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2025 Rice Football Defensive Player of the Year: Marcus Williams

January 16, 2026 By Matthew Bartlett

A veteran safety that held an injury-plagued defense together all season long, Marcus Williams is our 2025 Rice Football Defensive Player of the Year.

The 2024 Rice Football defense was one of the better units to come through South Main in several seasons. That group was stacked with experienced playmakers, several of whom went on to get opportunities in NFL camps the following offseason. That exodus left a 2025 unit that had talent, but few proven veteran leaders.

Redshirt Junior Marcus Williams had been around the program for four years, but injuries scattered across multiple seasons had prevented him from accruing the level of on-field production that mandated veteran deference, at least from the outside looking in. But as all the other pieces moved around him, Marcus kept showing up and working.

Williams won a starting spot out of the gate this fall, not a first for the talented defensive back. This time, though, no ill-timed injury thwarted his season. As multiple teammates missed time around him, Williams stayed healthy and never slowed down.

More: 2025 Rice Football Season Superlatives

The years spent studying the defense, even when he wasn’t on the field, would pay massive dividends, allowing defensive coordinator Jon Kay to move him all over the field. He primarily operated as the Owls’ free safety, but would slide into the slot to cover receivers one-on-one and work all the way across the field, showcasing a level of versatility the team prizes in its defenders.

Near the midpoint of the season, head coach Scott Abell reflected on how invaluable Williams’ consistency had been to the team.

“I don’t know where we’d be without him, in all honesty,” Abell said. “When I think about Marcus, I tell him this all the time, I love the way he handles himself. When you walk through our building, when you walk through our locker room, you get on our field. He is a professional. You never know how high he is, how low he is, he’s doing his job. He’s making everybody around him better.”

Not one to showboat or make a scene, Williams quietly shattered his career statistical highs. He became one of the select few Owls to play in every game, starting 12 of the 13 games. Williams finished third on the team in tackles and third in passes defended, a testament to how well-rounded he was as a player and how necessary he had become all over the field.

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Even if it was uncharted territory to some degree, Williams never seemed overmatched or overworked. He was as even-keeled as they come, always prepared for whatever challenges awaited him.

“I kinda expected myself to be in the position that I’m in,” he said. “I worked hard and I’m just proud to be where I am.”

Williams would graduate and enter the Transfer Portal after the season, turning his only true healthy season on South Main into an opportunity as a potential starter in the SEC. But even as he moves on from Rice football, the standard he set for quality and reliability on the back end of the defense will endure because of his efforts.

** Photo credit: Maria Lysaker **

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Marcus Williams, postseason awards, Rice Football

Rice Football: First Third of the Season Grades

September 19, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Here’s our Rice football report card for every position group through four games, doing our best to provide an honest assessment of the Owls so far.

A Thursday night tilt against Charlotte gives Rice football a chance to catch it’s collective breath on Saturday and rest up before a suddenly pivotal game against Navy this coming weekend. It’s also marks the completion of the first third of the season’s game, providing a natural check-in point on the program as head coach Scott Abell works to rebuild it in his image.

From the starting quarterback to the secondary, here’s our evaluation of where things stand through four games and one standout at each position who deserves some extra recognition.

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Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Aaron Turner, Alex Bacchetta, Andrew Awe, Chase Jenkins, Daveon Hook, Drayden Dickmann, Enoch Gota, Khary Crump, Marcus Williams, Michael Daley, Omari Porter, Peyton Stevenson, Plae Wyatt, Quinton Jackson, Rice Football, Tony Anyanwu, Ty Morris

Rice Football Races Past Charlotte in Prime Time

September 18, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice Football improved to 3-1 for the first time since 2001, dispatching the Charlotte 49ers in a prime time win on national television.

With the nation watching, Rice football put their gun-choice option offense on display on Thursday night, grinding out a road win over Charlotte in head coach Scott Abell’s American Conference debut. The Owls improved to 3-1 on the season.

“It’s exciting. It shows the world, it shows everyone that it’s different this year for Rice,” said senior linebacker Andrew Awe. “A lot of times [in the past] when we were down, we were down and out. But this year it’s different. We’re a contender for conference this year. We play hard every snap.”

