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Rice Owls football

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 65.38.99.226 (talk) at 18:26, 8 December 2014 (→‎Rice Bowl Game History). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rice Owls football
2014 Rice Owls football team
First season1912
Head coach
8th season, 47–53 (.470)
StadiumRice Stadium (Rice University)|Rice Stadium
(capacity: 47,000)
Year built1950
Field surfaceFieldTurf
LocationHouston, Texas, USA
LeagueNCAA Division I FBS
DivisionWest
Past conferencesSouthwest
(1915-1995)
WAC
(1996-2004)
All-time record428–548–32 (.440)
Bowl record6–4 (.600)
Conference titles8 (1934, 1937, 1946, 1949, 1953, 1957, 1994, 2013)
Division titles2 (2008, 2013)
Consensus All-Americans6
ColorsBlue and Gray
   
Fight songRice Fight
MascotSammy the Owl
Marching bandMarching Owl Band
Websitewww.riceowls.com

The Rice Owls football team represents Rice University in NCAA Division I college football. The Owls have competed in Conference USA's Western Division since 2005. Rice Stadium, built in 1950, hosts the Owls' home football games.

Venue

Rice Stadium

Rice Stadium was built in 1950, and has been the home of Owls football ever since. It hosted the NFL Super Bowl on January 1974. It replaced the old Rice Field (now Rice Track/Soccer Stadium) to increase seating. Total seating capacity in the current stadium was reduced from 70,000 to 47,000 before the 2006 season. The endzone seating benches were removed and covered with tarps, and all of the wooden bleachers were replaced with new, metal seating benches in 2006, as well.

History

1954 Cotton Bowl Classic

The Owls played in the eighteenth Cotton Bowl Classic against the Crimson Tide of Alabama. The game featured one of the most famous plays in college football history[1] when Rice's Dickey Moegle (later Maegle) burst free on a sweep play, and on his way down the sideline, was tackled by Tommy Lewis, who had come off the Alabama sideline without his helmet to tackle Moegle. Referee Cliff Shaw saw Lewis come off the bench and gave the Owls the 95 yard touchdown. Rice would win the game 28-6, with the only Crimson Tide score coming from Lewis. The yardage added to Moegle's 265 yards rushing, a Cotton Bowl Classic record that would stand until Tony Temple's effort in 2008. This would be the Owls' last bowl win until the 2008 Texas Bowl, a win which also secured the Owls their first 10-win season since 1949.[2]

Kennedy Speech

Kennedy at Rice University - GPN-2000-001618

Rice Stadium also hosted a speech by John F. Kennedy on September 12, 1962. In it, he used the Rice football team to challenge America to send a man to the moon.

But why, some say, the moon? Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask why climb the highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? Why does Rice play Texas? We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too.[3]

Coaching history

Name Seasons Overall Overall % Bowls Bowls %
David Bailiff 2007–present 30–44 40.5% 2–1 66.7%
Todd Graham 2006 7–6 53.8% 0–1 0.0%
Ken Hatfield 1994–2005 55–78–1 41.0% -- --
Fred Goldsmith 1989-93 23–31–1 42.7% -- --
Jerry Berndt 1986-88 6–27–0 18.2% -- --
Watson Brown 1984-85 4–18–0 18.2% -- --
Ray Alborn 1978-83 13–53–0 19.7% -- --
Homer Rice 1976-77 4–18–0 18.2% -- --
Al Conover 1972-75 14–28–2 34.1% -- --
Bill Peterson 1971 3–7–1 31.8% -- --
Bo Hagan 1967-70 12–27–1 31.3% -- --
Jess Neely 1940-66 144–124–10 53.6% 3–3–0 50.0%
Jimmy Kitts 1934-39 33–29–4 53.0% 1–0–0 100.0%
Jack Meagher 1929-33 26–26–0 50.0% -- --
Claude Rothgeb 1928 2–7–0 22.2% -- --
John Heisman 1924-27 14–18–3 44.3% -- --
John Anderson 1918 1–5–1 21.4% -- --
Phillip Arbuckle 1912-17,'19-23 51–25–8 65.5% -- --

Conference Championships

Southwest Conference: 1934, 1937, 1946*, 1949, 1953*, 1957, 1994*

Conference USA: 2013

* shared

Rice Bowl Game History

Bowl Game History Result
1938 Cotton Bowl Classic W, Rice 28 Colorado 14
1947 Orange Bowl W, Rice 8 Tennessee 0
1950 Cotton Bowl Classic W, Rice 27 North Carolina 13
1954 Cotton Bowl Classic W, Rice 28 Alabama 6
1958 Cotton Bowl Classic L, Rice 7 Navy 20
1961 Sugar Bowl L, Rice 6 Ole Miss 14
1961 Bluebonnet Bowl L, Rice 7 Kansas 33
2006 New Orleans Bowl L, Rice 17 Troy 41
2008 Texas Bowl W, Rice 38 Western Michigan 14
2012 Armed Forces Bowl W, Rice 33 Air Force 14
2013 Liberty Bowl L, Rice 7 Mississippi State 44
2014 Hawaii Bowl TBD, Rice vs Fresno State

All-time record vs. CUSA teams

Official record (including any NCAA imposed vacates and forfeits) against all current CUSA opponents as of the start of the 2014 season:

Opponent Won Lost Tied Percentage Streak First Last
Charlotte (joining in 2015) 0 0 0 - - -
Florida Atlantic 1 0 0 1.000 Won 1 2013 2013
FIU 1 0 0 1.000 Won 1 2014 2014
Louisiana Tech 4 4 0 .500 Lost 1 1965 2014
Marshall 2 4 0 .333 Lost 1 2007 2014
Middle Tennessee 0 0 0 - - -
North Texas 3 2 0 .600 Won 1 1988 2014
Old Dominion 0 1 0 .000 Lost 1 2014 2014
Southern Miss 4 1 0 .800 Won 2 2007 2014
UAB 3 2 0 .600 Won 2 2005 2013
UTEP 12 6 0 .667 Won 4 1996 2014
UTSA 3 0 0 1.000 Won 3 2012 2014
Western Kentucky 0 0 0 - - -
Totals 33 20 0 .623

Rivalries

SMU

Rice and SMU had been in the same conference with each other from 1918 through 2012, and have played each other 90 times as of 2012 with SMU leading the series 48-41-1. The rivalry is due to the fact that Rice and SMU were two of four private schools in the old Southwest Conference (Baylor and TCU were the others). Rice and SMU were also the two smallest schools in the conference, were located in the two largest cities of any teams in the conference (Houston and Dallas, respectively), and have historically been considered the two best private universities in Texas.

Rice-SMU: All-Time Records
Games played First meeting Last meeting RICE win RICE loss Ties Win %
90 November 17, 1916 (Won 146–3) November 17, 2012 (Won 36–14) [1] 41 48 1 45.5%

Houston

Rice participates in a crosstown rivalry with Houston. UH and Rice play annually for the Bayou Bucket, a weathered bucket found by former Rice guard Fred Curry at an antique shop. Curry had it designed into a trophy for $310. The two universities are separated by five miles in Houston. The Cougars lead the series 29-11.

Houston-Rice: All-Time Records
Games played First meeting Last meeting RICE win RICE loss Ties Win %
34 September 11, 1971 (lost 21–23) September 21, 2013 (lost 26–31) [2] 11 29 0 27.5%
Rice and Texas play in 2006.

Texas

Rice and Texas have maintained a one-sided rivalry beginning in the early days of the Southwest Conference. Texas' 28 consecutive victories from 1966–1993 represents the sixth longest single-opponent winning streak in college football history. In 1994, in a nationally televised ESPN game, Rice scored a major upset win over Texas, but since then Texas has resumed series dominance. Despite the dissolution of the Southwest Conference, Texas and Rice still play on a "near annual" basis. Texas is a public university that enrolls 50,201 total students (5th largest in the US as of 2007) and over 37,000 undergraduates. Rice is a private university and enrolls 3,051 undergraduates.

Texas-Rice: All-Time Records
Games played First meeting Last meeting Rice win Rice loss Ties Win %
103 October 17, 1914 (lost 0–41) September 3, 2011 (lost 34–9) 21 71 1 18.8%

Notable players

College Football Hall of Fame

Name Position Years Inducted Notes
Buddy Dial End 1956-1958 1993 was his team’s co-captain, Most Valuable Player, and was consensus All-America
John Heisman Coach 1892-1927 1954 Inducted for his career as a coach at Oberlin, Akron, Auburn, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Pennsylvania, Washington & Jefferson, Rice
Weldon Humble Guard 1941-1943, 1946 1961 He was a consensus All- America choice. Like most athletes of his time, Weldon was required to suspend his career for military service during World War II.
Dick Maegle Halfback 1952-1954 1979 He was consensus All-America and academic All-America in 1954
Jess Neely Coach 1924-1966 1971 Inducted for his career as a coach at Rhodes, Clemson, Rice
Bill Wallace Halfback 1932, 1934-1935 1978 Wallace was Rice's initial first team All-America selection
James "Froggy" Williams End 1946-1949 1965 a consensus All-American and was also selected to the Cotton Bowl’s All-Decade team for the 1950s
Tommy Kramer Quarterback 1972-1976 2012 Senior Bowl MVP and 1976 George Martin Award winner

Pro Football Hall of Fame

Rice All-Americans

Name Position All-America
Bill Wallace B 1934
H.J. Nichols G 1944
Weldon Humble G 1946
Froggy Williams E 1949
Joe Watson C 1949
Bill Howton E 1951
John Hudson T 1953
Kosse Johnson B 1953
Dicky Maegle HB 1954
King Hill QB 1957
Buddy Dial E 1958
Malcolm Walker C 1964
Tommy Kramer QB 1976
Steve Kidd P 1985
Trevor Cobb HB 1991;1992
Charles Torello OG 1997
Jarett Dillard WR 2006;2008
Kyle Martens P 2010

Former Rice Players currently in The NFL

Name Position Draft Round (Overall) Current Team Years in the NFL
James Casey FB 5 (152) Eagles 5
Phillip Gaines CB 3 (87) Chiefs R
Vance McDonald TE 2 (55) 49ers 2
Cheta Ozougwu OLB 7 (254) Saints 3
Andrew Sendejo S UD Vikings 3
Scott Solomon DE 7th (211) Buccaneers 3
Luke Willson TE 5th (158) Seahawks 2

Other former players

Future non-conference opponents

2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
at Texas at Stanford vs Stanford at Wake Forest vs Baylor
at Baylor at Army at Northwestern vs Northwestern vs Texas A&M
vs Army vs Baylor vs Army at Hawaii

[4]

References

  1. ^ Dickey Moegle in the 1954 Cotton Bowl Classic. Article. Retrieved on December 29, 2008.
  2. ^ Associated Press (2008-12-30). "Rice rolls Western Michigan for first bowl win since '54". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2008-12-31. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ http://er.jsc.nasa.gov/seh/ricetalk.htm
  4. ^ "Rice Owls Football Schedules and Future Schedules". fbschedules.com. Retrieved 2014-06-25.