In addition, all pages on Bizapedia will be served to you completely ad freeĪnd you will be granted access to view every profile in its entirety, even if the company chooses to hide the private information on their profile from the general public. I think he could be a first-round choice.Your entire office will be able to use your search subscription. He's not the fastest, but he can move around if he has to. "He's got a good arm, he's smart, he handles the offense well.
"He's a good pro prospect," says Norm Pollom of the Rams. It did not hurt him one bit when he hit 34 of 57 for 397 yards and two touchdowns in a 42-15 loss to Texas. Pro scouts low-rated him early in the season, but his worth has risen with every pass completion.
The Rice offense also should prove to be a big help to Kramer in the pro football draft, assuming there is one. As far as my life is concerned, it's helped me out tremendously." We've had some bad times, but I don't regret coming to Rice even though we didn't win a lot of football games. But you're going to face adversity throughout life and I think how well you can adjust to it is going to mean a lot to you later on. "Naturally I'd like to be with a winner," he says. Now Kramer looks at his decision philosophically. "I wanted to stay in Texas," he says, "and you're not going to get a better degree out of the state of Texas." After last week's 38-6 loss to Baylor, Sykes is second in the nation in pass receptions, averaging 6.7 a game, and Cunningham is third with a 6.3 average. The winning touchdown came on a six-yard pass to Tight End Ken Roy. Doug Cunningham, who has played his last five games with a splint on a broken finger, caught the touchdown pass that enabled Rice to tie the game at 34-all.
Eleven of those passes were caught by Running Back James Sykes. When the game was over, Kramer had completed 29 of 45 passes for 386 yards and three touchdowns. With Rice losing (what else?) 34-27 with less than four minutes to play, Kramer fired a barrage that took the Owls to two touchdowns and a 41-34 victory. The SMU game two weeks ago was more than a little typical of a Kramer performance. Because of his quick setup and release, Kramer has been sacked but 14 times although the Owl offensive line is constantly being shuffled and patched up because of injuries. Kramer has connected on 52.6% of his passes and has been intercepted only 12 times in 403 attempts. Kramer also has rewritten 10 Rice career and single-game records. With two games left, Kramer has already surpassed the 11-game pass-completion total compiled last year by San Diego State's Craig Penrose, the 1975 NCAA passing champion. Kramer has averaged 24 completions in 44 pass attempts a game for a season total of 2,580 yards and 17 touchdowns. The gunner in Rice's aerial circus is 21-year-old Tommy Kramer, a 6'2", 195-pound quarterback whose passing statistics are as staggering as the defenses that have tried to stop him. While the Owls seldom are successful, they are rarely boring, and the reason is a game-long passing attack that resembles Fran Tarkenton's two-minute offense. The Owls this season have been a delightful contrast to most of the state's other teams, which monotonously run the ball out of the wishbone, veer or T-bone. Yet Rice has refused to soften its schedule or lower its athletic sights, taking on such out-of-conference heavyweights as Florida, LSU and, in recent years, Notre Dame and USC.