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Rice Football overcomes 5-hour delay to knock off Navy

November 2, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football persevered through a five-hour delay and a water-logged field to knock off Navy in the Owls’ first game under interim head coach Pete Alamar.

The rain eventually let up, but Rice football never did. Despite the adversity of an in-season firing and a game against a Navy team previously unbeaten in conference play, the Owls took the Midshipmen to deep water and drowned them in the Houston storms. The win was the first for Rice over Navy since 2002 and the first-ever career win for interim head coach Pete Alamar. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Hours, not minutes

When he met with the media on Tuesday for the very first time as interim head coach, Pete Alamar made a vow to all assembled. “A Pete Alamar led football team is going to fight their butt off for 60 minutes or however long it takes,” he said. Little did anyone know much more than 60 minutes would be required for the Owls’ interim head coach to make good on that declaration.

Rice football was scheduled to host Navy, undefeated in conference play, at 3:00 PM CST on Saturday afternoon. That start time came and went as roving thunderstorms took turns abusing South Main. The ball was finally kicked at 5:30 pm but the Owls were only permitted one drive, which ended in a punt, before the weather forced both teams to their locker rooms for another hour.

When play resumed — three and a half hours after the original kick time — Tyson Flowers intercepted Navy quarterback Blake Horvath’s first attempt. Rice ran three plays and got the ball inside the five-yard line before lightning again forced an extended delay.

In total, the delays would last five hours and six minutes, approximately 20 minutes shy of the longest recorded weather delay in college football history. The stadium clock read 8:39 pm when the ball was snapped and Dean Connors sprinted off tackle for the opening touchdown. Rice took the lead on that play and never let up.

Hours upon hours of frustration and angst following the dismissal of head coach Mike Bloomgen earlier in the week boiled over in an outburst that would not be quelled. Led by an interim head coach, the Owls posted their most impressive win of the season.

Offensive explosion

That outburst would not have been possible without precision execution from the Owls’ offense once the game truly began in earnest. Rice built on Connors’ touchdown run with a hook-and-ladder conversion on third and long to set up a pin-point touchdown toss from EJ Warner to Matt Sykes between double-coverage.

Tim Horn tacked on a 47-yard field goal on the Owls’ following possession. Just like that, the double-digit home underdogs had a three-score lead over one of the league’s three remaining unbeaten teams.

The offense was held in check for the next four drives. Navy was more disciplined on defense during that time, but they were also aided by an incredulous interception by Warner, who threw into double coverage in the endzone on a first down play in which his receiver was beaten off the line and never had a chance to play on the ball.

After trading punts to start the second half, the offense returned to form, grinding out an 11-play, 80-yard drive punctuated by another touchdown run from Connors to put Rice in front 24-7. Buoyed by an impressive defensive showing, that proved to be more than enough to get the job done.

Defensive dominance

Navy came into the contest averaging 46.5 points per game in conference play, the best mark in the AAC. The Midshipmen run a triple-option scheme similar, albeit not quite the same, as the offense Army runs. The Black Knights dropped 37 points on the Owls a few weeks ago and didn’t seem to break a sweat. Holding Navy to a respectable output would have been a reasonable measure of success, but the Rice football had loftier goals in mind.

Rice held Navy to 112 yards of total offense in the first half, allowing exactly one drive in the Midshipmen’s first seven to extend beyond 15 yards. Owls were flying to the ball and making tackles, keeping deep shots out of the hands of receivers and, in at least two cases, taking the ball away themselves.

The defense stonewalled Navy on fourth and short in the redzone midway through the third quarter. They held the Middies to a field goal on an 18-play, 8-minute drive in the fourth quarter, utilizing sure-tackling and the clock to stifle the triple-option attack. Two fumbles, both of which Navy recovered, slowed that march, draining the clock and further.

Nothing was easy for the Navy offense on Saturday. The option attack, which had fooled so many teams, was rendered almost entirely ineffective against the Owls who were as assignment-sound of defense as they’ve been in any game this season. Navy had one run of 20+ yards, who made the right defense read time and time again.

A Navy offense that led the conference at 7.8 yards per play against conference foes was kneecapped on Saturday night and limited to just 4.3 per play. Horvath, who had been sacked three times in seven games, was sacked twice by Rice alone. The defense never flinched.

