San Antonio Express-News

Owls view QB pressure as vital to earning first win

- By Glynn A. Hill STAFF WRITER glynn.hill@chron.com Twitter: @glynn_hill

HOUSTON — Rice coach Mike Bloomgren references the games on his team’s schedule as opportunit­ies.

When Rice (06, 02 in Conference USA) travels to the Alamodome to face UTSA (24, 12) on Saturday, the team will be looking to curb its trend of missed chances.

“I think, ironically enough, (with) every loss there’s an added intensity,” Owls defensive end Trey Schuman said. “On one hand, that’s kind of bad because you want that same intensity all the time, but guys know we’re pressed for time. We want six wins to get to a bowl game, we have six games left. This intensity that we need to have for this game needs to be more than anything we’ve had the rest of the year.”

For Schuman and the defense, that endeavor starts with pressure.

“Getting to the quarterbac­k,” Schuman said of the unit’s focus through the bye week. “We don’t have the sacks and the production in the pass game that we want to, and we want to be able to work well with the back end to stop the quarterbac­k and to stop them on third downs because we feel as a defense that our thirddown efficiency is below par right now.”

Rice opponents are converting half of their thirddown attempts against the Owls’ defense (13th in CUSA).

Schuman also emphasized the importance of field awareness and knowing where the quarterbac­k is at all times.

It’s something of particular priority against UTSA, whose top two signalcall­ers have combined for 452 rushing yards.

On Monday, UTSA quarterbac­k Frank Harris was ruled out for the season with an upper body injury. But Lowell Narcisse has accounted for 326 rushing yards and three touchdowns.

The Roadrunner­s rank last in CUSA in passing offense, which could bode well for a Rice team that was beaten through the air in the first half of its most recent loss, 3520 at AlabamaBir­mingham.

“I expect them to play pretty good,” Owls running back Aston Walter said of UTSA, which beat Rice 203 in a game where both passing attacks struggled last year. “They came out last year had great energy, made a lot of plays, but I think that we’re a lot more developed this year.”

Offensivel­y, Bloomgren spent part of the bye week addressing thirddown conversion rates — especially midrange conversion­s.

“We talked a lot about situationa­l football,” he said. “Offensivel­y, I don’t know that I’ve ever been a part of an offense where you’re converting less on third and 4 to 6 than you are on third and 7 to 10. We’re doing such a better job staying ahead of the sticks than we did a year ago, we’re just not converting those things consistent­ly enough.”

The Owls have the third lowest thirddown conversion rate (31.46) and the second worst redzone conversion rate (72.22) in CUSA.

Despite the team’s improvemen­t, that reality has proven most costly.

“It’s our third conference game and obviously both teams are in need of a win,” Bloomgren said. “I want so badly for us to put it together and play our kind of football and come out victorious this Saturday.”

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