Rice’s 45 receptions for 791 yards and 12 touchdowns were personal bests during his final season at USC. Despite what he called a “frustrating” draft process, Rice sees his fateful seventh-round slide as “a blessing in disguise” considering where he landed.
“I’m in the best position possible to go ahead and make my mark and make my own legacy,” Rice said. “I went from Caleb Williams to Justin Herbert, and I’m in a room that’s going to allow me to compete, day-in and day-out. Everything’s upon me. If you guys don’t see me coming on this Fall, that’s on me. If you guys see me out there, then I put in the necessary work to put my best foot in the door and go out there and produce.”
Rice indeed joins a Chargers team facing an uncertain wide receiver depth chart following the offseason exits of Keenan Allen and Mike Williams. With superstar quarterback Justin Herbert at the helm, opportunity is aplenty for a young WR room that features Josh Palmer, DJ Chark, Quintin Johnston, Derius Davis and Smi Fehoko. Second-round rookie Ladd McConkey will also be in the mix for viable playing time in 2024.
Unlike most NFL players, Rice will have to deal with the sky-high comparisons being the son to arguably the greatest football player of all-time, especially as a wide receiver. As unfair as those views might be, the 22-year-old is taking it all in stride — and one year at a time.
“Rookie season in the NFL, I feel as though we’re neck-and-neck,” Rice said when asked how he and his father stack up at this point. “I’m faster, and I heard that his rookie season in the NFL wasn’t good [laughter]. I have to go top.”
Jerry Rice, a first-round pick by the 49ers in 1985, produced 49 receptions for 927 yards and three TDs during his rookie season, numbers that are certainly attainable for a first-year WR that sees ample playing time.
Brenden Rice says “without a doubt” he’s confident he can compete for a spot in the Chargers’ rotation as a rookie, which would certainly begin the invalidations of his draft fall this past April.
“My work ethic will separate myself,” he said. “There are a lot of great guys in the room, we have a lot of different body types, different types of games. But, if I can go ahead and do the little things each day-in and day-out, go ahead and prove myself, go ahead and know my playbook like the back of my hand, and also be attentive and do the extra little things, I think that I will continue to separate myself within this room.”
Netflix will have one of its biggest days Wednesday since the site launched in 1998 when it airs two NFL games for the
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Travis Kelce #87 and the Kansas City Chiefs play the Pittsburgh Steelers this Christmas. (Cooper Neill/Getty Images)The NFL and Netflix are teaming up to bring