Awe’s 11 tackles led the team and paced a defense that racked up six sacks and nine tackles for a loss. Turning in another solid performance in which many were, understandably, fixated on the new offense. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Hello, America

Rice football was the standalone game on Thursday night on ESPN, giving anyone slightly curious about the Owls’ new offensive scheme the chance to flip on the game — on their TV, not via a streaming service — and take in the option attack. Rice did not waste the opportunity to showcase it.

After allowing a field goal on defense, the Rice offense took the field and calmly marched 75 yards down the field in nine plays, churning through 4:26 on the clock and ending in the endzone. Rice attempted just two passes, the second of which was a pop pass over the top of the run-hunting defense for a score.

Good luck staying run-committed when @RiceFootball can sneak in a pass in the right moment… pic.twitter.com/MA5ydSJzHK

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 19, 2025

Charlotte entered the game allowing more than 4.5 yards per carry against FBS opponents, so there was expectation that Rice would be able to find success on the ground. On the opening drive, it was Quinton Jackson who ripped through the defense and drove the offense down the field. Quarterback Chase Jenkins would enter the fray a few drives later, cutting back for a massive 34-yard scamper just before halftime.

Chase Jenkins with a house call! pic.twitter.com/dJexoicq4P

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) September 19, 2025

For those onlookers who wanted to see what this Rice football offense could be, those two drives showcased it at its best. However…

With the Good, Comes the Bad

A run-first offense looks brilliant when it works, but what happened between the Owls’ first half touchdown drives showcased the dangers that come with building an offense that often eschews the passing game. Those two scoring drives accounted for 15 plays and 150 yards, but they were bookends to three consecutive three-and-outs — nine plays, 14 yards.

The difference between 10 yards per play and roughly 1.5 yards per play was palpable.

Abell didn’t seem overtly concerned. He mentioned they’d tried more triple option concepts on those drives that didn’t work before pivoting to different components of the offense. “It’s kind of just football, right?” Abell remarked. “At time they’re going to stop us. They’re going to force us to punt. And that’s okay. We’ve been good on special teams all year. We’ve been good on defense.”

And while it wouldn’t ever be used as an excuse, it’s hard not to connect Charlotte’s consecutive scoring drives to open the second quarter with a Rice defense given very little breathing room by it’s counterpart on the other side of the field. Charlotte ran 40 plays before halftime. Rice ran 24. That’s too many plays to ask a defense to defend without missing a step.

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The negative play is a very real threat to this offense. Rice had a second-half drive torpedoed with a holding penalty that put them in second and long. They settled for a 55-yard field goal, which Enoch Gota pushed just right. That’s not a special teams problem; that’s a flaw inherent to this offense.

Offense Clicks and Finds Redemption

Fortunately those woes would prove to not be fatal on Thursday. Rice opened the second half with a 75-yard touchdown drive to go up by two scores and was much more successful moving the sticks in the second half.

After closing the second quarter with a touchdown drive, they marched down the field to open the third quarter with another 75-yard scoring progression. They outscored Charlotte 14-3 in the middle eight, seizing control of the game.

“We did a good job responding before the first half ended and we came out in the third quarter rolling,” running back Daelen Alexander said. “I think we showed in the third quarter what we can do with the offense, fully.”

Once again, after a slower start, the final stat sheet looks rather impressive for the Rice offense. The Owls had three different players with at least 70 yards rushing and probably could have stretched those totals further if they hadn’t ratcheted things down in the final frame. Quinton Jackson rushed for 80 yards. Alexander and 73 yards and two touchdowns. Jenkins ran for 71 yards and a score. All three averaged north of 6.7 yards per carry.

He Just Wins

Scott Abell was hired because he’d won at places where it was historically hard to win. There was tremendous optimism (and expectation) that he’d be able to bring winning to South Main, but even the most ardent believers probably didn’t see this coming. With the win over Charlotte on Thursday, Rice improved to 3-1 the season. It’s the first 3-1 start for Rice football since 2001.

But that’s not all. Abell became the first coach to open their Rice tenure 3-1 since Bo Hagan did so in 1967. The win was the first win Rice football has ever had in their American Conference opener, falling in their first two tries since moving to the league. In fact, Rice hadn’t won a conference opener on the road since 2017.

