The source for Rice sports news

  • Football
    • Recruiting
    • Offer Tracker
    • Roster
    • Schedule
    • NFL Owls
  • Premium
    • Patreon
    • Season Preview
    • Join / FAQ
  • Podcast
  • More
    • Store
    • News
    • Basketball
    • Baseball
    • About
    • Contact
  • Login

Rice Football Recruiting: LB CJ Witten commits to Owls

August 21, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

A tackling machine has joined the ranks of the 2025 Rice Football recruiting class. Liberty Christian linebacker CJ Witten has committed to the Owls.

The 2025 Rice football recruiting class heated up in earnest this summer with players attending camp on campus and getting up close and personal with the staff. While that run of recruits has slowed down, the Owls aren’t finished with their upcoming haul just yet, adding another promising playmaker on defense this week. Liberty Christian linebacker CJ Witten has committed to the Owls.

Witten was among the large contingent of players who received offers during the summer months. His came back in late June, one of a half dozen programs to extend him an offer to play at the next level. Ultimately Witten opted for Rice over nearby Lamar and Houston Christian, also spurning the likes of Arkansas State, Army, Navy, UTEP and a few others, opting instead to come to South Main.

The son of former Dallas Cowboys great Jason Witten, CJ has developed into one of the most productive linebackers in the state. As a junior, he surpassed 100 tackles in a 14-game season and scored a pair of touchdowns.

He joins fellow linebacker Ty Thames, who joined the class back in June, to make up a strong tandem in the middle of the field. He’s the 19th commitment in the fold so far, a number that should rise, but should remain very competitive when it comes to earning the last handful of high school spots.

Premium: Rice Football Recruiting Offer and Commitment Tracker

It only takes a quick glance at the film to see what Witten brings to the fold. He’s explosive, instinctive and powerful. When he gets moving downhill he’s tough to avoid. Rice has put a premium on athleticism at this position in recent years. Witten certainly fits the bill and should be an excellent addition to an already potent linebacking corps.

Become a Patron!
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
  • Rice Football Recruiting: RB Carson Morgan commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: International Owls Update – May 10
  • The Winding Road: Jack Ben-Shoshan’s circuitous path to the top of the Rice Baseball bullpen
  • Rice Baseball inches closer to postseason with series win over Wichita State

Filed Under: Football, Football Recruiting Tagged With: CJ Witten, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting

Rice Football 2024 Season Preview: Rising Stars

August 21, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Which new faces will emerge as difference makers for Rice football in 2024? The Roost picks three rising stars for the upcoming season.

An annual tradition, this Rising Stars segment attempts to highlight potential differential players for the 2024 Rice football team that might not quite be household names… yet. Transfers, freshmen and newcomers of all kinds have graced this list in recent years.

With two weeks before the season starts, it’s time to lock in the picks. Here are our 2024 Rising Stars.

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

This piece is part of our 2024 Rice Football Season Preview. Get access to it, as well as all other preview posts such as positional breakdowns, depth chart and schedule analysis and more when you subscribe on Patreon today. 

Subscriber content. Please login to see the full post or visit our Patreon page.
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
  • Rice Football Recruiting: RB Carson Morgan commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: International Owls Update – May 10
  • The Winding Road: Jack Ben-Shoshan’s circuitous path to the top of the Rice Baseball bullpen
  • Rice Baseball inches closer to postseason with series win over Wichita State

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Boden Groen, Dean Connors, DeMone Green, Drayden Dickmann, Rice Football, Taji Atkins, Ty Morris

In it for the Long Haul: Mike Bloomgren Embarks on Seventh Season with Rice Football

August 21, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Entering his seventh season, Rice football head coach Mike Bloomgren has become one of the longest-tenured coaches in the country, persevering through a rebuild that was far from easy.

Mike Bloomgren found himself the elder statesman when he took the podium at American Conference Media Days in mid-July. A veteran of seven years as the head man for Rice football and the longest-tenured FBS head coach in the state of Texas, Bloomgren has certainly seen a thing or two along the way. His journey to where he is today hasn’t been linear. The bumps and bruises accrued along his path might have scared others in the profession away, but Bloomgren has persevered.

Onlookers are gradually starting to take notice. Rice was picked to finish seventh in the AAC this season, the first time the team has been projected to be better than a bottom dweller in its conference since Bloomgren arrived. Still, Bloomgren offered his best Rodney Dangerfield impersonation upon seeing those results, joking that the Owls “can’t get no respect.”

