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Baylor Football

Richard Reese Looking to Bounce Back after Tough Sophomore Season

July 12, 2024
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While capturing attention for donning a green and gold suit on Wednesday, junior running back Richard Reese’s presence at Big 12 Media Days in Las Vegas spoke just as much to his character as his style.

In 2022, Reese had a breakout rookie campaign, running for over 1,000 yards and collecting 14 rushing touchdowns. He earned Freshman All-America honors and won the Big 12 Offensive Freshman of the Year award.

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In 2022, running back Richard Reese rushed for over 1,000 yards and scored 14 rushing touchdowns.

The next practical step in Reese’s development was to take on an even bigger role as a sophomore and be the lighting to Oklahoma State transfer running back Dominic Richardson’s thunder. 

Instead, Reese was passed up on the depth chart by freshman Dawson Pendergrass and struggled with limited opportunities to make an impact on the field behind a patchwork offensive line in 2023.

“With new coaches coming in, everybody is learning, and sometimes, it doesn’t go how they are supposed to – I had to learn that last year,” Reese told 365Sports on Wednesday. “But I’m a team player. When my teammates were out there playing, I cheered them on.”

To put things into perspective, Reese totaled 306 rushing yards on only 66 attempts last fall, which was 132 fewer carries than the previous season. In Baylor’s final game against West Virginia, Reese returned two kickoffs back to the house, tying his season rushing touchdown total (2) in a matter of minutes.

It was a triumphant end to a disappointing season for Reese. In the modern era of college football, it was assumed the former Big 12 Offensive Freshman of the Year would enter the transfer portal and find playing opportunities elsewhere; instead, it was the exact opposite.

“I came here for a reason,” Reese said. “[Transferring] never slipped my mind. I love Coach Aranda and all of the people that got me here. I even talked with my dad, and he said, ‘BU is the place for you. Stay there. God sent you there for a reason.’”

Reese remained at Baylor, hunkered down this offseason and prepared for a bigger role once Jake Spavital was announced as the new offensive coordinator.

“For everybody, last year was a struggle, but especially for Richard,” head coach Dave Aranda told 365Sports at Big 12 Media Days. “The way he handled it this winter, he accepted new coaching, embraced his role and grew up. He attacked this spring and is set out for a breakout season.”

Jack Mackenzie - SicEm365
“I came here for a reason. [Transferring] never slipped my mind,” Reese said on Wednesday.

With Spavital’s spread offense returning to Waco, Reese is adjusting to the new scheme and is ready to put together a bounce-back campaign this fall.

“They’ve been teaching me the main keys of the offense,” Reese said. “When I’m out there on the field, I play free and don’t have to worry about anything. They really care about their players; that’s the main thing I’d say they do – they don’t want to see us fail.”

When his teammates were asked who the toughest person to guard on the team was, redshirt sophomore linebacker Keaton Thomas said without hesitation, “Definitely Richard Reese. He’s quick, agile and smooth.”

For Reese, it’s about regaining confidence and trusting that he’ll have an opportunity this season to show he’s capable of being the player who rushed for over 1,000 yards and earned Freshman All-American honors in 2022.

Discussion from...

Richard Reese Looking to Bounce Back after Tough Sophomore Season

4,556 Views | 12 Replies | Last: 3 mo ago by ImABearToo
BearlyBeloved
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Having RR start for us again is a major plus for Baylor's offense.
ImABearToo
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WTH went on with him last year, other than the HC and OC are bozos?
Big12Fan2024
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The only thing that happened to Reese last year is that he had a stupid a** OC who was clueless in how to get the ball to the most talented guy on the offensive side of the ball.
CaliBear00
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Tough season? He was left to rot on the bench by an inept OC who was clearly out of their depth. Tough indeed, but for all of the wrong reasons. I'm surprised Reese didn't hit the portal.
Oso Pardo
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Holy cow, at first glance I thought the title said he was looking to bounce and I was like Noooo!!

