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Rice Football: What I’m watching in Spring Practices — Patreon Q&A

February 28, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice football kicks off spring practice soon. This month’s Patreon Q&A focuses on what I’ll be following closely during these sessions.

In season or not, Rice football frequently appears as a focal point in these Q&A posts. Our February Q&A follows suit, focusing on the upcoming weeks of spring practices and which items I’ll personally be keeping a close eye on as the weeks progress. Practices are currently slated to start sometime in early March.

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

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Filed Under: Featured, Football, Premium Tagged With: Blake Boenisch, Bradley Rozner, Braedon Nutter, Brandt Peterson, Cedric Patterson, Cole Garcia, Conor Hunt, Derek Ferraro, Elroyal Morris, Enoch Gota, Ethan Onianwa, Faee Pepe, Isaac Klarkowski, Isaiah Esdale, Jake Bailey, John Long, Jovoni Johnson, Luke McCaffrey, Mike Bloomgren, Mike Leone, Naeem Smith, Regan Riddle, Rice Football, Sam Crawford, Tim Horn, TJ McMahon, Trey Phillippi, Wiley Green

Rice Football: 2022 Spring semester roster notes

February 5, 2022 By Matthew Bartlett

The Rice football roster has seen some significant changes since the Owls last played a game. Here are the most prominent adjustments.

Roster churn impacts every college program in the country and the changes have only been exacerbated by the ever-changing transfer climate. Rice football has experienced a large number of adjustments to its roster from where things left off last season. Some of those shifts can be attributed to transfers, others involve players who have left the program for one reason or another.

This update highlights which key players have been left off the most recently released roster as of the end of January as well as incoming spring enrollees and various notes regarding position shifts, number changes and more.

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For those checking in for the first time, or those returning, a quick programming note. Special updates like this are reserved for our subscribers. Get access to all practice notes, features and more insights 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: Andrew Bird, Brandt Peterson, Dean Connors, George Nyakwol, Isaiah Esdale, Jason White, Kebreyun Page, Luke McCaffrey, Rice Football, Robert French, Sam Crawford, Tim Horn, TJ McMahon, Wiley Green

Unpacking the Rice football QB carousel — November 2021 Patreon Q&A

November 29, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

Understanding the Rice football quarterback usage took center stage in this month’s line of questions. How were they deployed, and why?

Four different quarterbacks saw action for Rice football in 2021 and injuries told just part of the story. The genesis of this overview comes from a valid, and probing question: “Why did the Owls not use TJ McMahon during the year?” Did the coaching staff not know what he could do? Did they not trust him? And how did his usage fit in the big picture? We’ll unpack all of those angles here.

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

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

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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Jake Constantine, Luke McCaffrey, Mike Bloomgren, Rice Football, TJ McMahon, Wiley Green

“Tangible Progress” and the future for Rice Football, Mike Bloomgren

November 27, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

A thrilling comeback has Rice football and head coach Mike Bloomgren feeling good, but what’s next for Bloomgren and for the Owls?

Rice football head coach Mike Bloomgren coached his first game at South Main on August 25, 2018. On that day, his team trailed Prairie View A&M 28-19 entering the fourth quarter before winning on a walk-off field goal by Jack Fox.

The Owls would face many fourth-quarter deficits from that point onward. Up until Saturday, they hadn’t overcome a margin of as much as a single point since that opening game. In fact, Rice entered their final game of the 2021 season 1-31 when trailing at any point in the fourth quarter.

So when Rice quarterback TJ McMahon, who opened the season as the fourth-stringer on the depth chart, tossed an interception with the home team already trailing by 10 points with just under 10 minutes to play, things looked bleak.

Then the Rice defense forced a punt and McMahon and Co. unleashed a stunning five-play, 92-yard touchdown drive. The defense picked Louisiana Tech off once again, forced another three-and-out and a long punt return from Sean Fresch set McMahon up for his second fourth-quarter touchdown pass and a remarkable come-from-behind victory.

The victory was the Owl’s fourth of the season and, as Bloomgren was apt to mention postgame, the most wins Rice football has had since 2015. What does that mean for this program moving forward?

