
Baseball Hosts No. 16 LA Tech
4/8/2021 12:19:00 PM | Baseball
Owls Begin Five-Game Homestand At Reckling Park
Game 29 | vs. LA Tech, Friday, April 9, 6 pm
Game 30 | vs. LA Tech, Saturday, April 10, 1 pm (7 inn.; game one of DH)
Game 31 | vs. LA Tech, Saturday, April 10, tba (7 inn.; game two of DH)
Game 32 | vs. LA Tech, Sunday, April 11, 1 pm
Location: Reckling Park
Game Day Program: Online
Video Stream: CUSAtv
Listen Online: Audio
Live Stats: Here (all home games)
Series vs. Louisiana Tech: Rice leads 45-12 since 1969; Complete series listing
SEATING UPDATES AT RECKLING PARK - Seating at Reckling Park has been reduced in 2021 due to COVID-19 protocols and a limited number of reserved season tickets remain available as well as a limited amount of general single game tickets. Reserved seats have been assigned in a physically distanced manner and fans will be required to wear masks at all times unless actively eating or drinking. Fans are encouraged to review all of the protocols before attending the games this weekend.
LIMITED CONCESSIONS NOW AVAILABLE
A limited food menu featuring hot dogs and hamburgers will be available for home games at Reckling Park.
PARKING AT THE PARK - Parking is free in the Greenbriar Lot west of Rice Stadium and $5 in the Orange Lots (West Lot 3, 4 and 5).
SEASON TICKETS - Season tickets for the 2021 campaign are currently on sale. Season ticket members and donors who have purchased tickets for the 2021 season will then have their seats assigned in priority order based on Owl Club/season ticket status. Seat assignments are available now. Season ticket members can renew their seats online at Riceowls.com/myaccount and new season tickets can be purchased here. Group tickets will be made available, pending availability, on a first-come basis. Interested parties should fill out this form to indicate your interest in bringing a group to a game this season. Details on the confirmation of ticket purchases and seating locations will be emailed directly to season ticket members and student-athlete families. Current Rice students will receive emails with further information on how to access a limited number of tickets, which will be allocated on a first-come first-served basis. Any ticketing questions should be directed to the ticket office by calling 713-348-6957 or emailing tickets@rice.edu.
Watch League Games Online Via CUSAtv
Rice's Conference USA league games are slated for a live online video broadcast via CUSAtv. The broadcast is a subscription service which matches the home team's play-by-play audio with a video feed to create a television-like production on the Internet (either live or in an archived format). Games that have been selected for TV broadcasts and other platforms can alter the availability.
The Owl In logo represents the continued commitment of Rice Athletics' student-athletes, coaches, and staff to come together for positive change throughout our department, campus, and world. With increased efforts in education, policy development, and action as it relates to diversity, equity, inclusion, and social justice, members of the Rice Athletics community will become better equipped to ensure we can fulfill our department's desire to be a more inclusive and welcoming place. To learn more about being Owl In, visit RiceOwls.com/OwlIn.
Rice Play-By-Play Audio On The Web
Every Rice baseball game is scheduled for a live audio broadcast on the Internet at RiceOwls.com. Tune-in to the broadcast's pregame show 10 minutes before first pitch. Veteran J.P. Heath is now in his 13th season as the voice of the Owls.
Live Stats Links Online at RiceOwls.com
Links to live play-by-play text and statistics from every game, home and away, are posted on RiceOwls.com. Look for the links on the Rice Athletics front page, the weekly series preview, and/or the baseball schedule page.
Follow The Tweeting Rice Owls
The official Rice baseball Twitter account is @RiceBaseball while the Rice Athletics department is @RiceAthletics. Twitter is perhaps the fastest way to get weather-related changes to the schedule/updated start times.
Head Coach Matt Bragga
A 20-year veteran of the head coaching ranks, Matt Bragga was named the 21st head coach in Rice baseball history on June 15, 2018. He went 26-33 at Rice in his first season in 2019. The Owls were 2-14 when the 2020 season came to an abrupt end, but consider Rice's (non-conference) schedule featuring road series at Texas Tech and UC Irvine, plus another four games against Texas and Texas A&M, was rated as the 11th-toughest in all of Division I. Prior to Rice Bragga sent 15 years as the Head Coach at Tennessee Tech, building that program into one of the best in the Ohio Valley Conference. The four-time OVC Coach of the Year led the Golden Eagles to three NCAA Tournament appearances, winning six OVC championships in 10 years while reaching 40 or more wins in four of six seasons from 2013-2018. In 2018, he helped Tennessee Tech to its best season in school history, amassing a school and OVC-record 53 wins, the most in the country, while leading the team to the league's regular season title and its first-ever trip to the NCAA Super Regionals. The Jefferson, Ohio, native who played collegiately at Kentucky before a pro playing career, owns a Division I coaching record of 487-453-3. Bragga is aided by assistant coaches Cory Barton (Memphis, 2007, third year), Paul Janish (Rice, 2004; fourth year), and Trevor Putzig (Tenn Tech, 2018; first year).
