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Rice Football 2021: Spring Practice Week 4 Notebook

March 29, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football has completed its final scrimmage prior to the Blue-Gray Spring Game. There was a ton to unpack from this week’s sessions.

The second of two spring scrimmages wrapped up last Friday. Rice football took the field for 12 drives then finished up with a few situational drills. The defense won the day in what head coach Mike Bloomgren dubbed “a defense-dominated scrimmage”, but the biggest gleanings might have come from what transpired on the other side of the ball.

There is a lot to discuss regarding the quarterback situation. From there we’ll touch on the offensive line a bit and some of the highlights from the skill players. Then, yes, we will bestow some well-deserved praise on the defense.

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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 and Week 3 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.

The elephant in the room

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Rice Football 2021: Spring Practice Week 3 Notebook

March 21, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has one scrimmage in the books and continues to work. Here are some growing pains and high points from Week 3 of spring ball.

Overall, Rice Football head coach Mike Bloomgren was optimistic following the first scrimmage of the spring. “I look at our team in totality and we are better in terms of our knowledge of the system,” he said. “There’s less missed assignments everywhere on the field. And we move faster to and from the ball.”

That progress has come with some highs and a few lows. This team is, as Bloomgren dubbed it, “an exciting work in progress.”

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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 and Week 2 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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Rice Football 2021: Spring Practice Week 2 Notebook

March 15, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football had their first scrimmage of the spring this past week. A few players stood out, including one very notable position switch.

Rice football head coach Mike Bloomgren called spring practice “the lab” during his opening media sessions. The phrase stuck with me as I’ve watched the team go through drills over the last two weeks. Many things seem relatively mundane, but a few things did stand out as decidedly unique. Whether or not those tidbits remain in the fall might depend on how well the experiments go this month.

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Rice Football: 10 Takeaways from 2020 season

January 11, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2020 Rice football season was filled with highs and lows. After time to reflect, what can we take away from the Owls’ five-game campaign?

From rocky beginnings to the National Championship Game, the 2020 season is finally in the books. Rice football participated in five games, experiencing the full range of emotions. There was the quadruple-doink and an upset for the ages.

For those that haven’t relive some of the highpoints in the season with The Roosties, an annual Rice football awards show from The Roost Podcast. You can also check out our 2020 Rice Football Team Superlatives, featuring more traditional awards like Team MVP, Offense and Defensive Player of the Year and more.

And with that, a few final thoughts on the 2020 season with some forward-thinking questions about how the Owls’ former season will impact the ones to come.

1. Rice proved they can score

Rice football played 24 games against FBS opponents in Bloomgren’s first two seasons at South Main. The Owl reached 30 points in just two of those contests. Those two occasions came in the midst of their three game winning streak that capped off the 2019 season. Rice opened 2020 with back-to-back 30-point performances. That marks five outings of 30 or more points in the Owls’ most recent eight games compared to zero in the first 21. That’s a pretty stark difference.

2. Rice has some weapons on offense

Part of the reason for further optimism with the offense is the playmakers Rice will return in 2020. Even if they do lose senior Austin Trammell, wideout Jake Bailey proved to be a chain mover and a big play threat this season. Andrew Mason showed sparks. Running backs Juma Otoviano and Khalan Griffin were both productive. And more talent is on the way, especially in the wide receiving corps.

3. This defense could be the best in C-USA

The 20-0 shutout on the road at Marshall will forever be etched among the best wins Rice has seen in this century. The list of accolades and firsts from that game was exhausting (in a good way), but the performance also served as an exclamation point on work Rice was already building. Rice finished third in scoring defense, fourth against the run, sixth against the pass and third in total defense this season. And they have lots of depth returning in 2021.

4. The Transfer Portal has been kind to the Owls

Hitting on more than half of your transfers is a fairly robust number. Rice has batted much closer to 1.000 in Bloomgren’s tenure than many might realize. Mike Collins was tremendous in his three games. Former JUCO addition Miles McCord was a crucial starter for the Rice secondary this year. Jovaun Woolford played well on the offensive line. Once more, Rice filled the holes they needed with talented additions from the portal.

5. Rice is close

Rice won by three scores in both of their wins in 2020. They lost by a touchdown or less in two contests and fell by 10 points in the other. A cruel field goal bounce separated the Owls from a 2-3 season and a possible bowl berth. The Owls’ only 10 point win in 2019 came in their season finale against UTEP. They lost by more than a touchdown five times in nine defeats. The wins are getting better and the losses are getting closer. A few better bounces and the record should come around, too.

Rice Football, postseason survey

Areas of Concern

6. The offense wasn’t nearly as good without Mike Collins

The drop off in production was stark when Mike Collins was not on the field. When JoVoni Johnson and Wiley Green were taking snaps the same offense that averaged 30 points per game with Collins dropped to 14.5 offensive points per game without him. If Collins does not return in 2020, Rice is going to have to find a way to get better production out of the quarterback spot. The addition of another grad transfer quarterback certainly suggests that room may look different in 2021.