“It’s happening. It’s not happening at the pace that we want it to. It’s not happening at the pace I want it to, but it’s happening,” Bloomgren said with an assured, yet measured enthusiasm.

Bloomgren then steered the conversation back to the senior class. “It was so important for them to leave the program better than they found it and I think they can tangibly say they did,” he contended. “Their freshman year they had one win. Their next year they had two and now we’re building. Again not at the pace any of us want, but we’re building and I think their impact is going to be felt and remembered in this program for a while to come.”

More: Rice Football rallies to knock off LA Tech

Four wins are, indeed, tangible progress. Add in two overtime contests and somehow account for the loss of several defensive starters who missed the bulk of the season and Rice football could be as close to that next step as many between the hedges believe themselves to be.

Rice doesn’t play Texas or Arkansas next season, but they do play USC. The rest of the non-conference slate includes Houston, McNeese State and a Louisiana team that might have a new head coach in the coming weeks. Other C-USA programs on their schedule like UTSA and WKU both project to have massive amounts of turnover given how many seniors fill their rosters. There is opportunity.

Even if his moment in the spotlight is brief, McMahon seemed fully in touch with its significance. “I think it just shows that we can hang with anybody we play with,” he said, before going on to address a looming question the Rice fanbase desperately wants to know, adding, “I think in the next year we’ll be where we want to be, at the least.”

That promised land includes a bowl trip. It speaks of a season that in which, in Bloomgren’s own words could see this program get to “six, seven, eight, nine, 10 wins, whatever that looks like next year,” provided they find a way to turn those near misses into wins, no matter what it takes.

The ascent has been slow, but it’s there. Bloomgren has championed process since he arrived at Rice. The next step is to take a hard look in the mirror and to modify the process to squeeze out every win this program is truly capable of achieving. Even if that means some uncomfortable conversations.

“Somehow, we gotta find a way to do it,” Bloomgren said. Indeed they do. It started with winning one more on Saturday, reminding all this program is certainly capable of rediscovering winning ways. Where next? Only time will tell.

Photo credit Maria Lysaker
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Filed Under: Archive, Football Tagged With: Mike Bloomgren, Rice Football, TJ McMahon

TJ McMahon, defense lift Rice Football to come-from-behind win

November 27, 2021 By Matthew Bartlett

It wasn’t easy, but a Rice football fought to the end for a gritty win over Louisiana Tech, capping off a 4-win season for the Owls.

Midway through the fourth quarter, Rice football quarterback TJ McMahon stepped up in the pocket and unleashed a bullet… right into the waiting arms of a Louisiana Tech defensive back. A turnover committed by the former fourth-string quarterback with the season on the line seemed a fitting way to a season that did not go according to plan. Except that’s not where this story ends.

McMahon and Rice needed to be perfect from that point onward to win. They were. Not only did Rice rally to overcome the deficit, they held on, intercepting Louisiana Tech with the clocking winding down to clinch an improbable victory. Here are a few immediate reactions from the game:

Secondary slump continues

The Rice secondary has been picked apart by their opponents this year. Seeing Bailey Zappe carve them up a few weeks ago was understandable, but allowing the likes of JD Head to lead a mediocre Louisiana Tech offense up and down the field was particularly discouraging. Injuries or not, this defense was largely unable to find a way to get off the field on third and medium and third and long, scenarios in which they should be more likely to succeed than not.

A former Pearland High school product, Head entered Saturday with minimal collegiate experience. He threw for 196 yards and two touchdowns against UAB earlier this season. Against Rice, he more or less had this way. He wasn’t perfect, but he guided the Bulldogs down the field with regularity.

The secondary stepped up and made plays when they needed to. Had it not been for two fourth quarter picks, Rice would not have won this game. It’s better to win ugly than not win, so this unit should get credit for the outcome on Saturday.

The Roost Podcast: Stay tuned for the game recap this week – Rice football vs UTEP

Getting De’Braylon Carrol and Treshawn Chamberlain back next season will help, but it’s starting to look like something more drastic needs to be done. Rice has done a fairly decent job of keeping receivers in front of them and limiting the 75-yard bomb touchdowns, but its come at the expense of being picked apart at the intermediate levels of the field.