Possible Starting Pitchers
Coach Bragga has announced the first three scheduled Owl starters for the LA Tech series. The starting pitcher for game four (Sunday) is TBA.
• Blake Brogdon (2-4, 5.80 ERA) has been the Owls' initial starting pitcher for each of the last five weekends. At Middle Tennessee (April 1) the right-hander worked a career-long 7.1 innings where he allowed just two runs while striking out seven, but he received just one run of offensive support. In an outing against Southern (March 19) he pitched 7.0 innings with a career-high 10 strikeouts to earn his second Rice victory. In 2021 Brogdon has averaged 8.6 strikeouts per 9.0 innings and maintained a 3-to-1 strikeouts-to-walks ratio. In four appearances in 2020 Brogdon held opposing hitters to a composite .194 batting average. His hard work he has put in since his debut season has caught the coaches' attention. Prior to Rice the 6-foot-2 Brogdon was a local prep standout at Cypress Woods High School just northwest of Houston.
• It may have taken a long time in finally arriving, but Roel Garcia (1-1, 4.21 ERA) is back in 2021 and ready to have his first full collegiate season since 2018. By design this year Garcia worked just 4.0 innings in his first two starts against HBU and Louisiana. He moved up 5.0 innings against Texas A&M-Corpus Christi on March 6 and had 4.0 in a 7-inning game vs. UTSA in the C-USA weekend. Garcia has maintained a 4.21 ERA in 25.2 innings while striking out 21 and scattering eight walks. In 2020, Garcia had just one outing where he struck out three of the eight batters he faced in 2.0 innings at west coach power Cal Irvine. Things were looking up, but then the 2020 season came to an unexpected end and he had to replay the waiting game. The Deer Park, Texas, native is a veteran in his fifth year with the program, but he was sidelined all of 2019. Even without pitching in a single game in 2019, that did not stop the Toronto Blue Jays from selecting him in the 27th round of that year's MLB Draft. The 6-foot-4 right-hander had an improved second season of Division I baseball in 2018, finishing among the Rice staff leaders in starts (tied second), wins (tied third), innings (fourth), strikeouts (fifth) and opponents' batting average (fifth). He made 15 pitching appearances with 11 starts, including six times in Conference USA league games. Garcia totaled 52.0 innings with starts against high-RPI teams Texas A&M, TCU, Southern Miss and Florida Atlantic (twice). He pitched at least 5.0 innings in a game six times. Garcia was tabbed to be a significant part of Matt Bragga's debut Rice season in 2019, but the big right-hander was lost for the year in a preseason practice in January.
• Mitchell Holcomb (4-2, 4.24 ERA) is a graduate transfer from the Ivy League (Penn) who is originally from Georgetown, Texas. Holcomb started the opening game of the 2021 season vs. HBU and due to a quirk in the schedule he wound up with the demanding assignment of starting three games in a 12-day stretch. In his previous four starts he has maintained a 2.20 ERA, a .226 opponents' batting average and a 9.3-to-1 strikeouts-to-walks ratio in a combined 28.2 frames. Last week against Middle Tennessee Holcomb notched his and the staff's second complete game in as many weeks. By simply joining Rice he became one of the most experienced Division I pitchers on the Owl staff, owning a total of 31 career appearances, including 28 starts, totaling 163.0 innings prior to Rice. In four years at Penn he maintained a 4.03 career ERA and averaged 7.8 strikeouts per 9.0 innings of work. Holcomb made two starts on the mound for the Quakers in abbreviated 2020 season totaling 13.0 innings. He fired 8.0 shutout innings scattering four hits and striking out eight for a road victory at Conference USA foe FIU. In the 2020 season he held opposing hitters to a composite .213 batting average. A highlight from earlier in his career was fanning 12 batters at Yale in 2018. The Texas native is a 2016 graduate of Meridian High School (located between Fort Worth and Waco). He was a two-time first team All-State selection who led the Yellow Jackets to back-to-back 2A state titles in 2015-2016.