7. The running game hasn’t really broken out

Rice averaged 2.8 yards per carry this season, a fair deal below the 3.5 and 3.9 yards per carry they averaged in 2019 and 2018, respectively. For an offense as committed to moving the chains on the ground, coming in below three yards per carry should sound some alarms. That number is skewed to some degree, by a disastrous game against North Texas, but Rice didn’t run the ball particularly well against UAB either.

8. Rice saved all their turnovers for one game

The Rice defense picked off six passes in 12 games in 2019. They had five in one afternoon against Marshall in 2020. Beyond that, Rice only had one other interception in four additional games. They added three fumble recoveries. Turnovers are somewhat of a fluky stat, but Rice has consistently finished in the bottom half of the league in takeaways in recent years.

9. Too many special teams mistakes

Rice has been among the league leaders in special teams over the last three years. NFL Pro Bowler Jack Fox helped the Owls get there, but the rest of the coverage and return units have done their part even with him in the pros. The return units did not deliver this season. Rice fumbled three punts and had a return touchdown called back via penalty.

10. Uncertain 2021 roster makeup

2020 was circled as the year Rice would have all of their proverbial ducks in a row. Then the pandemic hit. Then the injuries came. Rice did the most with what they had, snatching a marquee win, but it wasn’t quite the season anyone expected. The senior class has another free year of eligibility, should they chose to exercise it. The unknown of who will (and won’t) be back, makes it hard to look to far into what rosters will look like in 2021.

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Rice Football 2020 Offensive Newcomer of the Year: Khalan Griffin

December 23, 2020 By Matthew Bartlett

After rising through the ranks and making the most of his opportunity, Khalan Griffin is our 2020 Rice Football Offensive Newcomer of the Year.

A year removed from his first carry as a Rice Owl, Khalan Griffin was on crutches. A leg injury suffered in the first game of his senior season shortened his high school career, but not before he would amass 208 rushing yards, hobbled, in his second game before being shut down.

Touching twice the century mark on one leg was impressive. But it wouldn’t be the last time Griffin fought the odds and compiled an absurd state line. Healed up and back to 100 percent, Griffin hit the ground running at Rice as soon as he could.

He was attentive in preseason Zoom sessions, working to learn an offensive far more complex than any he’d run before. It was tough sledding. When he arrived on campus, he was buried on the depth chart, just like most of his fellow freshmen classmates. But Griffin didn’t stay there.

By way of effort and opportunity, Griffin and fellow freshman running back Kobie Campbell were the only two healthy running backs during the Owls’ first scrimmage of fall camp. That would mean a heavy workload for Griffin, the first big test of his collegiate career.

He carried the ball 32 times that Saturday morning, racking up 247 yards on the ground, 165 of which came after contact. One of the stingiest run defenses in Conference USA was gashed by a true freshman who, admittedly, was still learning the ropes.

Rice had the No. 3 rushing defense in the conference this fall.  One player surpassed 100 yards on the ground against the Owls all season. Preseason all-conference rusher Brenden Knox averaged a meager 3.8 yards per carry on 20 attempts, tallying 76 yards against the stout Rice front seven. Griffin had more than double that after initial contact in his first padded scrimmage. The bar had been set.

Immediately following the big day, head coach Mike Bloomgren opened up his post-practice press conference with comments on Griffin. “Khalan Griffin was dominant again today. It didn’t matter what defense he was going against. It didn’t matter what offensive line was blocking for him. He just found a way to make every run violent,” Bloomgren said. It was high praise for a young player.

Then the games arrived. The backup to starter Juma Otoviano out of the gate, Griffin provided fresh legs in the Owls’ fourth-quarter rally against Middle Tennessee in their season opener. His first carry of the fourth quarter went for 10-yards. Then he exploded for a 20-yard scamper up the gut. Rice would go on to pull within one score following a touchdown pass on that possession.

Two games, and almost a month later, Griffin started his first career game. On the road against North Texas, Griffin ran for 72 yards and caught two passes for 45 yards, surpassing 100 all-purpose yards for the first time in his career. Rice wouldn’t win the game, but the moment wasn’t lost on the grateful freshman.

“I want to start off by saying thank you to my coaches and the whole running back room because without them, I don’t think I’d be standing in front of you today,” Griffin said when asked about his first start. “I also want to give a hats off to Juma [Otoviano], Ari [Broussard], Kobie [Cambpell] and Jawan [King].”

Griffin would lead Rice football in rushing in the abridged 2020 season. He finished second on the team to only Austin Trammell in all-purpose yards. His first collegiate touchdown managed to elude him, despite a first down run against Marshall that was stopped at the one-yard line.

Beyond that, the rest of his freshman campaign went extremely well. Griffin had three starts in five games. He ran for 249 yards and carved out a key role in the offense. His future is bright.

When asked what the pecking order would be in the backfield before the season, Bloomgren was noncommittal. He went as far as to say Griffin “took advantage of an opportunity.” What would transpire in the weeks and months to come was far from decided. Griffin made those decisions easier with his commitment and effort, both on and off the field.

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Filed Under: Football, Archive Tagged With: Khalan Griffin, Rice Football, The Roost Awards

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