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Rice Football 2022 Special Teams Player of the Year: Christian VanSickle

January 6, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Nearly automatic at a position in need of stability, kicker Christian VanSickle is our 2022 Rice Football Special Teams Player of the Year.

There was a point during the 2021 season when Rice football just stopped kicking field goals. The coaching staff wisely made the decision to go for it on fourth down more often rather than put the ball at the feet of anyone in the specials teams room, resulting in zero field goal attempts after November 6 and a whopping 10 fourth down tries.

That was the backdrop that Christian VanSickle stepped into this season. Competence would have been enough. He was excellent and a sure-fire selection for our 2022 Rice Football Special Teams Player of the Year.

With VanSickle’s foot doing the honors, Rice improved from 5-for-11 (45%) on field goal tries to 11-of-16. (69%). Van Sickle did not miss a single extra point; the Owls missed two such tries the season prior.

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But it wasn’t just the overall bump in numbers that made VanSickle so reliable, it’s how those statistics were accumulated. VanSickle converted his first 10 attempts, beginning the year a staggering 10-for-10.

In that span, he made six kicks from beyond 30 yards. Rice had one such make all of last season. He had four go through the pipes from 40+ yards away. And this after attempting his first collegiate field goal last season. For someone brand new to the position to give his team the utmost level of reliability was truly remarkable.

“He’s been awesome,” special teams coordinator Chris Monfiletto said. “He’s put in the time.”

The field goal unit went from a liability to an asset in the span of one season and VanSickle was the prevailing reason for that improvement.

More: Offensive Newcomer of the Year — WR Isaiah Esdale

VanSickle wasn’t perfect. He did end the year on a surprising cold spell, missing five of his last six attempts. Cold and windy conditions in the Owls’ final two games of the season clearly impacted the ball coming off his foot and a few more makes in the regular season finale against North Texas could have elevated his stature even further. Nevertheless, what he did for this team this year was crucial.

If VanSickle doesn’t emerge, Rice football probably drops at least one more game along the way. He contributed 13 points himself in the Owls’ seven-point win over UTEP. He was responsible for seven points in a tight game that would become a 12-point win over Louisiana. For an offense that had its ups and downs, VanSickle was extremely consistent, and that’s what Rice football needed the most.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Christian VanSickle, postseason awards, Rice Football

Rice Football 2022 Offensive Newcomer of the Year: Isaiah Esdale

January 4, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football rebuilt its offense during the offseason, bulking up the receiving corps and finding a playmaker in Isaiah Esdale.

After playing a part-time role at West Virginia before he arrived in Houston, Isaiah Esdale wanted to make his final season count. “I want to break records,” he said with a serious smile upon his arrival. While the big records might not have fallen, Esdale carved out his portion of history and earned his spot as our 2022 Rice Football Offensive Newcomer of the Year.

Like his play, Esdale’s path to Houston was an extremely positive surprise. The team had a loaded wide receiver depth chart and didn’t appear to be in the market to add another pass catcher. Then he entered the Transfer Portal and Rice couldn’t pass up the opportunity to bring him in.

On the day he committed to come to Rice, head coach Mike Bloomgren described him as a guy “that absolutely made 50/50 balls more like 80/20 balls.” Wide receivers coach Mike Kershaw joked that he didn’t know how he was going to get so many different receivers on the field at the same time, but Esdale would make plays. Esdale was clearly a talented player, but where would he fit in this offense?

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Then two things happened. Injuries cropped up in the receiver room, knocking out fellow transfer Sam Crawford for the season as well as the loss of Cedric Patterson going for an extended period of time, too. While the room was thinning out, Esdale was producing. He flashed in practice, making plays at all levels of the field.

It was crystal clear by the midpoint of fall camp that he had earned a spot on the field. How big that role would become would come down to him.

Esdale would go on to catch 42 passes as a Rice Owl. 25 of them went for a first down. 13 of them were for 15+ yards or longer. He was a chain mover and a big-play maker, coming through in clutch moments time and time again. While Bradley Rozner and Luke McCaffrey were the wideouts that most often found paydirt and racked up the yards, Esdale’s contribution was clutchness.

