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NFL Draft: WR Luke McCaffrey selected No. 100 Overall by Commanders

April 26, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Former Rice football wide receiver Luke McCaffrey was selected No. 100 overall by the Washington Commanders in the 2024 NFL Draft.

A steady riser throughout the pre-draft process, Luke McCaffrey didn’t have to wait long to learn his pro destination. The former Rice football wide receiver was selected with the final pick of the third round, going No. 100 overall to the Washington Commanders.

McCaffrey enters the NFL following a season in which he led the AAC in touchdown receptions (12), racking up 68 receptions and 963 receiving yards in the process.

He’ll follow in the footsteps of a family flush with NFL bloodlines. Luke’s brother, Christian, is a standout running back with the San Francisco 49ers. His father, Ed, was a third-round pick to the Denver Broncos who would go on to play 13 seasons in the league and win three Super Bowls.

In Washington, McCaffrey joins a robust Commanders’ roster which includes newly drafted quarterback Jayden Daniels from LSU. He’ll step into a receiver room that includes Terry McLaurin, Jahan Dotson and others.

McCaffrey is the first Rice player to hear his name called in the NFL Draft since Christian Covington was selected by the Houston Texans in 2015 and the first top-100 selection for the Owls since Phillip Gains was drafted by the Chiefs in 2014. He’s the Rice wide receiver drafted since Jarett Dillard was selected by the Jaguars in the fifth round in 2009 and the first Rice player drafted by Washington since Tony Barker in the 10th round of the 1992 draft.

McCaffrey was named The Roost’s Offensive Player of the Year for Rice football in back-to-back seasons, his first two years playing wide receiver at the collegiate level following a transition from quarterback. If he can excel to that degree in such a short time, the sky might truly be the limit for him at the next level.

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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Luke McCaffrey, Rice Football

Rice Football 2024 Spring Notebook 10: Unanswered Questions

April 23, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

A few outstanding questions remain for Rice football after the conclusion of spring practice. Let’s address a few unknowns and potential concerns.

It was largely an encouraging spring for Rice football. Both sides of the ball had their moments. New quarterback EJ Warner looked poised and productive in just a few short weeks. The coaching staff walked away happy, for the most part. But no football team is ever perfect after spring practices and they’ll have a few months to address the concerns that remain as best they can. What are those potential pain points? We highlight a few from the totality of spring practices below.

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A wide receiver room in transition

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Aquantis Clemmons, Blake Boenisch, Charlie Looes, Chibby Nwajuaku, Coleman Bennett, Daelen Alexander, Dean Connors, DeMone Green, EJ Warner, Elroyal Morris, Graham Walker, Izeya Floyd, Jalen Hargrove, Jordan Campbell, Joseph Mutombo, Josh Pearcy, Lamont Narcisse, Landon Ransom, Max Ahoia, Michael Daley, Michael Larbie, Owen Carter, practice notes, Quinton Jackson, Rawson MacNeill, Rice Football, spring practice, Taji Atkins

The Roost Podcast | Ep 173 – Rice Football Spring Ball Review

April 19, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football has officially concluded a successful set of spring practices, generating optimism. How much faith is reasonable at this juncture?

Several weeks of Rice football spring practices are in the books and the general sentiment from South Main was positive for both sides of the ball. Several players and position groups have earned their fair share of confidence and faith in their potential. Should we buy that camp hype? Carter and Matthew go through the roster, position by position and render some verdicts.

You can find previous episodes on the podcast page. For now, give a listen to Episode 173.

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Rice Football Spring Practice Review: Do You Believe?

  • EJ Warner is the guy?
  • Dean Connors is the best Rice running back since…?
  • The wide receiver room is the deepest its been under Bloomgren?
  • Boden Groen could be the Owls’ top receiving option?
  • The offensive line is going to be fine?
  • The defensive line has enough pieces to be effective?
  • The linebacker room is the best room on defense?
  • Max Ahoia is one of the Owls’ opening day starter at corner?
  • The safety room has enough playmakers to be differential?

Where can you find us?

The Roost Podcast is part of the Dave Campbell’s Republic of Football Podcast Network. You can find this podcast and all of our partner podcasts on Apple, Spotify and wherever you get your podcasts.

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

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Podcast Tagged With: practice notes, Rice Football, spring practice

Rice Football 2024 Spring Notebook 9: Offensive Takeaways

April 19, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

A new Rice football quarterback debuted and a host of pass catchers made their marks. Here’s what we learned from that side of the ball during spring practices.

EJ Warner looked the part in his first-ever snaps in a Rice football uniform, but he wasn’t the only standout from the offense this spring. Without the veteran hands of Luke McCaffrey to lean on, new faces stepped up and some veterans reestablished themselves as potential options moving forward. Who made the biggest strides on this side of the ball this spring?