The statistics like that are plentiful. They all painted slightly different variations of a reality that’s becoming more believable with each passing weekend. Rice football might just be in a different place than they’ve been in quite some time and Abell is the unquestioned catalyst.

“I’m not surprised, but I am very proud of this team and this group,” Abell said. “I’m proud of where we are. I’m not surprised, and for those who are seeing this for the first time, we’re just at the beginning of this. Stay tuned. There’s more to come. And I look forward to what’s next for us.”

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Getting Off the Field

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Andrew Awe, Chase Jenkins, Daelen Alexander, game recap, Khary Crump, Marcus Williams, Quinton Jackson, Rice Football

Rice Football 2025: Louisiana Game Week Practice Notes

August 28, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

The first Rice football game of the Scott Abell era is upon us and the Owls are ready to go. Here’s the latest from the practice field this week.

The (unofficial) Rice football depth chart has mostly worked itself out. Chase Jenkins has started to put his mark on the offense and a few individual standouts have warranted notice in the last few days before the season opener.

Jenkins insists this team is ready to go and is as locked in as they could be before such an important game.

Rice Football Preseason Preview: Check out the rest of the series here.

“It’s us versus anybody else,” he said this week. “I feel like we go to each game, home or away, wherever we play — we could play in a parking lot — we’re going to go out there with the same mindset each time and go out there and play our best and play our game and then the result will show.”

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This update provides some more insight into Jenkins’ evolution in the offense, who will fill out the depth chart behind him and a few more notes as the team prepares for the first game of the season in a few days time.

Chase Jenkins is ready to roll

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Aaron Turner, Ahran Ogbor, AJ Padgett, Alex Bacchetta, Andrew Awe, Aquantis Clemmons, Artis Cole, Blaise Tita, Blake Boenisch, Braylen Walker, Carson Morgan, Chase Allen, Chase Jenkins, Chibby Nwajuaku, Chris Clark, Cooper King, Cullen Witt, D'Andre Hardeman, Daelen Alexander, Daveon Hook, David Kasemervisz, David Stickle, DeMone Green, Dillan Botts, Drayden Dickmann, Drew Devillier, Ejike Adele, Elroyal Morris, Enoch Gota, Ephraim Dotson, Jack Kane, James Falk, Jerrick Harper, Jo Chavez, John Long, Joseph Mutombo, Khary Crump, Landon Ransom, Lucas Scheerhorn, Luke Miller, Luke Needham, Marcus Williams, Max Balthazar, Micah Barnett, Michael Daley, Nate Bledsoe, Netane Fehoko, Omari Porter, Owen Carter, Patrick Crayton, Patrick Valent, Payton Matthews, Peyton Stevenson, Plae Wyatt, practice notes, Quinton Jackson, Rice Football, Ryan Butler, Sam Carrell, Sean Sullivan, Ty Morris, Tyson Thompson, Tyvonn Byars, Weston Kropp, wyatt freeman

Rice Football 2025 Fall Camp Notebook: Position Battles Brewing

August 8, 2025 By Matthew Bartlett

At a few key positions, the Rice football depth chart remains up in the air. Who’s making their case to be in the two-deep in the secondary and the trenches?

As the team nears the midpoint of fall camp and battles the sweltering heat of Houston, Texas, attitudes and focus remain high. “They continue to bring energy and show up every day,” Rice football head coach Scott Abell said of his team.

Rice Football Preseason Preview: Check out the rest of the series here.

This update digs into impressions up front along the defensive line, some (hopefully) minor injury concerns and a handful of key individual standouts after a team scrimmage period on Friday.

A flurry of moving parts along the line

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Recent Posts
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  • Rice Women’s Basketball Stifles Temple at Home
  • Rice Basketball soars past East Carolina on the road
  • Rice Football Recruiting: CB Rymen Mosley commits to Owls

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Aaron Turner, AJ Padgett, Aquantis Clemmons, Artis Cole, Blake Boenisch, Chase Jenkins, Cullen Witt, D'Andre Hardeman, David Kasemervisz, Drayden Dickmann, Drew Devillier, Ejike Adele, Jack Kane, Joseph Mutombo, Lucas Scheerhorn, Marcus Williams, Plae Wyatt, practice notes, Rice Football, Sean Sullivan

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