n9M7ekHA6

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 29, 2024

Charlotte finally found life under backup quarterback Deshawn Purdie, who connected on three deep passes, all of which resulted in scoring drives. That was essentially it for the Charlotte attack. Three plays. But it was enough.

As the offense works through its challenges in real time, more and more pressure is going to be put on this defense to win games. On Saturday against a woeful Charlotte offense, they came close enough but got little help from the other phases. If they can translate that to more talented opponents, Rice is going to have a fighting chance to win some games, but they’re the last bastion of hope for a team that’s hurting.

Losing on the Margin

A fourth down pass interference call against Sean Fresch changed the outcome of this game. A block in the back penalty on the ensuing possession might very well have swung the outcome, too. Both plays exemplified the dangerous tightrope Rice Football attempted to walk in this game. Rice let a bad Charlotte team stick around to the point where one blown coverage could shift the result of the game.

The best teams in the sport create margin. You can afford a bust on any particular play or phase of the game when there’s a buffer to cover those shortcomings. When you’re stuck in a one-score game, every mistake matters. Teams with more faults make more mistakes. There’s some truth to the old adage that good teams stay good and bad teams stay bad.

This is a bad football team right now.

One that, in Bloomgren’s own words “failed in all three phases” to one of the few teams left in the country that had yet to beat an FBS opponent. It’s hard to imagine a lower point than this in a season that was supposed to be a breakthrough campaign. Picked to finish in the thick of a competitive AAC, Rice football sits dead last in the standings and they have yet to play UTSA, Tulane, Memphis or South Florida.

This is a team out of excuses and out of answers. There’s a lot of soul-searching to be done during this bye week from everyone in the program. This isn’t how this season was supposed to go.

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Fourth and the Woe Zone

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

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Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Daveon Hook, Dean Connors, EJ Warner, Enoch Gota, game recap, Joseph Mutombo, Josh Pearcy, Matt Sykes, Peyton Stevenson, Rice Football, Taji Atkins

The Roost Podcast | Ep 186 – Another sad recap: Rice Football loses to Army

September 23, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football fell to 1-3 on the season, dropping their AAC opener at Army. Next week’s game at Charlotte is officially a must-win.

Rice football “got Army’d” on Saturday afternoon as the Black Knight ran all over the Owls who weren’t able to find any sort of rhythm on either side of the ball until it was too late. Carter and Matthew recap the debacle and share a few brief thoughts and updates on the latest in conference realignment which reared its head this week.

You can find previous episodes on the podcast page. For now, give a listen to Episode 186.

Follow @TheRoostPod

Episode Notes

DCTF

The Roost Podcast is now part of the Dave Campbell’s Republic of Football Podcast Network. You’ll still get the same content with the same hosts, but now under the DCTF banner.

Homefield

We’re thrilled to partner with Homefield Apparel, the premier proprietor of college football clothing. First-time buyers can use the code ROOST for 15% off their order. The Owls hoodie is a personal favorite as is the Luv-Ya-Owls shirt. Make sure you check out the brand-new sailor hat (pictured below) as you shop the Rice collection or pick up something else (or both)!

Patreon

Get exclusive insight on Patreon. Be the first to get the inside scoop on what’s going on with Rice football and stick around for even further analysis. That includes practice updates, analysis and more. Your support matters and makes The Roost better.

Become a Patron!

Recapping Rice Football vs Army

  • AAC Members mark themselves safe from conference realignment
  • Rice fans don’t have to go to Pullman, WA, congrats!
  • Undisciplined effort mars Owls’ West Point showing
  • Defense unable to overcome slue of injuries
  • EJ Warner had some moments, but neither he or the offense was consistent enough
  • It’s officially a must win game this week against Charlotte

Where can you find us?

The Roost Podcast is part of the Dave Campbell’s Republic of Football Podcast Network. You can find this podcast and all of our partner podcasts on Apple, Spotify and wherever you get your podcasts.

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

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  • Know Your Foe: Rice Football vs South Florida
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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Podcast Tagged With: game recap, podcast, Rice Football

Rice Football marched off the field by Army at West Point

September 21, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football fell behind early and saw their hopes drown in the Hudson River, falling on the road to Army in a one-sided affair.

Army’s clock-control offense had its way with the Rice football defense, striking early and holding on for dear life. The Owls found themselves in comeback mode — not a place a struggling offense wants to be. Things were downhill quickly from there as Rice fell to 1-3 on the season. “We got Army’d today. We didn’t do anything to stop it. Not a lot of fun to be a part of,” head coach Mike Bloomgren painfully acknowledge afterward. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Undisciplined start

Discipline was the word of the week around South Main. Everyone was quick to mention that for everything Army might lack in athleticism, they made up for in poise and discipline. This was a team that wasn’t going to beat itself. And if you didn’t do your job and stay focused, you were going to get beat.