Previously: Owls & Blue Raiders Finish In 9-9 Tie In 12 Innings
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — The Rice and Middle Tennessee baseball teams battled for 12 innings, and implemented the NCAA's new extra inning playing rules to avoid a possible tie, but the league foes finished in a 9-9 deadlock in the final game of a Conference USA weekend series Saturday afternoon in Murfreesboro, Tenn. The same teams have already been in the same scenario, in the same location in fact, to finish in a 5-5 tie in nine innings in April of 2018. Saturday's contest went three extra frames but was ended due to a travel curfew in the series' final game. Trailing 7-5 to start the top of the ninth Rice rallied for three runs to take an 8-7 lead on a pair of hits and a fielding error. The Owls could not close out the win in the bottom of the inning, however, and MTSU tied the score 8-8. The teams started the 10th using the new extra-inning format of starting the frame with a runner in scoring position. Neither team scored in the tenth, but both were able to push across a run in the 11th to make it 9-9. The game ended by pre-game agreement after a scoreless 12th inning.
Winning Is Always In Fashion
For the fashion-minded, Rice's 2021 W-L records while wearing the various uniform combinations is as follows:
1-0 in gradient blue jersey with white pants
4-2 in gradient white jersey
2-1 in white jersey, 'Rice' in blue Old English
1-1 in blue jersey, 'Rice' in white Old English and gray pants
1-1 in all gray ('Rice' in blue Old English)
2-3 in pinstripes
1-2-1 in blue top, 'Rice' in Old English and pinstripe pants
1-2 in gray "R" top
0-2 in gradient blue jersey with gray pants
Preseason Accolades For Comeaux
Rice's Braden Comeaux was selected to 2021 Preseason All-Conference USA Baseball Team in the league's annual head coaches' poll, the C-USA office announced on Feb. 11. The Rice graduate who is playing with an added year of eligibility led the Owls in hitting (.349) and slugging percentage (.535) in 2020. He was also second on the on the squad in runs scored (7), on-base average (.404) and home runs (1) – all while playing in just ten of the team's 16 games during that abbreviated collegiate season. Comeaux reached base safely in eight of his ten games played and batted .333 with runners in scoring position. Comeaux has long-had the full attention of the C-USA head-coaches, but now his reputation is growing. On Feb. 10 he was one of just 48 players from across the country named to the preseason watch list for the prestigious 2021 Bragan Collegiate Slugger Award. From its headquarters in the DFW Metroplex, the Bobby Bragan Youth Foundation has combined a passion for baseball and providing youngsters with the incentive and opportunity to pursue a college education for more than 25 years. At the conclusion of the season one position player will be presented with the foundation's Slugger Award. Since its inception in 2017 the award is based on performance at the plate, academics and personal integrity.
The C-USA Preseason Poll
In the 2021 C-USA head coaches preseason poll Rice was selected third in the new divisional format being introduced this year. Here are the results of the league's 12 head coaches (first place votes in parentheses):
WEST
1. Southern Miss (10)
2. Louisiana Tech (2)
3. Rice
4. Middle Tennessee
5. UTSA
6. UAB
EAST
1. Florida Atlantic (10)
2. Old Dominion (1)
3. FIU (1)
4. WKU
5. Charlotte
6. Marshall
RICE SINCE 1999 - Using the 1999 season as the starting point (the year the NCAA expanded the postseason tournament field to 64 teams with the current Super Regional format), Rice baseball has maintained one of the nation's top win percentages over the last 21 years. Here's a closer look at the country's winningest programs from 1999-2020 (note: this listing will not be updated to include games played in 2021):
Team Years Wins Loses Ties PCT
Florida State 22 1019 391 1 .723
North Carolina 22 948 406 1 .700
LSU 22 950 432 6 .687
South Carolina 22 938 438 0 .682
Coastal Carolina 22 896 418 2 .682
Rice 22 924 435 2 .680
Miami (Fla.) 22 894 421 3 .679
Oral Roberts 22 849 416 0 .671
Cal St. Fullerton 22 881 434 0 .670
Texas 22 894 450 1 .665
Oregon St. 22 811 422 3 .657
Louisville 22 866 453 1 .656
Arizona St. 22 805 422 2 .656
Georgia Tech 22 858 456 1 .653
Virginia 22 840 446 3 .653
Florida 22 888 474 2 .652
Clemson 22 891 478 1 .651