The build

“In year one it was hard to argue,” Bloomgren said, remembering where the program came from back in his early days on South Main. “We had a lot of holes in our roster. We had some talented kids, but we had a lot of holes too. The same was true in 2019. Still building. Still playing a lot of young kids.”

It was in that 2018 season that Rice began a complete overhaul of its roster. The program didn’t fully start to resemble a bonafide FBS squad until years into Bloomgren’s tenure. That same season the coaching staff was forced to turn to a scout team running back to cover Houston superstar wideout Marquez Stevenson. The Cougars scored 28 unanswered points and pulled off a come-from-behind win that afternoon.

“The five-year plan got scrapped in about year two and a half and got reassessed.”

Two years later, a converted wide receiver turned emergency defensive back took the field in an oversized offensive lineman jersey to break up a red zone pass against North Texas. He succeeded, but the sheer absurdity of the situation served as a waypoint for a team in progress, a finished product still in the making.

There weren’t real expectations back then, not really. At least not when it came to high win totals on the field. That started to shift in 2020, but COVID through a wrench in things before a brutal schedule in 2021 — Rice opened against Arkansas, Houston and Texas — made year five a retooling point, of sorts.

“The five-year plan got scrapped in about year two and a half and got reassessed,” Bloomgren admitted. It was then that things started to shift.

Raising the floor

After going 11-31 in Bloomgren’s first four seasons, Rice has gone 11-13 in the regular season since, with most of those wins coming in a more challenging AAC. Armed with a complete roster, patience, and (for the most part) healthy starting quarterbacks, the Owls have reached bowl games in back-to-back seasons, something which had only occurred twice in the centuries’ worth of Rice football seasons before Bloomgren arrived.

Bloomgren was always quick to describe his vision for Rice football as two-fold. He wanted to raise the ceiling, to reach those postseason opportunities. But he wanted to make sure he raised the floor, too. When the tough years came, in years past, the program would plummet to a one or two-win campaign. Now, they hope to take on adversity and preserve, aspiring to become a postseason-caliber program even in the tough years.

More: Join the Rice football discussion on Discord

That growth is part of what enabled Rice to reach its highest point in those preseason polls, but it’s who Rice brings back that likely played a more significant role. ESPN’s Bill Connelly ranked Rice football No.1 in the AAC in returning production, an assessment that attempts to quantify how much of last year’s talent is returning this coming season.

Rice lost three important starters on defense (DE Coleman Coco, CB Tre’shon Devons and DT De’Braylon Carroll) and three key pieces on offense (QB JT Daniels, WR Luke McCaffrey and LT Clay Servin) but more or less everyone else stayed. Only two of their most significant departures were transfers. For the most part, eligibility expiration and the NFL have been the reason for players who don’t return to Rice football right now. Few choose to leave.

Establishing a culture

Every coach in America uses the word culture in their recruiting pitch. Bloomgren has made the nebulous word a tangible reality at Rice.

“He’s not even a coach anymore. He’s like another father figure in Houston,” star defensive back Gabe Taylor said of Bloomgren. “The bond we have with Coach Smith, the whole coaching staff. It’s unbreakable. There’s no other team like this one. The brotherhood is real, genuine, second-to-none.”

For years Bloomgren labored to build the roster. Once it got here, everyone stuck around.

“Rice is a place that I’ve been longer than any other place in my life, school-wise,” running back Dean Connors said. “This third year will be the longest I’ve been playing football for someone and I wouldn’t want it to be anyone other than Bloom. He was the one coach who gave me my chance, my shot. I owe him the world and just look what he’s done with the program.”

There’s a different type of buy-in created for those who have been in the depths and labored to make something better. Taylor, Connors, and several other stars certainly have the talent to be coveted elsewhere. Their leadership and commitment to what they started never allowed any other program to be an option.

Those repercussions have helped establish one of the most consistent rosters in the country, a roster the likes of quarterback EJ Warner and others wanted to come join. It’s become a team that players like sixth-year players Josh Peary, Myron Morrison, Izeya Floyd and others just don’t want to leave, even with a degree in hand and potential NFL opportunities ahead.

Bloomgren couldn’t have asked for much more than this. He built the roster to his liking, established a postseason baseline and earned some respect in his conference. All that’s left to do now is take that next step and start to win in earnest.

The Future at South Main

Moving forward, Bloomgren and Rice football find themselves in a good place. A private institution, Rice isn’t required to report contractual information, but multiple sources have confirmed to The Roost the nature of Bloomgren’s current agreement. The contract stipulates an automatic one-year extension upon the invitation to any bowl game. Additionally, as was previously reported by The Roost, Bloomgren was given a one-year extension because of the COVID-19 season.