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It’s EJ Warner SZN

Bloomgren opened his press conference following the Rice football spring game with praise for Joshua Pearcy who, in Bloomgren’s own words, had “made me a believer”. In an open-ended follow-up question, I asked him who else had “made him a believer” this spring.

Without missing a beat, Bloomgren said “The easy one, the low-hanging fruit,” was quarterback EJ Warner.

“He came into a very, very complicated offense and was able to execute it at a very high level. There’s not a lot of ‘can’t get out of the huddle’, calling plays wrong, forgetting motions, things like that. He’s out there like he’s been in an offense like this forever,” Bloomgren said. “His comfort and ability to come in and execute, the touch that he has, the ability to get balls pushed really quickly in his progression because of his pre-snap reads, I just think he’s done some really cool things.”

More: Rice Football Spring Game Takeaways

Those all seem like well-meaning platitudes given to a new transfer quarterback, but if you remember back to late last season, the specific details Bloomgren mentioned here are important.

AJ Padgett, with whom Warner is competing for the starting job, struggled with those very things. Bloomgren noted instances when he called the wrong play and had issues in the huddle despite being a veteran in this system. Meanwhile Warner, in the span of a few weeks, appears to have mastered those crucial operational functions.

When asked to name a starter, Bloomgren deflected but made his current position clear. “I’m glad we don’t have to decide it today,” he said, before adding on his own volition, “but there’s certainly times this spring where you felt EJ really had the upper hand really because of the command, his ability to control the passes and throw the ball where he wants it with pretty good precision.”

A starter might not be named for some time, but it’s abundantly clear EJ Warner has positioned himself to be QB1 when Rice football takes the field against Sam Houston in Week 1.

Raising the floor

Bloomgren has a favorite saying that he tends to bring out at the start of spring practice every year. The wording has varied over the years, but the gist of it goes something like this.

Defense is a destructive process. Everyone can fall down and one guy can make a big play on his own. Offense is a constructive process. All 11 guys have to do their job for a play to be successful.

And because it’s generally assumed that it’s harder to get 11 guys to execute in sync on Day 1, the defense has always started faster than the offense in spring practice. That wasn’t the case this year.

The offense stole the show in Scrimmage 1 and had another practice heading into the second scrimmage in which they swept the defense in all the major team drills of the day. For the first three or four weeks of camp, the offense led the way, a definitive first for this team since Bloomgren arrived.

Now the defense did catch up because they have lots of talented players too, but most had fewer question marks about that side of the ball which returns so much productivity from a season ago. To see the less established unit, breaking in a new quarterback and without their top playmaking option at wide receiver, do what they did is extremely encouraging.

It suggests that the talent level as a whole has moved closer toward being more “quarterback-proof” than it has been in years past. This offense has enough talented pieces that it doesn’t need a hard reset in March to start from scratch and rebuild from square one. Even the younger faces can pick up where they left off and keep moving. That’s an extremely encouraging sign for the future.

The O-Line will be alright

Despite an inauspicious showing in the spring game, the offensive line has been largely impressive through the duration of spring practices. Ethan Onianwa looks right at home at left tackle and the rest of the line has gelled well. Having to cycle through multiple third-string options in the second scrimmage and spring game made the optics look less than ideal, but the body of work was encouraging on the whole.

Run blocking has been a massive struggle for this unit over the last several seasons. Protection has largely been alright. The line excelled in protection throughout the spring and regularly opened up lanes for the backs. A defense that made some big plays and stymied the passing game did allow 5.4 yards per carry on the ground, primarily to Quinton Jackson and Christian Francisco.

Beyond getting healthier by the fall, Bloomgren divulged afterward they are getting reinforcements on that front. Days later, Chad Lindberg a former Georgia offensive lineman and blue-chip offensive tackle recruit from League City, Texas, announced his commitment. He’ll join the Owls this coming season with two years of eligibility remaining.

The starting five from left to right, hypothetically, could now be Ethan Onianwa, Brant Banks, Braedon Nutter, John Long and Chad Lindberg.

Then there’s Brad Baur, Miguel Cedeno, Weston Kropp, Lavel Dumont and Spencer Cassell as potential backups. That could be a solid unit on its own. That’s a fantastic starting point, especially considering where this team has come from in years past.

Just wait until we see a full complement of touches for Dean Connors behind this unit. Which brings us to the next takeaway…

Dean Connors breakout incoming

Dean Connors only carried the ball six times in the spring game. He caught three passes. The only surprising result from those nine touches, honestly, was that he did not score. It’s been that kind of spring for the standout running back, who continues to get praise after praise from his teammates and coaches.

For example, when asked to identify the hardest offensive player to tackle on the team, both rush end Joshua Pearcy and linebacker Ty Morris pointed to Connors. “He’s a dawg,” Pearcy said with a grin, fresh from a head on collision with Connors in practice in which the elusive running back had somehow evaded Pearcy’s grasp and burst away for additional yardage.