Glad to see he's getting good looks from CJS, Reese is a difference maker if you just drop the reins and let him work.
Killing Floor
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By "bounce back" do you mean "Dave Aranda isn't going to manage snaps for the offense"? Because Reese is stronger and faster and more confident and ultimately a better football athlete in 2023 than he was in 2022. Just some bald moron made an example of him and wasted a year at the expense of wins.
blackie
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I saw more that the O-line was incapable of opening up a hole for him. When a play was called for him to get the ball via pass, such as a swing route, he couldn't catch the pass....and it wasn't the QB's fault. I could certainly see given those factors why he wasn't able to contribute much last year. It would have been stupid to keep calling plays that you knew would not work and throw to a guy to whom you justifiably questioned his ability to catch even the most routine of passes.

I know people here are eager to jump on the coaches, but the O-line played heavily in last year's misery and Reese often times had bricks for hands when the ball was thrown his direction.
Daveisabovereproach
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blackie said:

I saw more that the O-line was incapable of opening up a hole for him. When a play was called for him to get the ball via pass, such as a swing route, he couldn't catch the pass....and it wasn't the QB's fault. I could certainly see given those factors why he wasn't able to contribute much last year. It would have been stupid to keep calling plays that you knew would not work and throw to a guy to whom you justifiably questioned his ability to catch even the most routine of passes.

I know people here are eager to jump on the coaches, but the O-line played heavily in last year's misery and Reese often times had bricks for hands when the ball was thrown his direction.


I think Aranda should have put his head together with Grimes and worked on getting Reese in the slot with bubble screens, shallow crossing routes, etc. to simply get the ball in his hands and allow him to make a play. You don't put your most dynamic player on the bench when your offense is stagnant. I do agree that running between the tackles wasn't working because of the crappy offensive line. Pendergrass was the better option breaking through the initial tackles at the line of scrimmage that should've been taken away by the offensive line
blackie
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Daveisabovereproach said:

blackie said:

I saw more that the O-line was incapable of opening up a hole for him. When a play was called for him to get the ball via pass, such as a swing route, he couldn't catch the pass....and it wasn't the QB's fault. I could certainly see given those factors why he wasn't able to contribute much last year. It would have been stupid to keep calling plays that you knew would not work and throw to a guy to whom you justifiably questioned his ability to catch even the most routine of passes.

I know people here are eager to jump on the coaches, but the O-line played heavily in last year's misery and Reese often times had bricks for hands when the ball was thrown his direction.


I think Aranda should have put his head together with Grimes and worked on getting Reese in the slot with bubble screens, shallow crossing routes, etc. to simply get the ball in his hands and allow him to make a play. You don't put your most dynamic player on the bench when your offense is stagnant. I do agree that running between the tackles wasn't working because of the crappy offensive line. Pendergrass was the better option breaking through the initial tackles at the line of scrimmage that should've been taken away by the offensive line
Don't disagree, but the player has to catch the ball for anything to work. There were too many times where the ball was thrown right to his hands with no defense near while he was still in the backfield and he dropped it. Hopefully he has improved in this area.
ImABearToo
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In our "new" offense, will he excell like Seastrunk, Shock or Chafin? Those guys were much bigger and stronger but will Spav try and use Reese in a similar manner? Dominic?
Daveisabovereproach
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ImABearToo said:

In our "new" offense, will he excell like Seastrunk, Shock or Chafin? Those guys were much bigger and stronger but will Spav try and use Reese in a similar manner? Dominic?


Probably not imho. Those offenses from 2012 through 2015 were special in large part due to the offensive line. I'm also skeptical of whether we actually have the firepower at receiver as well as the quarterback to make the throws that would open up the run game like we were doing back then. But we'll see
ImABearToo
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Very true. Line was massive, and experienced. Hope Mack & Co haven't oversold the offense, lots of references made that "we're going back to our former style of offense." That wasn't so much a style, it was simply The Coach!
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