Just enough special teams

Not to be outdone, special teams did their part as well. Tyson Thompson routinely set the offense up with superb field position, averaging 17 yards per return on punts including a long of 30 yards. He put one on the deck but was able to recover. After taking over the job from Sean Fresch midseason, Thompson has found his niche and made several important contributions to this game.

Horn’s 47-yard field goal was the longest by an Owl this season and while Alex Bacchetta’s 50-yard boot wasn’t a season-long for the Owls’ punt team it rolled to a stop on the one-foot line, marking another superb field position win in a game in which every yard came at a premium.

It wasn’t a perfect day on the special teams front. Horn missed a 45-yard kick that would have made it a three-score game with 4:25 on the clock, but by that time the writing was on the wall. Everyone had done just enough and Rice football was going to win.

Predictably unpredictable

In many ways, Saturday’s stunner will become a fitting footnote on the 2024 Rice football season, which has not gone according to plan in any respect since the year began with a home upset to Sam Houston. The Owls weren’t expected to go 2-6, nor was snapping a decade-long losing streak to UTSA in the cards. Beating Navy with an interim head coach on the helm as double-digit underdogs? That wasn’t in the realm of possibility either.

But in the same way that none of this year has made sense, the unexpected continues to find Rice football.

Against Navy, that pendulum swung back in favor of the blue and gray as hard as it possibly could. Rice got a marquee win and the players in a locker room that has absorbed so much sadness in recent weeks had the chance to celebrate and exhale. Finally, after everyone had counted them out and the season had been written off as a failure, relief had come in the form a Homecoming win that so many on this team will remember for a lifetime.

Digging deeper

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Alex Bacchetta, Dean Connors, EJ Warner, game recap, Matt Sykes, Pete Alamar, Rice Football, Tim Horn

Rice Football: Behind enemy lines with a Navy Insider

October 31, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Navy is next up on the 2024 Rice football schedule so we’re going behind enemy lines with Middies’ insider Mike James from Rivals’ The Mid Report.

Middies’ insider Mike James was kind enough to stop by and answer a few questions about the upcoming matchup between Rice Football and Navy. The answers below should shed some light on the Owls’ upcoming opponent.

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For those checking in for the first time, or those returning, a quick programming note. Special features like this are reserved for our subscribers. Have questions? You can get those answered in our monthly Q&As and get access to all practice notes, recruiting updates and features like this one when you subscribe on Patreon today.

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.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Game preview, Rice Football

Rice Football 2024: Navy Game Week Practice Report

October 30, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has an interim head coach, quarterback uncertainty and an injured captain. Here’s what we learned from the Owls at practice this week.

Mike Bloomgren is out. Pete Alamar is in. And Rice football marches on. Navy is next up on the docket, no small task for any permutation of the Owls’ program. This update will touch on a few logistical adaptions to the weekly practice schedule now that Alamar is calling the hots as well as the latest on the injury front, which continues to have lasting ramifications for the program as the season progresses. Here’s where the team stands prior to the Navy game this weekend.

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For those checking in for the first time, or those returning, a quick programming note. Special features like this are reserved for our subscribers. Have questions? You can get those answered in our monthly Q&As and get access to all practice notes, recruiting updates and features like this one when you subscribe on Patreon today.

On the (interim) head coach

Make sure you check out this feature released earlier in the week on Alamar and what the program is going to look like for the next few weeks under his direction. That’s going to impact the day-to-day operations around South Main to some extent, but there’s no sense in reiterating the same information twice. Things have gone more or less according to plan, in those respects.

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?
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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Brant Banks, Chad Lindberg, Daveon Hook, David Stickle, Drew Devillier, EJ Warner, Ethan Onianwa, Gabe Taylor, Geron Hargon, Jojo Jean, Max Ahoia, Myron Morrison, Pete Alamar, practice notes, Rice Football, trace norfleet, Tyson Flowers

What will Rice Football look like under Pete Alamar: October 2024 Q&A

October 30, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Pete Alamar has been named the interim coach for the remainder of the 2024 Rice Football season. What will the program look like now? We look at both in this month’s subscriber Q&A.