Some sort of answer needs to be found going forward. It’s not fair to blame the Owls’ struggles on a unit that largely carried them for the prior two seasons, but had the Owls been just a little bit more sturdy on the back end, Rice probably squeezes out another win, or two.

Slow and steady, with some pop

Luke McCaffrey played well during his first start in more than two months’ time, showcasing patience through the air and incredible vision on the ground. Head coach Mike Bloomgren mentioned earlier this week that McCaffrey didn’t fully comprehend the full breadth of the offense, but he did showcase a remarkable ability to execute the plays he was asked to run on Saturday.

Rice mixed a heavy rotation of running backs with some razzle-dazzle and picked their moments when it came time to take shots down the field. The result was an offense that, while not quite electric, was able to produce enough explosive plays to take pressure off the running game and open up space for McCaffrey to maneuver.

The first home run was a perfectly blocked run by Cameron Montgomery:

💨 Can't catch Cam. 💨pic.twitter.com/KyU0gpuWUZ

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) November 27, 2021

Rice came back quickly afterward to take the lead thanks to McCaffrey getting just enough mustard on this pass to Cedric Patterson, and perhaps a fortunate whiff by the Louisiana Tech defensive back.

#McCaffreyMagic pic.twitter.com/WjoIhLtd3q

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) November 27, 2021

The Rice football offense is still a ways away from putting up video game numbers, but they’ve showcased they can get points without needing a 16-play, 8:00 minute drive. The quick-strike ability is an important sign of growth this season.

And then there was this: a perfect strike from backup TJ McMahon to Cedric Patterson to go ahead in the fourth quarter.

Look at the grit on this TD. McMahon and Patterson both fight through contact and make the play.pic.twitter.com/XHsJaZ4rVm

— The Roost (@AtTheRoost) November 27, 2021

Check the clock

After weathering the early onslaught, the Rice defense picked up a few stops and the offense adding some touchdowns. All was working well with Rice driving and looking to extend its lead. Rice faced 1st-and-10 from the Louisiana Tech 36-yard line with a minute and a half to play in the first half and three timeouts.

Not only did Rice not score, but the Owls did manage to burn through the 90 seconds left on the clock quicker than a West Texas brush fire. Rice found themselves attempting a hail mary on fourth and 10 with two seconds on the clock and multiple timeouts left uncalled.

Clock management is a learned skill, but this isn’t the first time this season Rice has utilized their timeouts ineffectively. Rice spiked the ball multiple times on the fourth quarterback comeback drive against North Texas despite having timeouts to burn.

Even if they had managed minimal yardage and settled for a 40ish yard field goal, Rice had a golden opportunity to go into the break leading by a touchdown or more with the opportunity to extend that lead when they received the kickoff to start the second half. Instead, McCaffrey took a sack and Rice ended up with nothing. For a team looking to learn how to win, they have to start winning on the margins. That includes managing the clock more effectively.

Out on a high note

This game was important for the seniors, for players like Jordan Myers and Elijah Garcia who saw this program bottom out and slowly begin to climb back upward. Rice football hasn’t won four games in a season until this year. It’s not the bowl trip they aspired to, but it is tangible concrete evidence that these seniors have left things better than they found them.

For those remaining, it speaks of a future still in progress. Yes, there are questions — there will be plenty of time in the offseason to address those — but for those searching for reasons to keep the faith, Saturday delivered. This mixture of four wins, two overtime losses and a slew of injuries will prove to be tough to swallow, but the framework to become what this program seeks to become is still in place.

Athletic Director Joe Karlgaard and head coach Mike Bloomgren must sift through the mess and determine what changes need to be made for Rice football to take that next step. Just about everything should be on the table, but expect the approach to be as measured and thoughtful as it is thorough. No hasty decisions will be made, but proof of course corrections will be needed. This team is capable of more, and everyone at South Main believes it.

Digging deeper

Every week we’ll have a stat, storyline or key learning from the game reserved for our subscribers.

Find a quarterback, please

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
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Filed Under: Archive, Football, Premium Tagged With: Cam Montgomery, Cedric Patterson, game recap, Luke McCaffrey, Rice Football, TJ McMahon

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