“When you need a big catch, when you need a big play, he’s coming through,” Bloomgren said. “He makes things look easy, including those big-time catches in big-time situations.”

More: Defensive Newcomer of the Year — LB Chris Conti

And even more impressive still, Esdale accounted for almost a third of that production with an injured hand. The veteran wideout got hurt at the beginning of the Western Kentucky game and would wear a split on one finger during practice for the next two weeks. One would have never been able to tell by watching his play on Saturdays.

“Isaiah’s not going to be bothered by this stuff. Isaiah is going to be fine,” Bloomgren said following the Western Kentucky game in which Esdale was banged up. “I don’t think anything is going to keep him from playing.”

Bloomgren would be right. Esdale finished the season and kept producing. After battling through injuries midseason that limited his practice time during the week, Esdale persevered and continued to show tremendous toughness, catching his only two touchdowns as an Owl in the Lending Tree Bowl, both of which came on plays of, you guessed it, 25+ yards. Rice football doesn’t get to where it did this season without his contributions.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Isaiah Esdale, postseason awards, Rice Football

Rice Football 2022 Defensive Newcomer of the Year: Chris Conti

January 2, 2023 By Matthew Bartlett

One of the few transfer additions on defense, linebacker Chris Conti quickly became a mainstay and our 2022 Rice Football Defensive Newcomer of the Year.

Rice football received commitments from two transfer linebackers from the Transfer Portal last winter. The hope, at least among the coaching staff, was that both would play meaningful roles for the Owls this coming season and beyond. But only one of them made it to campus and thus, though unspoken, a heaping mantle of expectations was unconsciously placed upon his shoulders.

Fortunately for everyone, Chris Conti had wide shoulders and was ready for the challenge.

The Rutgers transfer was a late addition to the portal, finding mutual interest from the Owls early on. By the time he announced his commitment, spring football was winding down. He didn’t arrived on campus until workouts in the summer, putting him behind the proverbial eight ball when it came to learning and mastering the Owls’ defensive schemes. That never seemed to phase him, though.

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Defensive Coordinator Brian Smith referred to Conti as someone with “starting ability” in the days leading up to fall camp, betting on talent that hadn’t seen the field very much at his previous stop. The high school film was exciting, but that had been so long ago.

Conti arrived on campus with three years of eligibility remaining. The hope was always that he’d become a key piece in the Owls’ linebacker room. How quickly that happened was up to him.

As it turned out, it wouldn’t take much time at all. Conti started his first game in a Rice uniform on the road against USC, making four tackles, tied for third-most on the team. From there, the ascent began.

”He’s playing exceptionally well. He’s still getting more and more comfortable with the system every day.” head coach Mike Bloomgren said following Conti’s second game against McNeese State. “I’m not sure he’s where he’ll be three weeks from now.”

Bloomgren did go on to note that the base package Rice deployed against McNeese State was the only reason Conti wasn’t officially listed as a starter in that contest. Bloomgren reiterated Conti had already earned a starting spot and Conti quickly backed up that praise.

Podcast: More superlatives and awards on the Fourth Annual Roosties

He would officially be tabbed as the starter in 11 of 12 games during the 2022 season. He had a season-best 11 tackles against Houston and things started to really click.

“I’ll be honest, I love the culture. I love the guys,” Conti said. “Right when I came they brought me in with open arms and I’ve loved every second of it.”

Conti would reach double digits tackles again a few weeks later against Louisiana Tech. Throughout the year he added four tackles for a loss and one sack. For someone Rice had hoped would become an important piece, he became a key cog for the Rice defense.

After a parade of reliable all-conference caliber linebackers that have passed through the Rice football locker room in recent years, finding someone who could fill those shoes was a daunting task. The Owls found at least one such man in Conti. And fortunately enough, he still has two more seasons of eligibility to make a difference at South Main.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Chris conti, postseason awards, Rice Football

The Roost Podcast | Ep 136 – Fourth Annual Roosties!

December 8, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

The 2022 Rice football regular season is over and there’s a bowl game on its way, but first, the fourth annual Roosties Award ceremony is here.

There will be a time for a more formal set of Rice football postseason awards. From Team MVP to newcomers of the year, those awards are coming. First, it’s time to present our more unconventional awards to players, units and general confusion caused by the season as we know it thus far. Stay tuned below for our fourth iteration of the annual Roosties!