There are still four games remaining in the 2024 Rice football season. The decision to move on from Mike Bloomgren midseason — the first time such a move has happened in season in program history — has shifted a lot of responsibilities around South Main. What will the program look like under the direction of interim head coach Pete Alamar? We tackle that question, ranging from the specific adjustments to the more philosophical ramifications.

Questions were edited briefly for clarity. Want to get your questions answered? Subscribe on Patreon for our monthly mailbag.

For those checking in for the first time, or those returning, a quick programming note. Special features like this are reserved for our subscribers. Have questions? You can get those answered in our monthly Q&As and get access to all practice notes, recruiting updates and features like this one when you subscribe on Patreon today.

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Q: Just how does Alamar run things in the interim…delegate to the coordinators?

Q: Will we notice anything different with Alamar? Is he changing personnel or implementing anything interesting schematically?

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?
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Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Pete Alamar, Rice Football

Rice Football 2024: Navy presser quotes and depth chart

October 29, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Next up for Rice football: Navy. Here’s what interim head coach Pete Alamar had to say about the matchup and a few depth chart notes.

Following the dismissal of head coach Mike Bloomgren on Sunday, interim head coach Pete Alamar and a set of players met with the media for their customary weekly availability. They recapped the UConn game and looked ahead at their upcoming matchup with Navy.

More: Game Preview: Rice Football vs Navy

We touch on those items, then dig into the Rice football depth chart and what the team looks like heading into the weekend. First, the quotes:

Press Conference Quotes

“To state the obvious, a few things have changed and transpired here in the last few days. I can tell you this, Mike Bloomgren, Coach Bloomgren, is one of my best friends. 18 months ago he sold me on a vision, a vision for Rice football and a vision for Rice University. And that’s why I’m here… I can tell you this, he gave his heart and soul for seven years to Rice University and Rice football. There isn’t anyone in this building who would tell you that it’s not better for having him here in that time.” – Pete Alamar on the state of the program

https://twitter.com/AtTheRoost/status/1851346426292257108

“Here’s what I know. I’ve been entrusted to lead this program for the next five weeks. And for me, all I’m concerned about is putting our guys in the best position they can to play fast, play free and have an opportunity to win games. Period. After that, it is what it is. I’m under no illusions. I’m not here to audition for the head job. I’m here to lead this program for the next five weeks and do the best job. I possibly can.” – Pete Alamar on being the interim head coach 

“When you’ve coached for a long time, you get to be around some really special dudes. What he did was phenomenally cool. I’ve been fortunate. I’ve had the Desean Jackson. I’ve had Ty Montgomery… I’ve had Christian McCaffrey… I’ve told this football team, that cat, right there, is as good as any kick returner I’ve had at hitting and getting. His first 25 is what makes him special because when he hits it, he hits it.”– Pete Alamar on kick returner Quinton Jackson

“I’ve been on teams here where we haven’t had success or reached the goals that we’ve had. I would argue that this is probably the most underachieving, given how he felt about this season going in, that we’ve had. I have never once for a second doubted the desire, the effort, the driving for wins that this team has shown. I’m more proud of the resilience of this team than any other team that I’ve been on. And there’s no doubt about that in my mind. That being said, through all the things that have happened in this season that didn’t go our way, not one time have I had to motivate a guy to get up. Not one time has that been a problem and that hasn’t been a problem through these last 48 hours which you would say has been a most-resiliency challenging situation.”  – Captain Izeya Floyd on the state of the team

“It means a lot, to be named with those talented players. I’m just blessed to be in this position and I’m grateful to have him as my coach…. Being recognized for that award, it’s not just me. It’s everybody on this team that helped me along the way.” – Kick returner Quinton Jackson on the praise from Alamar and being named AAC Special Teams Player of the Week

Depth Chart

Rice Football

Depth Chart Notes

Given all the changes within the program this week it was unlikely there we significant changes coming to the official depth chart that is released on Tuesday. That was indeed the case, with the only difference reflecting sustained injury situations — an OR at the quarterback spot and the removal of JoVoni Johnson from the two-deep in favor of Owen Carter.

However, that doesn’t necessarily mean everything will be congruous week to week once the team installs its game plan for Navy. For those updates, including the latest on the health of Warner and other key pieces, you’ll want to stay tuned to the practice notes later in the week reserved for subscribers.

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

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Izeya Floyd, Pete Alamar, press conference notes, Quinton Jackson, Rice Football

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