It was that kind of spring for Connors. He’d get a handful of snaps and still leave the field with a highlight play or two, utilizing his vision and agility to score touchdowns from all areas of the field.

“Just trying to figure out more ways to get better and more ways to learn,” was Connors’ assessment of his spring. “Trying to learn more of a holistic view of the offense, learn different positions, more of the scheme, and dive deeper into some of the things I didn’t know.”

Boden Groen is the pass catcher to know

When flipping through my notebook of reactions and thoughts from the spring, few names showed up more times among offensive players than tight end Boden Groen. As the wide receivers cycled through so many different names and faces, Groen stepped into the unquestioned TE1 role. Although he shared snaps with Elijah Mojarro and others, it was Groen that became a visible factor in the passing game.

The offense’s only passing touchdown in the second scrimmage came in the redzone on a crossing route to Groen, who caught the pass from Warner in stride and made a beeline to the pylon, outracing the defense and finding paydirt, one of their lone blemishes on another otherwise exemplary afternoon.

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Among all receivers and tight ends, Groen trailed only Luke McCaffrey in receptions and receiving yards for the Owls last season, and that came while serving as the backup to Jack Bradley for most of the year. Now given more snaps and responsibilities as the starter, those numbers — 39 receptions for 383 yards — are only going to rise.

The rest of the pass-catching hierarchy still has to sort itself out. No matter how the targets to the receivers bear themselves out, Groen is going to be a focal point of this offense, particularly in the redzone.

Odds and Ends

  • We’ve seen so many running backs have big spring games only to fade back into the rotation come the fall. I think Quinton Jackson’s explosiveness is real and he’ll carve out a meaningful role in the offense, but his frame and skillset probably lends itself to a more stylized role that leaves the bulk of the rushing work to others like Daelen Alexander, Bucknell transfer Coleman Bennett and freshman signee Taji Atkins.
  • Rawson MacNeill and Landon Ransom were both solid this spring, but no wide receiver really separated themselves as a clear frontrunner just yet. Expect a much wider target distribution at the position this coming season, pending big changes in fall camp. Kobie Campbell is probably the wideout who made the best case for a bigger role in 2024.
  • There are moments when AJ Padgett looks really, really good. Physically he has the talent to play the position, it’s just been the mental lapses that have kept him from becoming a true challenge for the job. If he does settle in as the backup, which would be expected as of now, Rice fans should feel very comfortable with that outcome. He’s won games for the Owls in the past.
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Filed Under: AAC, Football, Premium, Reserve Tagged With: AJ Padgett, Boden Groen, Brad Baur, Braedon Nutter, Brant Banks, Chad Lindberg, Christian Francisco, Coleman Bennett, Daelen Alexander, Dean Connors, EJ Warner, Elijah Mojarro, Ethan Onianwa, John Long, Kobie Campbell, Landon Ransom, Lavel Dumont, Miguel Cedeno, practice notes, Quinton Jackson, Rawson MacNeill, Rice Football, Spencer Cassell, spring practice, Taji Atkins, Ty Morris, Weston Kropp

Rice Football Recruiting: Georgia transfer OL Chad Lindberg commits to Owls

April 16, 2024 By Matthew Bartlett

The first big Rice football recruiting pickup of the post-spring Transfer Portal cycle is in. Former Georgia offensive lineman Chad Lindberg has committed to the Owls.

An offensive line coach at heart, head coach Mike Bloomgren would be hard-pressed to ever say he has enough offensive linemen. Days removed from a spring game that featured a productive, but injury-plagued front line, reinforcements are coming. Former Georgia offensive lineman Chad Lindberg has committed to the Owls, the latest victory for the Rice football recruiting department.

A former four-star recruit from League City, Texas, Lindberg was a hot commodity in the 2020 recruiting cycle, ultimately choosing Georgia over Texas. After redshirting with the Bulldogs in 2020, he appeared in 22 games over the next three seasons, operating primarily as a backup and special teams member. Because of the frequency of how often Georgia steamrolled its opponents, though, Lindberg saw a fair amount of action.

Lindberg also marks the second straight season Rice has landed an offensive line transfer from the Power 5 ranks. Nebraska transfer Brant Branks started all 13 games for the Owls at left guard last season. He had been slated to transition to right tackle this spring and played well, but Lindberg’s addition might cause further shuffling on the Owls’ front five.

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Lindberg is a tackle by trade but should have the flexibility to kick inside if that’s how Rice opts to find their best five at the position. More than anything else, this move solidifies the Owls’ depth at the position, giving them at least two starting caliber options at every position, something this staff has been dreaming about since they arrived at South Main and a luxury among the Group of 5 ranks. Lindberg has two years of eligibility remaining.

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Filed Under: Football, Football Recruiting Tagged With: Chad Lindberg, Rice Football, Rice Football recruiting

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