You can find previous episodes on the podcast page. For now, give a listen to Episode 136.

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Episode Notes

Housekeeping

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Remembering Rice Football with the Roosties! 

Carter and Matthew had out honors in the following categories with some variations along the way and a detour or two. Here are the categories:

  • Favorite Play
  • Player You Were Most Wrong About (Biggest surprise)
  • Most Improved Unit
  • Play/Game You Most Want to Redo
  • Player You’ll Miss the Most
  • Out of Nowhere Star
  • Most Valuable Transfer
  • Most Head Scratching Moment
  • Most Dominant Game
  • Player You’re Most Looking Forward to in 2022

Where can you find us?

Download and subscribe to The Roost Podcast on any of your favorite podcast providers. The show is available on iTunes, GooglePlay, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn and PodBean. Please consider leaving a review wherever you listen.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Podcast Tagged With: postseason awards, Rice Football

Rice Football 2021 Team MVP: Jake Bailey

December 28, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

The glue guy for a revamped offensive attack, Jake Bailey’s consistency and big-play ability led to him being named our 2021 Rice Football Team MVP.

There are countless ways to determine what “most valuable player” actually means. Raw numbers tell one story. Anecdotes and narrative can tell another. Then there’s that feeling on one’s gut. The kind one gets when you just know that one particular player contributes more to his team than one can distill down into one statistic or any singular storyline. For Rice football in 2021, the answer to all of those questions was Jake Bailey.

In modern football, MVP honors seemingly always default to quarterbacks. Rice had four different signal-callers appear in crucial moments this season. Wiley Green won the biggest game. Jake Constantine won the most. Luke McCaffrey and TJ McMahon accounted for perhaps the most improbable comeback.

But the only unifying factor among those four passers was the constant churn. In large part because of injuries, no one player in that room consistently put the team on his back every single week and found ways to will them to victories. Jake Bailey did.

Despite being knocked out of the UTEP game in the second half and missing the finale against Louisiana Tech entirely, Bailey still led all Rice pass-catchers in receiving yardage. He scored twice and had on remarkable endzone grab that would have been a touchdown called back by a questionable penalty. The raw numbers were good, really good.

When those catches game were perhaps even more important. Bailey led all Rice players in third-down receptions (17) and third-down receiving yards (209). He caught five passes on fourth down. All five moved the sticks, including a diving 36-yard stretch on a scramble from Constantine to help Rice mount a fourth-quarter comeback bid.

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It probably shouldn’t be surprising Bailey became the focal point of the Rice offense. Head coach Mike Bloomgren noted Bailey was “becoming somebody the quarterbacks trust completely” in the early portions of fall camp, adding that Bailey was the kind of player that was always “finding a way to get open.”

There was a period of time when the Jake-to-Jake connection between Constantine and Bailey was the most productive dynamic on the entire roster. With Constantine at the controls and the pocket wavering, he’d often roll out and immediately fix his eyes on Bailey, who was seemingly always ready to make a play and move the sticks.

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That almost innate connection is part of what Bailey so effective on the gridiron. “It was never scripted,” Bailey said of one such schoolyard play. “There’s no formula for it, but it’s always great when it can work out and be something big.”

Big might be the perfect word to describe the size at which Bailey played. Standing 5-foot-10, there were only five players on the roster with a listed height shorter than Bailey. Yet Bailey never let that stop him. If anything, his stature aided his quickness and made him just that more difficult to bring down in the open field.

Bailey is one of the most dynamic playmakers Rice football has at its disposal, and the talented wideout still has two more seasons of eligibility remaining. As a redshirt sophomore, he’s taken home our Rice Football Team MVP honors. The rise of Jake Bailey might only be beginning. Those are some lofty expectations, but Bailey says he’s ready to embrace them.

“When there’s pressure in the situation that means you’re doing something important. That means you’re doing something where people have to look at you, expect from you. It’s always a great place to be. I think pressure is a privilege,” he said. Here’s to seeing where that pressure leads him in 2022 and beyond.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Jake Bailey, postseason awards, Rice Football

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