That’s what made it particularly disheartening when the Owls were flagged for a penalty on the opening kickoff (duplicate jersey numbers) and promptly allowed a 41-yard touchdown pass just a few plays later. When it was the Owls’ turn on offense everything appeared to be going according to plan before Rice was flagged again, this time for having too many men on the field. Moved back from third and short to third and long, Rice failed to convert and punted.

The two penalties in the first two drives were preventable mental mistakes. Those things happen on occasion, even to the best of teams, but for them to happen on this particular Saturday after how much the Owls preached discipline this week was disappointing. Tack on penalties later for a snap infraction and an illegal formation and you see a team that was not as locked in as they needed to be.

“Your margin for error is going to be small against an Army team. You don’t want to give them an inch, much less five yards or any kind of first down.” Bloomgren said. “So those are the things that you do beat yourself up about, rightfully so. That’s on us. You can’t do those kind of things.”

The Owls’ reasons for concern were validated on Saturday. Rice had one possession in the first quarter and allowed Army to score on its first two possessions. As expected, Army didn’t mess up. Rice did.

Running loose

Rice and Army met most recently in 2019. In that game, Rice held Army to 14 points and 231 yards on the ground. Schematically, the Owls were well prepared for the Black Knights option attack. Since that time the Rice football roster has gotten much better, particularly in the trenches. Even though the Army rushing attack had been productive this year, there was reason to believe Rice would be able to battle it out along the lines. That wasn’t the case on Saturday.

Put simply, Army annihilated Rice on the ground. The nation’s leading rushing attack had its way with the Owls’ defense.

Army quarterback Bryson Daily ran for 100 yards and two touchdowns… in the first half. He got up to 252 total yards in the second half including a 6-for-9 day through the air with two more touchdowns, a near-flawless outing from the Black Knights’ quarterback.

Entering this game, the Rice defense wasn’t supposed to be the problem, but they had simply no answer for the quarterback run game. This won’t be the last option team that Rice faces this year. FAU’s quarterback is a powerful runner, too.

The Owls’ run defense has officially been put on notice.

Offensive sparks

If there was a silver lining to this game, and that’s a huge supposition after such a tough result, it was the brief signs of life from the Rice offense. Outside of the third down woes — we’ll get to that shortly — Rice was able to run the ball effectively and EJ Warner was more accurate in the passing game. He made a few nice throws down field on Saturday and while his receivers didn’t do him many favors, the offense did move down the field with more frequency.

It’s probably telling, though, that the most impactful offensive play involved some trickeration:

At least we had this.

This was a fun play.pic.twitter.com/Tf5YhQwxcl

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 21, 2024

Warner consistently put too much air under the ball when he took shots down the field. His interception was almost directly caused by overshooting Matt Sykes, who isn’t a short receiver. The willingness to look down the field was there, seen on display on his touchdown pass to Sykes in the third quarter.

Nice hitch and go from Sykes on the TD pass from Warner in the third quarter.pic.twitter.com/ky9NtzMzfF

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 21, 2024

If he can improve his touch, there’s a chance for this side of the ball to coalesce into a productive unit. If not, this side of the ball is going to be in trouble when the running game struggles.

Must win, already

It’s too early in the season to be here, but Rice football already faces a must-win game next weekend against Charlotte. Frankly, this game against Army had already neared that territory, but there is no putting the genie back in that bottle.

Had Rice beaten Army, they’d have the prospects of a 2-0 start to conference play going into the bye, salvaging what was such a tumultuous start to the 2024 season. After how bumpy the first few weeks of this season have been, that possibility was a breath of fresh air.

Instead, Rice is playing to avoid an even more gruesome beginning to what was meant to be a breakthrough season. It’s hard to put into words how quickly this year has pivoted from a daydream to a nightmare, but the last stand officially takes place on Saturday. A win against Charlotte gets Rice into the bye week 1-1 in conference play with a lot of time to do some soul-searching. If Rice wants to go bowling for a third consecutive year, this is their chance to get off the mat.

When asked about that added pressure, Bloomgren did not shy away. “I don’t know if there’s any need to add any pressure. I think we all want to win so badly,” he said. I think our effort is great. How do we sharpen up our details? How do we sharpen up our ability to do it on game day?”

Ultimately, that’s the most important question of all and one that must be answered come next game day.

Digging deeper

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Third down woes

Sorry! This part of content is hidden behind this box because it requires a higher contribution level ($10) at Patreon. Why not take this chance to increase your contribution?
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
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  • Know Your Foe: Rice Football vs South Florida
  • Rice Women’s Basketball Routs Morgan State
  • Rice Women’s Basketball Edges Illinois State in OT

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: EJ Warner, game recap, Matt Sykes, Rice Football

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