Rice vs Texas State College Football Preview: Time, TV, Key Players

Rice vs Texas State Armed Forces Bowl preview
Credit: Getty Images

The Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl brings an all-Texas matchup to Fort Worth — a clash of tempo, styles, and late-season momentum.

Game details

  • Matchup: Rice Owls (5–7) vs Texas State Bobcats (6–6)
  • Bowl: Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl
  • Venue: Amon G. Carter Stadium, Fort Worth, Texas
  • Kickoff: 1:00 p.m. ET (10:00 a.m. PT / 12:00 p.m. CT)
  • TV/Streaming: ESPN (and streaming via the ESPN app)

If you want the official broadcast listing and live coverage hub, ESPN’s college football pages typically carry the latest channel and game information in one place. ESPN College Football

The quick read

This bowl sets up as a stylistic tug-of-war. Rice spent the season leaning into a run-first identity that tries to shorten games and protect a defense that has struggled to keep teams off the scoreboard. Texas State, meanwhile, plays faster and has been far more explosive — the kind of team that can turn a single mistake into a two-score swing before the other sideline can catch its breath.

Add the bowl-season wild card — opt-outs, portal movement, and motivation — and it’s the kind of matchup that can swing quickly. Rice enters without starting quarterback Chase Jenkins (transfer portal), which puts extra pressure on the Owls’ ground game to keep the chains moving and the clock bleeding.

Recent form and momentum

Rice arrives after a rough finish, dropping back-to-back games, including a lopsided loss in its final outing. Texas State’s trajectory has been the opposite: the Bobcats closed with a three-game winning streak and showed they can score in bunches when their offense gets rolling.

The programs have also seen each other recently in bowl season. This is a rematch of the 2023 First Responder Bowl, a game Texas State won decisively. That history doesn’t decide Friday’s result — rosters and contexts change fast — but it adds an edge to an already local-flavored matchup.

Key players to watch

Texas State: QB Brad Jackson

If there’s a single reason Texas State looks dangerous, it’s the production (and flexibility) from Brad Jackson. He threw for 3,050 yards with 18 passing touchdowns, and he’s also a major factor on the ground with 692 rushing yards and 16 rushing scores. When he’s comfortable, Texas State can punish defenses both vertically and with designed runs that stress contain.

Texas State: RB Lincoln Pare + WR Beau Sparks

The Bobcats can lean on balance. Lincoln Pare powered the run game with 1,022 rushing yards and 11 touchdowns. In the passing game, Beau Sparks led the way with 1,113 receiving yards and 9 touchdowns — a steady target who can turn broken coverages into quick points.

Rice: RB Quinton Jackson

Rice’s path almost always starts with the run, and Quinton Jackson (team-high 811 rushing yards, 6 touchdowns) is the headliner. The Owls have spread carries around all season, with multiple players contributing on the ground — a key detail for a scheme built on persistence, rhythm, and wearing defenses down.

Rice: WR Aaron Turner + defensive anchors

Through the air, Rice’s production has been limited compared with most FBS offenses, but Aaron Turner has been the most reliable option (374 receiving yards, 53 receptions, 3 TD). Defensively, Rice has leaned on tackle volume from Ashton Awe (around 100 tackles) and pass-rush flashes from T. Anyanwu (team-high 5 sacks). For Texas State, linebacker T. Payne has been a tackling machine (around 102 tackles), while K. Alexander has led the edge pressure (about 4 sacks).

How Rice can win

Rice’s blueprint is straightforward: shorten the game, keep possessions limited, and make every drive feel expensive. That means staying ahead of the chains with efficient rushing, avoiding negative plays, and converting on third-and-manageable. If the Owls fall behind early, the game can tilt quickly — not just because of the scoreboard, but because chasing points is the opposite of their comfort zone.

The other must-have is discipline. Against a quarterback who can beat you two ways, missed fits and blown contain turn into chunk gains. Rice doesn’t need perfection, but it does need a game that stays within one or two scores into the second half.

How Texas State can win

Texas State’s best version looks like pace plus balance. If the Bobcats can start fast — even just a couple of early scoring drives — they force Rice to abandon the slow-cooker approach and play in a game that becomes wider and louder with every possession. Establishing the run with Pare also sets up cleaner throwing windows for Jackson, especially if Rice’s defense is forced to creep extra bodies toward the line.

The biggest danger for Texas State is letting Rice dictate tempo. If the Owls are churning clock, converting fourth-and-short, and keeping Jackson on the sideline, the margin for error tightens. But if Texas State turns this into a track meet, the Bobcats’ offensive ceiling becomes the story.

Prediction

The matchup points toward Texas State controlling the script more often than not — particularly with its quarterback’s dual-threat impact and the way the Bobcats can score in clusters. Rice can absolutely make this uncomfortable if it owns time of possession, but the loss of Jenkins and the need to keep pace on the scoreboard make the hill steeper.

Pick: Texas State by multiple scores, with the most likely swing factor being whether Rice can keep the game slow and close into the fourth quarter.

For bowl-game viewing help and the full day’s lineup, keep this page handy: NCAA bowl schedule hub.


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