In totality, Bloomgren has now worked under his base five-year original contract agreement, plus three additional years of extensions, the first from the COVID season and the subsequent two earned by bowl trips. As things currently stand, he has two years remaining on his adjusted deal, which runs through the 2025 season.

Should Bloomgren bring Rice to the postseason again in 2024, the same clause would be in effect, triggering another one-year extension.

The terms are a win for both parties. Bloomgren has had the privilege of watching his kids go to school in the same places, eschewing the roaming norms that often typify the coaching profession. As long as Bloomgren continues to ensure Rice is a postseason-quality team, he’ll have security while Rice is protected should things go south. All parties dream of any potential dilemmas caused by too much winning, but that bridge will be crossed when we get there.

For now, Bloomgren and his team are preparing for Year Seven with Rice football. Only four head coaches in program history have been on South Main longer.

“It’s just been great to see the growth,” Bloomgren said. “As exciting as it is to go into Year Seven, [it’s even more exciting] to know that we’ve really made progress and we’re in a position, we think, we can jump to the next step.”

** Photo Credit: Maria Lysaker **
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
  • Rice Football Recruiting: RB Carson Morgan commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: International Owls Update – May 10
  • The Winding Road: Jack Ben-Shoshan’s circuitous path to the top of the Rice Baseball bullpen
  • Rice Baseball inches closer to postseason with series win over Wichita State

Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Mike Bloomgren, Rice Football

2024 Rice Football Season Preview: Corner

August 19, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Next up in our 2024 Rice Football Season Preview: corner. Here’s our breakdown of the Owls’ plans for the group this season.

The corner room has made a lot of progress in recent seasons, but once again will ask some relatively new faces to step into large roles on a defense that asks a lot from this position. How well this unit adjusts to those demands and develops throughout the year will determine just how high the ceiling is for the defense as a whole in 2024 and beyond.

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

This piece is part of our 2024 Rice Football Season Preview. Get access to it, as well as all other preview posts such as positional breakdowns, depth chart and schedule analysis and more when you subscribe on Patreon today. 

Subscriber content. Please login to see the full post or visit our Patreon page.
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?
** Photo credit Maria Lysaker **
Subscribe on Patreon for exclusive Rice football recruiting updates, practice notes and more.

Recent Posts
  • Rice Football Recruiting: RB Carson Morgan commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: International Owls Update – May 10
  • The Winding Road: Jack Ben-Shoshan’s circuitous path to the top of the Rice Baseball bullpen
  • Rice Baseball inches closer to postseason with series win over Wichita State

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: 2024 Rice Football Season Preview, AJ Stephens, Bailey Fletcher, Ephraim Dotson, Faybian Marks, Jamarion Clark, Jeremiah Williams, Lamont Narcisse, Max Ahoia, Moh Bility, Rice Football, Sean Fresch

Rice Football 2024 Fall Camp Notebook 4: The Rise of Taji Atkins

August 18, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Freshman running back Taji Atkins continues to impress whenever Rice Football takes the field. Nothing has been too big for this talented newcomer.

There’s been a “Here’s What Taji Atkins Did Today” section of every report I’ve written from camp thus far, and for good reason. The freshman runner continues to dazzle whenever he gets the football. On Saturday he carried the ball eight times for 41 yards, scoring three touchdowns. As if that wasn’t enough, on the first play of the short-yardage situation drills, Atkins bounced a ball outside and kept running until he reached the endzone.

On a play where he was asked to get one yard, he got 50.

Subscriber content. Please login to see the full post or visit our Patreon page.
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
  • Rice Football Recruiting: RB Carson Morgan commits to Owls
  • Rice Baseball 2025: International Owls Update – May 10
  • The Winding Road: Jack Ben-Shoshan’s circuitous path to the top of the Rice Baseball bullpen
  • Rice Baseball inches closer to postseason with series win over Wichita State

Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Rice Football, Taji Atkins

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • …
  • 329
  • Next Page »
  1. Item 1
  2. Item 2
  3. Item 3
  4. Item 4
  5. Item 5
  • Jack Ben-Shoshan, Rice Baseball
  • Rice Football
  • Rice Baseball, David Pierce
  • Rice Football
  • “He’s a Bulldog”: Parker Smith’s Journey to Rice Baseball Ace
Become a patron at Patreon!
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter