UNLV @ WYOMING STUFF

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Either 2-1 UNLV has to snap its 19-game road losing streak in Mountain West Conference games, or Wyoming needs to end its offensive touchdown drought, which currently stands at nine quarters for the 1-2 Cowboys.

Or neither streak could end, and it will make for an ugly affair that Rebels fans will be glad is not televised.

But, odds are, at least one will fall. Probably both.

Here's a closer look at the Cowboys.

1) How exactly DOES a team go nine quarters without an offensive TD?

Well, four of those quarters came against the No. 2 team in the country in Texas, so there's something to be said for that. And even though they're not in the top tier of the league, another Big 12 foe came a week later in Colorado.

But another factor is instability at the quarterback position through three games.

In the first two games, true freshman Austyn Carta-Samuels and juco transfer Robert Benjamin have both seen action that is pretty much equal. Against the Buffaloes, senior Karsten Sween ? who had 641 pass attempts coming into the 2009 season ? saw a brief bit of action.

Now, it appears that first-year coach Dave Christensen has handed the car keys to his youngest driver ? Carta-Samuels ? for good.

The frosh from San Jose, Calif., who is 26-of-53 for 294 yards in three appearances, will make his first career start against the Rebels, who come into the game boasting the 99th-ranked pass defense out of 120 FBS teams.

Surely, they'll manage to find the end zone somehow. Christensen ? who was previously the offensive coordinator at Missouri ? is installing a shotgun spread offense without all of the pieces in place. But still, what he has should be good for a couple of points here and there in 2009.

2) Get 'em goin' early

However, the guys who Christensen did recruit to run his high-powered offense are getting their shots in early.

When the game starts on Saturday, Wyoming will be starting four true freshmen on offense, including running back Alvester Alexander and receiver Chris McNeill.

Alexander will still share duties with Darius Terry, but is looking good early on as a Cowboy, with 23 carries for 127 yards and a TD in his first three career games.

As for McNeill, he had two catches for 11 yards last week after battling concussion woes during much of the fall, and is now atop the depth chart at one receiver spot. He's a nice complement to the Cowboys' top weapon ? 6-foot-4 junior receiver David Leonard, who has 19 catches for 177 yards and is a top-flight deep threat.

3) Where does the elevation factor in?

Laramie, Wyo., is one of the highest outposts in all of college football, checking in right around 7,200 feet above sea level.

Several teams struggle with the adjustment ? especially early in games ? and the Cowboys have a history of using that as a distinct home field advantage. Heck, just ask Texas, who led Wyoming by a slim margin at halftime a few weeks back, 13-10.

But UNLV probably won't be as thrown off as most, as a 10-day period of the Rebels' fall training camp is spent playing up in Ely, where the elevation is roughly 6,500 feet.

4) A couple of guys to fear up front

On paper, Wyoming's defense doesn't strike fear into the hearts of many, as the Cowboys are ranked 103rd in the country in total defense, surrendering 427 yards per game.

But for the most part, the defensive unit has been good enough.

With the exception of an ?ber-sloppy second half against Texas (getting shutout 28-0), the D has kept Wyoming hanging around against Weber State and Colorado.

A lot of that has to do with the veterans up front in senior defensive tackle John Fletcher and senior defensive end Mitch Unrein.

Unrein's numbers aren't huge this year, with eight tackles in three games, but he's well-known as one of the league's top pass rushers, while Fletcher has three sacks and five of the Cowboys' 17 tackles for loss.

5) The logistics

If you're an over-optimistic Wyoming fan, looking for any kind of advantage whatsoever, you can look to mother nature.

Earlier this week in Laramie, it snowed. Yes, snow. And both rain and snow were in the forecast for Thursday night, with more expected Friday morning. However, the 10-day forecast calls for 72-degree weather and sunny conditions on Saturday come game time.

But, as we all know, anything can happen.

Plus, this is UNLV's first day game of the season, with their last two contests having kicked off at 8 p.m., PDT. This one will begin at noon, PDT. How will the Rebels' body clocks respond?

Again, with a lengthy drought on each side of this one, you've got to look at every imaginable factor
 

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INSIDE THE MATCHUP: UNLV AT WYOMING

INSIDE THE MATCHUP: UNLV AT WYOMING

INSIDE THE MATCHUP: UNLV AT WYOMING

THE COWBOYS


RECORD: 1-2 overall, 0-0 Mountain West Conference.

LAST WEEK: One week after matching what is probably the top team in the Big 12 step for step, Wyoming laid an egg against one of the conference's worst teams.

The Pokes mustered just 230 yards of total offense, notched just three first-half first downs and missed a pair of field goals, suffering a road shutout for the fourth time in three seasons.

The Cowboys were outgained 151-76 on the ground, moved the chains just 13 times and were 4-for-18 on third-down conversions.

UW's defense gave up just 326 yards of offense, but allowed the Buffaloes to go 4-for-4 in red-zone scoring and forced just one turnover while spending more than 35 minutes on the field.

KEY STAT: 1 minute, 48 seconds.

If the Pokes don't score in that amount of time against UNLV, they will have gone 10 complete quarters without scoring an offensive touchdown.

Junior running back Darius Terry scored less than two minutes into the third quarter against Weber State, but UW has just three field goals and a punt block returned for a touchdown since.

WHO TO WATCH: The Cowboys' entire wide-receiving corps has failed to gain separation against man-to-man defense the entire season and needs to give UW's quarterback -- no matter who that is -- a better chance to move the ball.

The Pokes need to get the ball rolling against the Rebels as UNLV's passing defense is ranked eighth in the Mountain West Conference.


THE REBELS


RECORD: 2-1 overall, 0-0 MWC.

LAST WEEK: UNLV followed up a gut-wrenching, close road loss with a fulfilling one-point victory over Hawaii on Saturday night.

Junior quarterback Omar Clayton led the Rebels on a 14-play, 67-yard drive, capping it off with a 15-yard touchdown pass to Phillip Payne to escape with a 34-33 home victory.

The offensive battle featured 51 first downs and nearly 1,000 yards of total offense.

UNLV trailed 20-14 at halftime, but held the ball for nearly 13 minutes in the third quarter, outgained Hawaii 120-28 on the ground and got three touchdown passes and a touchdown run from Clayton, who was named the MWC Offensive Player of the Week.

KEY STAT: 12.

MWC quarterbacks Max Hall (BYU) and Brian Johnson (formerly at Utah) have received most of the attention the last two years, but Clayton has been as consistent as any -- at least when it comes to touchdown tosses.

Clayton has thrown a touchdown pass in 12 consecutive games, the longest active streak in the conference.

UW doesn't have a touchdown through the air yet this year.

WHO TO WATCH: UNLV wide receiver Ryan Wolfe is currently the nation's active leader in receiving yards with 3,023.

After racking up 130 yards against Hawaii, the Rebels' Biletnikoff Award candidate now has 11 games with 100 or more receiving yards.

That number ranks first in school history and fourth in conference history. He needs six more such games to tie BYU's Austin Collie for the league record.
 

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Freshmen Cowboys rising

Freshmen Cowboys rising

Freshmen Cowboys rising

Austyn Carta-Samuels isn't the only Wyoming freshman moving up the football depth chart.
Rookie running back Alvester Alexander will likely continue to share duties in the UW backfield, but he's now listed as the Pokes' No. 1 option.
And freshman wide receiver Chris McNeill, bothered this fall by concussions, got his first career receptions against Colorado and is now listed as a starter.
For more on the rise of UW's true freshmen, check back to trib.com or see Thursday's Star-Tribune.
 

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Christense tabs Carta-Samuels as starting QB

Christense tabs Carta-Samuels as starting QB

Christense tabs Carta-Samuels as starting QB

Fresh Face

LARAMIE -- Tate Forcier has led the Michigan Wolverines back into the top 25.
Matt Barkley had USC in the top five until he suffered an injury and the Trojans suffered an upset.
Wyoming might not be worried about national rankings, but it will become the fifth program -- Rutgers starts Tom Savage and Army starts Trent Steelman -- in the country to put the success of its football program in the hands of a true freshman.
UW coach Dave Christensen announced Monday that Austyn Carta-Samuels will take over as the Cowboys' starting quarterback on Saturday against UNLV and the Pokes will put an end to the quarterback rotation used in their first three games.
"Austyn's going to be our starter and we don't have a rotation planned this week," Christensen said during his weekly meeting with the media. "He did some good things with his feet, getting out of the pocket ... when pressure was coming. He scrambled to make plays. He knows where to go with the ball in our scheme, has made some good throws.
"We think at this point in time he gives us the best chance."
Junior college transfer Robert Benjamin started the first three games for the Cowboys, but -- aside from the Pokes' first offensive drive of the season -- never seemed to find a rhythm with UW's new spread offense.
He completed 25 of 56 passes for 209 yards and ran the ball 25 times for 91 yards.
"You just base it on productivity and, right now, Austyn is making more things happen when he's in there," Christensen said. "They've had equal opportunities to compete and see who can get it done."
Carta-Samuels has played in all three games in varying amounts. He took the majority of the reps in the season-opening victory, played just the final quarter against Texas and then led UW's offense for the final three quarters in a 24-0 loss to Colorado on Saturday.
But the San Jose, Calif., native has said all along that part of the reason he came to UW was the opportunity to play a prominent role as a freshman, and it doesn't get any more prominent than starting the Pokes' first Mountain West Conference game.
"This is what I've been working for forever and there's just a lot of opportunity in front of me," Carta-Samuels said. "No mentality change, it's just a lot more smiles and a lot more excitement."
Current UW senior Karsten Sween started seven games as a redshirt freshman, but Carta-Samuels is the first true freshman quarterback to start for UW since Rick Costello in 1974.
That year, Costello, also a California native (LaMirada), set a school record with 21 interceptions.
Carta-Samuels hasn't turned the ball over once, but now he'll be charged with jumpstarting an offense that hasn't scored a touchdown in nearly 10 quarters.
"We're not producing at all, but when he goes in, what the tape says is that he's doing some things that give you a chance," UW offensive coordinator Marcus Arroyo said. "I think the continuity is something we're really excited to see -- one guy being the one voice."
WATTS WILL KICK FIELD GOALS: The only other major depth-chart change announced Monday was a change in kickers.
Walk-on Ian Watts, who handled kickoff duties the last two weeks, is now the starter on field goals and extra points.
Sophomore Austin McCoy went 0-for-2 on field goals in the Pokes' shutout loss at Colorado.
Senior kicker Jake Scott, who had fallen off the depth chart last week, will return to his role as starting kicker for kickoffs.
GIVENS TO PLAY MORE: Whether Fred Givens gets his starting job back or not, his playing time will be increasing.
Givens, who started at noseguard when Alex Stover couldn't make the trip to Boulder because of a groin injury, stopped the Buffaloes on back-to-back plays when they needed just one yard.
He finished with six tackles and now has nine -- 1.5 for loss -- on the year.
"It was his chance to work his way in, so to speak, and he didn't disappoint," UW defensive coordinator Marty Fletcher said. "He's got himself in a situation where those two will rotate a lot."
WEATHER WOES: The Cowboys got a rude awakening from the weather, literally and in more ways than one.
A heavy storm rolled through Laramie on Sunday night and early Monday morning, including a hail storm said to have awakened many around UW at about 2 a.m.
The players awoke to temperatures in the 30s, wind chills in the 20s and light snow throughout the day.
"It's stupid weather," freshman safety Shamiel Gary said. "I'm not used to this. I'm just gonna get my long sleeves on and get ready for practice. I've played in weather like this in November, but not in September."
Current forecasts for Saturday are calling for clearer conditions and temperatures in the 60s.

Contact sports reporter Eric Schmoldt at eric.schmoldt@trib.com. Check out his blog at tribtown.trib.com/ESchmoldt/blog.

COWBOYS TRACKER
MONDAY: Wyoming football coach Dave Christensen and Cowboys players spoke during their weekly media session.
CHANGING GEARS: Christensen announced that true freshman Austyn Carta-Samuels will start Saturday against UNLV, becoming the fifth true freshman starting quarterback in the country and the first at UW since 1974.
HE SAID IT: "We're not producing at all, but when he goes in, what the tape says is that he's doing some things that give you a chance." -- UW offensive coordinator Marcus Arroyo.
SATURDAY: UNLV at Wyoming, 1 p.m., War Memorial Stadium, Laramie, (No TV).
 

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Wyoming is still adjusting to changes




But the Pokes are making familiar mistakes on offense, defense and special teams -- with the exception of turnovers.

By Robert Gagliardi
rgagliardi@wyomingnews.com

BOULDER, Colo. -- There are a lot of changes in the University of Wyoming football program from last season to this season.

New coach, new offense, new players. Heck, even new uniforms.

The Cowboys are only three games into their 2009 season, yet some familiar patterns are forming from last season.

The offense is struggling in terms of scoring and throwing.

The defense has its moments, but still some inconsistencies have yielded a lot of points and yards.

Special teams often leave points on the field or set the opposition up for easy points.

Last Saturday's 24-0 loss at Colorado was an example of many of those shortcomings.

UW failed to score an offensive touchdown for the second straight game, and hasn't scored one in its last nine quarters.

Last season it was shut out twice -- both on the road -- and had two separate droughts of six and seven quarters where it didn't score an offensive touchdown.

The Cowboys have averaged 13 points per game this season, and had nation's worst 12.7 last season.

UW's two new quarterbacks -- junior Robert Benjamin and true freshman Austyn-Carta Samuels -- have averaged about 60 yards more per game passing than last year's quarterbacks.

But that duo's efficiency rating is the third worst in the nation. In 2008 it was the fifth worst.

About the only thing UW is doing better offensively so far this season is not turning it over.

Its turnover margin is plus-4 this season, which is tied for 12th nationally. Last season it was minus-22, the second-worst in the country.

The switch from a power run game last season to a spread offense this season is still a work in progress, but UW knows improvements must occur for it to even be competitive in games from here on out.

"I'm telling you things are going to come together soon," Carta-Samuels said. "We have to learn quickly. I have to learn quickly as a freshman.

"These guys have never run the spread offense before. ... It's a quick learning curve. There are no excuses; we just have to keep working on it."

Carta-Samuels came in for an ineffective Benjamin in the second quarter at Colorado and played the rest of the game. He was 11 of 24 for 125 yards and led the team with 36 rushing yards.

Even though UW's defense was on the field about 11 minutes more than the offense, it too had its struggles.

The Cowboys had difficulties stopping Colorado's run game (151 yards), gave up some big plays in the passing game, especially on third down (Colorado converted 7 of 16 third-down conversions) and when the quarterback scrambled out of the pocket.

Through three games UW has allowed 29 points and 427 yards of total offense, which rank in the bottom third in the nation.

"We've got to be more disciplined as a defense as a whole," junior cornerback Marcell Gipson said.

UW missed five field goals last season, and missed its only two attempts against Colorado.

And, the kickoff return coverage that was among the nation's worst last season has allowed about five more yards per return this season.

Is this UW team like last year's in terms of its struggles?

The players don't think so.

"I think it's different because I think (first-year coach Dave) Christensen will make the adjustments needed to get us going, whether it's getting different guys in there or what," senior defensive tackle John Fletcher said. "We've got to put some points up on the board and the defense has got to eliminate those big plays and keep points off the board."

Added senior center Russ Arnold: "I think we have the confidence. We have the players. We have the ability. All that has to happen for us to really come into this is we need one game where every thing rolls. From there I have do doubt we will have a good season. (This) week is going to be the time."

Gipson willing to give

Christensen said the Cowboys' offense needs to do a better job against man-to-man coverage.

Junior receiver David Leonard agreed with his coach and hopes that UW's staring cornerbacks -- brothers Marcell and Tashaun Gipson -- will help this week in practice with more one-on-one drill work.

Marcell Gipson said he's willing to lend a helping hand.

"I'll be in their face every day in practice I guarantee you that much," he said. "I'm going to go as hard as I would in a game. If that's what they need work on I'm down for it."

Rebels rally

UW hosts UNLV (2-1) Saturday in the Mountain West Conference opener for both teams.

UNLV rallied for a 34-33 home win over Hawaii in a game that ended at about 12:15 a.m. MST Sunday morning.

Junior quarterback Omar Clayton threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to sophomore receiver Phillip Payne with 36 seconds left in the game for the game-winning score.

National leaders

Sophomore linebacker Brian Hendricks is tied for fourth nationally with 13 tackles per game. His 18 solo stops is tied for best mark in the MWC.

UW has five players in the conference's top 10 in tackles: true freshman safety Shamiel Gary (third, 10 per game), junior safety Chris Prosinski (tied for fourth, 9.7 per game), sophomore linebacker Gabe Knapton (sixth, 9.3 per game) and senior linebacker Weston Johnson (tied for 10th, eight per game).

Gary is tied for fifth nationally with three interceptions in three games.

Givens gives

Senior nose guard Fred Givens made his first start of the season for injured sophomore Alex Stover (groin), and recorded six tackles.

It marked the first time this season and the ninth time in his career he had at least five tackles in a game.

In three games this season Givens has nine tackles, including 11/2 for loss.
 

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Offensive woes continue for the Cowboys

Offensive woes continue for the Cowboys

Offensive woes continue for the Cowboys





By ROBERT GAGLIARDI Special to the Boomerang


Dave Christensen put this one on himself.

The first-year University of Wyoming coach shouldered the blame for his teams? 24-0 loss at Colorado on Saturday at Folsom Field.

?We looked like a poorly coached football team,? he said. ?A lack of discipline, too many penalties, personal fouls. I did a poor job of preparing this team. I?ll take responsibility.?

Eight penalties for 86 yards didn?t help.


But the big problem with this team right now is on offense.

Against Colorado those struggles included:

n No offensive touchdowns. The Cowboys have been blanked offensively in their last two games and for nine quarters dating back to the season-opener against Weber State.

n Only 230 yards of total offense and 3.2 yards per play.

n Thirteen first downs, and two came from penalty. The Cowboys didn?t get their initial first down until about six minutes into the second quarter.

n A two-quarterback rotation of junior Robert Benjamin and true freshman Austyn Carta-Samuels that combined to be 15 of 36 for 154 yards. They didn?t throw an interception, but they didn?t score any points and were sacked four times.

Two missed field goals didn?t help, either.

And even though the defense was on the field a lot again, it had its shortcomings against the run (151 yards and three touchdowns) and gave up too many big plays in the passing game when the quarterback scrambled out of the pocket.

But the lack of offense was the main issue, and to a man, that?s where the problems lie.

?They played a little more man-to-man coverage, which we knew was going to happen,? Christensen said. ?People are going to do that until we start doing something to get them out of that on early downs.

?We?ve got to get guys open. ? You?ve got to execute. You?ve got to put plays together back-to-back, get first downs and keep your offense on the field.?

When asked if Christensen has the personnel to do that, he said: ?We got who we got. We?ve got to find a way to help these kids be successful. That?s our job as coaches. If something?s being taken away, we?ve got to have answers to go to something else.?

Right now, UW has no answers.

It might try something different at quarterback as Carta-Samuels was more effective than Benjamin in this game and may have played his way into the starting job next week at home against UNLV.

Benjamin started but was just 1 of 4 for two yards and two sacks, and also had six yards rushing. He seemed to be on the run the entire time he was out there.

Nonetheless Benjamin was ineffective and has been out of sorts since the opener against Weber State.

Carta-Samuels wasn?t great. He was 11-for-24 for 125 yards and led the team with 36 rushing yards. He had a 37-yard pass to senior Donate Morgan and was a combination of lucky and good as he threw it into double coverage and Morgan made a nice catch.

Still, Carta-Samuels seems to be the more poised of the two right now, and Christensen said he doesn?t want to continue to rotate quarterbacks.

?We?ve got to decide on a quarterback. We?ve got to get that issue settled,? he said.

But not matter who the quarterback is UW has to figure out how to get receivers open in man coverage.

When teams defend you man-to-man they basically are saying their athletes on defense are better than yours on offense ? or at least they?ll take their chances.

The Cowboys don?t have the athletes ? at least in what they?re doing right now ? to get open in man coverage.

?Right now it?s pretty much everything,? UW junior receiver David Leonard said on the receivers? struggles in man-to-man coverage. ?We?re not performing. It?s pretty much who?s the better guy and right now we haven?t been winning. That?s going to have to change.?

That allows defenses to do more with their front seven, which in turn wreaks havoc on an offense.

No. 2 Texas magnified that point in last week?s 41-10 win in Laramie.

Colorado, certainly not a top 25 program right now, proved that to be true as well.

And as UW gets into conference play where it will face better defenses than Colorado?s, it will see a lot more man coverage.

Carta-Samuels said numerous times after the game that he and his teammates need to use this as a learning experience.

Losses like this are tough lessons to learn, and a lot of these guys have to learn quickly.

If not the losses will pile up quickly.
 

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UNLV players not fazed by road MWC losing streak

UNLV players not fazed by road MWC losing streak

UNLV players not fazed by road MWC losing streak

Rebels maintain that 2009 team is more mature than those of the past

A 19-game losing streak on the road against Mountain West Conference foes could be a monstrous elephant in the middle of the room for the UNLV football team.

However, the squad's veteran leaders try not to acknowledge its presence as they get ready for their first venture away from Las Vegas in the 2009 season this Saturday at Wyoming.

"A game is a game, a win is a win, a loss is a loss, regardless of excuses or anything like that," senior linebacker Jason Beauchamp said. "I think (the streak) is just an excuse. There's no curse or anything like that.

"I think that was more of a thing in the past, and that'll change."

OK, maybe not completely a thing of the past.

"I wouldn't say it's never spoken about, because it's an emphasis to prove that we can win on the road," junior offensive lineman Matt Murphy added. "It's something we haven't proven in the past. I wouldn't say it's a key motivator.

"The main focus is Wyoming itself."

On paper, it certainly looks like the Rebels have a golden opportunity to end their streak this weekend in Laramie.

It's the second-longest road conference losing streak in the FBS, only behind Duke, which has dropped 20 consecutive away games in ACC play.

Under first-year coach Dave Christensen, the Cowboys' offense has sputtered, having not scored a touchdown in its last nine quarters. They're fresh off of a 24-0 loss at Colorado, and this weekend will hand the offensive keys over to a true freshman quarterback in Austyn Carta-Samuels, who has split time so far this season with junior Robert Benjamin.

The Cowboys are 1-2 and are truly a team on the ropes early in the season.

For the Rebels, they believe that the key to righting the ship away from Sam Boyd Stadium has plenty to do with leadership, which they now feel is firmly present within the roster.

"What I do, a lot of the d-linemen or linebackers do," Beauchamp said. "It's a mentality thing. If I was cracking jokes all the time or decided to not show up to meetings, some of the younger guys would do the same. They'd think, 'Hey, he's doing it, and he's doing great, so I'm gonna do it, too.'

"So that's all it is. Guys in leadership roles are mature, and we're a lot more serious about winning than we've been in the past."

Beauchamp and his fellow senior leaders, such as receiver Ryan Wolfe, have dealt with more road letdowns than their younger teammates, and plenty of it is still fresh in their minds, as they can draw off of three major setbacks from 2008 that helped contribute to letting a 3-1 start turn into a 5-7 finish with no postseason.

Murphy and Wolfe both referenced last season's 42-35 loss to BYU ? one during which the Rebels held a 35-34 fourth quarter lead ? as their toughest experience during the streak.

"They were close all the way to the end, and you're so close to beating them that you taste it, and it just kinda fell their way," Murphy said. "We had a bus ride there, bus ride back, so it was a long bus ride, and it was in my head the whole time."

Added Wolfe: "We played our (backsides) off for 60 minutes and just didn't do enough to get it done. Credit (BYU quarterback) Max Hall. He led the two-minute drive of a lifetime and got it in there, and we just couldn't capitalize. None of them are easy, especially on the road, because you've got to think about it the entire way back."

The toughest one for Beauchamp was last year's 41-28 loss at Colorado State, which was the second leg of a five-game losing skid in the middle of the season.

That game compares to this weekend's contest in Wyoming in the sense that if UNLV wants to go to a bowl game for the first time since 2000, these are the types of games which have to be won.

"We knew that was gonna be a game where one of the two teams would go to a bowl game," Beauchamp said of CSU, which won the New Mexico Bowl after a 6-6 season. "Like I said, everything's different now. We're mature now, so things are really different."
 

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Mondays with Mike: UNLV looking to change recent road trend in Laramie

Rebels will attempt to snap 19-game road conference losing streak against Cowboys

Sure, 1-2 Wyoming is who the schedule indicates the UNLV football team will take on this Saturday.

But Mike Sanford's 2-1 club is also fighting history.

Plain and simple, it's hard to ignore the fact heading into this game that the Rebels have dropped 19 consecutive road Mountain West Conference games dating back to the final season of the John Robinson era in 2004.

On paper, it looks as though UNLV should snap that skid Saturday afternoon in Laramie, Wyo.

But paper doesn't decide games, and neither do oddsmakers, who have set the Rebels as a 5 1/2-point favorite to start the week.

"To win on the road, you have to be mature," Sanford said Monday. "You have to have been through difficult moments and set goals and expectations for the future to win on the road. Now, obviously, I think the talent factor has been a factor in the past, but I also think maturity has been a factor in the past."

Focus ties in with maturity, and to see where that set the Rebels back in the past, one only has to look back as far as the last time Sanford took his team on the road in 2008.

It dropped a 42-21 decision to close last season at San Diego State, which entered the game at 1-10. UNLV had much more on the line that night, coming off two emotional victories over New Mexico and Wyoming to keep its postseason hopes alive. However, the Rebels instead ended the season 5-7 and home for the holidays.

Sanford said that almost a year later, he still has a hard time putting his finger on just what went wrong that night in Southern California, but he has a general idea.

"I think there was too much focus on bowl games, not enough on San Diego State," he said. "That's my perception from talking to the leaders on our team."

As the talent level at UNLV has consistently risen under Sanford, he feels the overall mental makeup of his team has, too. Of course, tangible evidence of that growth won't be fully available until after Saturday's conference opener.

The team's regular week-long fall camp trip to Ely not only prepares it for Wyoming in terms of playing at a high elevation (6,500 feet above sea level in Ely compared to 7,200 in Laramie), the trip into the mountains also sends home the message that going on the road isn't a time to have a vacation.

"That's been by design to get us more used to playing on the road," he said. "When you play on the road, it's not about comfort. It's about getting a job done and going to play, and I think (in the past) there's probably been a little bit too much expectation by immature players to have a good time on the road."

Wyoming's tough times

The aforementioned 'on paper' is mostly in reference to the Cowboys' offense, which has gone nine quarters since last reaching the end zone.

In scoring offense, Wyoming ranks 111th out of 120 FBS teams, and is 99th in total offense. Granted, eight of those quarters came against Big 12 competition, and four of those were against No. 2 Texas in a 41-10 loss.

Sanford is more than familiar with what first-year coach Dave Christensen did as the offensive coordinator at Missouri in his previous gig, saying he and his staff studied film of the Tigers. He also knows the struggles of trying to run a shotgun spread offense as a rookie coach with limited weapons.

"I think the whole transition from going from primarily a run offense to a spread offense is difficult," he said. "The hard thing is balancing out the scholarships, because you need more receivers."

The Cowboys announced Monday that true freshman quarterback Austyn Carta-Samuels will make his first career start against the Rebels. He went 11-of-25 for 125 yards in reserve duty in last weekend's 24-0 loss at Colorado.

Injury updates

Senior receiver Rodelin Anthony, who has eight catches for 135 yards and three touchdowns through three games, is still doubtful for Saturday's game. In fact, after suffering a concussion against Hawaii on kick coverage, he might not make the trip to Wyoming.

Also potentially out is senior safety Marquel Martin, who started the Hawaii game and has eight tackles in three games. He also suffered a concussion, which wasn't detected immediately after the game.

Junior safety Alex De Giacomo is also questionable with a hamstring pull.

Thoughts on a long weekend for the league

The Mountain West Conference has made a reputation in recent years for performing well and turning heads in non-conference play.

Over the weekend, the league went an uncharacteristic 3-4, highlighted by BYU and Utah losing their undefeated statuses with losses to Florida State and Oregon, respectively.

"I was actually surprised at how our league did this weekend," Sanford said. "I expected Utah to beat Oregon, even though it was at Oregon. I really did think BYU was going to beat Florida State. I was shocked. Then, really, the other one that surprised me was San Diego State losing to Idaho."

Other than UNLV, only Colorado State and TCU were victorious in non-league contests.
 

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Omar Clayton becoming a consistent late-game producer

Omar Clayton becoming a consistent late-game producer

Omar Clayton becoming a consistent late-game producer

Rebels QB showing consistency in crunch time

Rebels fans in the stands were probably chewing on finger nails and only using the edges of the benches they were seated on.

Gamblers around town probably had visible beads of sweat coming down their foreheads.

So who was keeping their cool the best, as UNLV had basically five minutes to drive 67 yards, needing nothing less than a touchdown to win?

Believe it or not, it was junior quarterback Omar Clayton.

"Weirdly I felt more confident in the last drive knowing that if we didn't score, we lose the game ? I felt more confident and more relaxed in that drive than the whole game," he said. "That last five minutes, when we had to take the ball down and score to win, I felt at ease."

He looked the part the entire way.

In that 14-play, 67-yard jaunt that ate up almost the entire remaining game clock and resulted in a game-winning 15-yard TD pass to Phillip Payne, Clayton was 7-of-11 for 71 yards and the score. He was further rewarded earlier this week by being named the Mountain West Conference's Offensive Player of the Week.

It wasn't the first time Clayton had looked cool and calm in the clutch, and it probably won't be the last.

In just 15 career starts, he already has a strong late-game resum?.

? During last season's thrilling comeback and eventual triumph at Arizona State, the highlight was obviously Phillip Payne's spectacular one-handed touchdown grab on an eight-yard toss from Clayton. But on the drive, Clayton was 6-of-8 for 68 yards and the score, threw a nice touch pass to Frank Summers for a 29-yard gain, and also hit Payne for a crucial nine-yard gain on fourth-and-nine.

? A week later, Clayton obviously had no interest in making an overtime session against Iowa State last very long. After the Cyclones kicked a 37-yard field goal to go ahead by three, Clayton threw one pass to Phillip Payne for a 25-yard score, giving the Rebels a 34-31 victory.

? UNLV lost to BYU, 42-35, in Provo last season following a late Cougars score. But the Rebels had the eventual co-Mountain West Champs on the ropes. Trailing 34-28 with just under nine minutes to go, Clayton was 3-of-4 for 46 yards and a TD pass to Ryan Wolfe in putting the Rebels ahead, 35-34. And on a desperation drive at the end, needing to go the length of the field in less than two minutes, he completed six passes before the attempt stalled out.

It may sound surprising to hear Clayton say that a situation which only raises the blood pressure for most coaches has him completely unfazed.

"Maybe they'd think I was lying, I don't know," Clayton said. "It just wasn't a stressful situation, at all. Some of it comes from confidence, some of it comes from making plays. I think that we're able to perform when our backs are up against the wall."

One coach who isn't surprised is UNLV offensive coordinator Todd Berry, who calls the plays from the press box, and was responsible for bringing Clayton to Las Vegas a few years back as a preferred walk-on and has known the efficient QB since his prep days in Normal, Ill.

His rise from fifth-string quarterback to starter on scholarship has been well documented, and with each clutch performance, his reputation simply grows.

"He's a very calm and composed player, and most of the time I think I tend to relate in those types of situations," Berry said. "He understands the offense, understands the system. There's kind of a comfort level in that. The game's slowed down for him now in terms of being more mature and understanding where his protection is coming from."

Berry said that a lot of the Rebels' success against Hawaii, in particular, had to do with preparation.

All week, they prepared to face a quirky defense, with only three down linemen and an extra nickelback in the secondary. Instead, the Warriors went with a traditional 4-3 defense, with four down linemen, three linebackers and four defensive backs.

It worked for awhile, as Clayton threw two uncharacteristic interceptions in the first half, but he figured things out after the intermission, and for that final drive, Hawaii switched to the odd look that the Rebels had prepared for all week.

At that point, all Berry had to do was make the right calls, and he had the confidence that Clayton would execute with the precision that he's come to expect.

"He's got judgement," he said. "If you've got a guy with judgmenet at the QB position and some athleticism, you'll have a pretty good player. He's very cerebral in his throws. I can't coach judgement."

Added Clayton: "I think it works both ways. Me having faith in what he's gonna call, him having faith to call whatever he needs to call, knowing that myself and the offense will be able to execute it."

It's all well and good that Clayton is as composed as just about any collegiate quarterback that you'll find. But the Rebels, who try to improve to 3-1 against a struggling Wyoming squad this weekend in Laramie, don't necessarily want to make it such a regular occurrence.

But if the close calls continue, the Rebels can rest assure that they've got the right guys making the calls.

"That would be nice for the whole football team," Berry said. "It's great for our confidence level. Those games over a period of time can be draining on a football team."

Payne, Clausen looking better

Sophomore receiver Phillip Payne and sophomore backup quarterback Mike Clausen attended team meetings on Wednesday and showed signs of improvement after bouts with the flu.

They still did not practice, but coach Mike Sanford said both are probable for Saturday's contest at Wyoming.

Payne is coming off of his best game as a Rebel, with eight catches for 94 yards against Hawaii, including two key second half touchdowns.

Clausen has seen action in all three of UNLV's games, has thrown for 95 yards and two scores and has two more touchdowns on the ground.

The Rebels will already be without senior receiver Rodelin Anthony (concussion) and senior safety Marquel Martin (concussion). Junior safety Alex De Giacomo (hamstring) is still questionable.

1984 championship team to be honored

The 1984 UNLV football team, which went 11-2 overall, 7-0 in Pacific Coast Athletic Association play and defeated Toledo, 30-13, in the California Bowl, will be honored on Friday, Oct. 16, as part of the school's Homecoming festivities.

The squad will gather at South Point Hotel from 7-9 p.m. that night. Players and coaches from that team can RSVP by calling (702) 895-2474.

Members of that team, including Randall Cunningham and Ickey Woods, will serve as honorary captains the next night as UNLV takes on Utah at Sam Boyd Stadium at 7 p.m.
 

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OVERLOOK NO ONE: Rebels' progress gets road test

OVERLOOK NO ONE: Rebels' progress gets road test

OVERLOOK NO ONE: Rebels' progress gets road test

UNLV favored at Wyoming despite skid as MWC visitor


LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
LARAMIE, Wyo. -- Ten months later, UNLV coach Mike Sanford still shakes his head over the loss at San Diego State that ended the Rebels' 2008 season.

"I still can't completely figure that one out," he said. "That one just baffled me."

Sanford said the Rebels' 42-21 loss to a clearly inferior opponent has taught his players to focus on the game rather than side issues such as bowl scenarios. The loss left UNLV with a 5-7 record, destroying any shot at a postseason berth.

Today the Rebels (2-1) visit Wyoming (1-2), another team they should beat -- on paper. The Rebels are a 31/2-point favorite, but the teams appear headed in opposite directions entering Mountain West Conference play.

If the Rebels truly are on an upswing, losses such as the one at San Diego State should seldom occur anymore, if ever. Part of developing into a top program is beating teams you're supposed to beat.

"You can't get excited to play Oregon State or Hawaii and then not get excited to play Wyoming, because we're here to play football," defensive end/linebacker Jason Beauchamp said. "Those games we should win, we have to go out and win."

Besides, the Rebels still have much to prove. They have lost a school-record 19 straight conference road games, including all 16 under Sanford.

But the Rebels are favored with good reason. They have won four of six dating to last season and their offense is playing well. Their 31-point average is their highest since a school-record 34.9 in 1980, and their 412-yard average is their best since finishing at 417.3 in 1997.

Wyoming is struggling to find positives under first-year coach Dave Christensen, who brought the spread offense with him from Missouri, where he was offensive coordinator.

The Cowboys haven't scored an offensive touchdown in the past nine quarters, and freshman quarterback Austyn Carta-Samuels is making his first start today.

Carta-Samuels faces a confident UNLV team. Players have uttered near-bulletin-board statements that probably wouldn't have crossed their minds a year or two ago.

The Rebels' new-found swagger has been noticeable on the field. In last week's 34-33 home victory over Hawaii, UNLV twice rallied in the fourth quarter after touchdowns and won on Omar Clayton's 15-yard pass to Phillip Payne with 36 seconds left.

Those sorts of performances can carry over, the Rebels insist.

"I feel like we have reinforced confidence," Clayton said. "We feel like we can play, and we actually believe it. It's not like Coach Sanford just telling us he thinks we're going to win."

Another victory today -- whether an ugly, grind-it-out win or by a wide margin -- would continue that reinforcement, which the Rebels will need to navigate their difficult upcoming schedule. Next week they visit UNR, then return to Sam Boyd Stadium for consecutive conference games against Brigham Young and Utah.

So UNLV can't allow an opportunity to beat a Wyoming team that appears there for the taking slip away.

"One of the problems around here has been playing up to and playing down to a perception of how good the opponent is," Sanford said. "Those days are done. We've got to play at a high level all the time."
 

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Cowboys hope Rebels won't beat the spread

Cowboys hope Rebels won't beat the spread

Cowboys hope Rebels won't beat the spread

LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
UNLV's Mike Sanford understands better than most coaches the difficulty of what Wyoming's Dave Christensen is trying to accomplish by radically changing the Cowboys' offense in his first season.

Upon Sanford's arrival for the 2005 season, he threw out the Rebels' traditional two-back set in favor of the spread offense. The transition was messy; in Sanford's first season UNLV averaged 18.8 points per game and went 2-9.

Similarly, Christensen has abandoned a power running game to implement the spread at Wyoming, which will host the Rebels at noon Saturday.

"The whole transition of going from primarily a run offense to a spread is difficult," Sanford said. "The hard thing is balancing out the scholarships because you need more receivers.

"Just looking at (Wyoming), I think it fits more who they are because the two really good running backs from last year are both gone."

Sanford finally has his players in place after a longer transition than he expected.

Not that the Rebels (2-1) have arrived, but their improvement is noticeable. Their scoring average jumped from 18.2 points in 2007 to 25.6 last year and is 31.0 through three games this year. They are averaging 412 yards, their most since averaging 417.3 in 1997.

Putting the right quarterback in place is likely the foremost reason, with Omar Clayton taking over last season. The junior has 3,235 passing yards, 221 shy of eighth place on the school's career list.

Before Clayton, UNLV's quarterback spot under Sanford resembled a never-ending audition, with the job held by the likes of Shane Steichen, Jarrod Jackson, Rocky Hinds and Travis Dixon.

"I think it's a very difficult process," Sanford said. "I think, No. 1, finding a quarterback that fits the spread, but also finding quarterbacks that are good players in general.

"Guys you think are good players, they don't turn out to be as good. So that's a really hard position to evaluate."

Patience will be required at Wyoming as well. After the Cowboys (1-2) averaged a nation-worst 12.7 points last year, they are up to only 13.0 in 2009 and don't have an offensive touchdown in their last nine quarters.

Those dismal stats prompted a change at quarterback this week, with Christensen inserting freshman Austyn Carta-Samuels for his first start. He came off the bench last week to replace junior Robert Benjamin during a 24-0 loss at Colorado and went 11-for-24 for 125 yards.

If Carta-Samuels is the long-term answer, the Cowboys' transition to the spread will prove faster than UNLV's was.

"I feel real good about where we're at from a quarterback standpoint," Christensen said. "We've got the right guy there. We've got to have a lot more accountability by those surrounding guys."

The judgment of whether the spread is a success at Wyoming was never going to be made this season anyway.

"It's hard to put a time frame on it," Christensen said. "We're continuing to recruit the same way we did (for our first recruiting class). ... We've got a lot of work to do from that standpoint.

"We're pleased with the young kids, but they don't have a lot of experience. We don't have a lot of depth yet at any of the positions offensively."

Christensen and Sanford are coaches with common backgrounds. Both became head coaches after being offensive coordinators at schools where the spread yielded success -- Sanford at Utah and Christensen at Missouri.

That offense has become the rage nationally. It can be dynamic. But it also can be difficult to implement.

"It's got its growing pains," Christensen said.

He and Sanford have seen that firsthand.
 

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Trends - UNLV at Wyoming

Trends - UNLV at Wyoming

Trends - UNLV at Wyoming


ATS Trends

UNLV

Runnin' Rebels are 6-2 ATS in their last 8 games after allowing more than 280 yards passing in their previous game.
Runnin' Rebels are 11-24-1 ATS in their last 36 games in September.
Runnin' Rebels are 7-16-1 ATS in their last 24 games following a S.U. win.
Runnin' Rebels are 2-5 ATS in their last 7 games as a road favorite.
Runnin' Rebels are 10-26 ATS in their last 36 games after allowing less than 100 yards rushing in their previous game.
Runnin' Rebels are 9-24 ATS vs. a team with a losing record.
Runnin' Rebels are 7-20 ATS in their last 27 games as a favorite.
Runnin' Rebels are 3-9 ATS in their last 12 games as a favorite of 3.5-10.0.
Runnin' Rebels are 6-18-2 ATS in their last 26 road games.
Runnin' Rebels are 0-7 ATS in their last 7 road games vs. a team with a losing home record.


Wyoming

Cowboys are 7-3 ATS in their last 10 home games vs. a team with a winning road record.
Cowboys are 16-35-1 ATS in their last 52 games after scoring less than 20 points in their previous game.
Cowboys are 7-19 ATS in their last 26 games as an underdog.
Cowboys are 13-38-2 ATS in their last 53 games following a ATS loss.
Cowboys are 1-4 ATS in their last 5 games as a home underdog.
Cowboys are 5-21-1 ATS in their last 27 games following a SU loss of more than 20 points.
Cowboys are 5-21 ATS in their last 26 games following a S.U. loss.
Cowboys are 5-21 ATS in their last 26 games after accumulating less than 275 total yards in their previous game.
Cowboys are 3-13 ATS in their last 16 games after accumulating less than 100 yards rushing in their previous game.
Cowboys are 2-9-1 ATS in their last 12 home games.
Cowboys are 5-23-1 ATS in their last 29 games overall.
Cowboys are 1-5 ATS in their last 6 games in September.
Cowboys are 4-22-1 ATS in their last 27 games on grass.
Cowboys are 4-23 ATS in their last 27 games after accumulating less than 170 yards passing in their previous game.
Cowboys are 4-25-1 ATS in their last 30 conference games.
Cowboys are 1-11-1 ATS vs. a team with a winning record.
Cowboys are 0-5 ATS in their last 5 games as an underdog of 3.5-10.0.


OU Trends

UNLV

Under is 5-1 in Runnin' Rebels last 6 games after allowing less than 100 yards rushing in their previous game.
Over is 4-1 in Runnin' Rebels last 5 games as a favorite.
Over is 4-1 in Runnin' Rebels last 5 road games.
Over is 6-2 in Runnin' Rebels last 8 conference games.
Over is 6-2 in Runnin' Rebels last 8 games after accumulating more than 450 total yards in their previous game.
Over is 8-3 in Runnin' Rebels last 11 games on grass.
Over is 8-3 in Runnin' Rebels last 11 games overall.
Under is 12-5 in Runnin' Rebels last 17 games following a S.U. win.
Over is 7-3-1 in Runnin' Rebels last 11 games after accumulating more than 280 yards passing in their previous game.
Under is 9-4 in Runnin' Rebels last 13 games in September.


Wyoming


Over is 5-1 in Cowboys last 6 home games vs. a team with a winning road record.
Under is 5-1 in Cowboys last 6 games on grass.
Under is 5-1 in Cowboys last 6 games overall.
Under is 4-1 in Cowboys last 5 games as an underdog of 3.5-10.0.
Under is 4-1 in Cowboys last 5 games following a SU loss of more than 20 points.
Under is 4-1 in Cowboys last 5 games as an underdog.
Under is 4-1 in Cowboys last 5 games in September.
Over is 19-7 in Cowboys last 26 games following a ATS loss.
Over is 17-7 in Cowboys last 24 games following a S.U. loss.


Head to Head

Over is 4-0 in the last 4 meetings in Wyoming.
Over is 7-1 in the last 8 meetings.
 

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Wyoming Cowboys (0-1) (0-0 H) vs UNLV Rebels (0-0) (0-0 A)

Wyoming Cowboys (0-1) (0-0 H) vs UNLV Rebels (0-0) (0-0 A)

Wyoming Cowboys (0-1) (0-0 H) vs UNLV Rebels (0-0) (0-0 A)

Game Time: 3:00 p.m. EDT Saturday, September 26

Stadium: War Memorial Stadium Surface: Grass




RECORD ANALYSIS
STRAIGHT-UP VS. SPREAD OVER/UNDER
UNLV Rebels HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL

Year-to-Date 2 - 1 0 - 0 2 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 0 1 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 0 1 - 1
Last 5 games 2 - 1 0 - 0 2 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 0 1 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 0 1 - 1
YTD vs. Conf. 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0
STRAIGHT-UP VS. SPREAD OVER/UNDER
Wyoming Cowboys HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL
Year-to-Date 1 - 1 0 - 1 1 - 2 1 - 0 0 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 0 0 - 1 0 - 1
Last 5 games 1 - 1 0 - 1 1 - 2 1 - 0 0 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 0 0 - 1 0 - 1
YTD vs. Conf. 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0
AWAY VS. SPREAD HOME VS. SPREAD
Year-to-Date FAV DOG GRASS TURF FAV DOG GRASS TURF
UNLV Rebels 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 0 0 - 1 1 - 0 1 - 1 0 - 0
Wyoming Cowboys 0 - 0 0 - 1 0 - 1 0 - 0 0 - 0 1 - 0 1 - 0 0 - 0



TEAM LOGS/SCHEDULE:
( * = overtime)

UNLV Rebels
LINE OVER/UNDER
DATE DAY OPP SCORE SU OPEN CLOSE ATS &
MARGIN OPEN CLOSE O/U &
MARGIN G/T
09/05/09 Sat SAC 38 - 3 W 0 0 W 35 0 0 O +-41.0 G
09/12/09 Sat ORST 21 - 23 L -8.5 -6.5 L -8.5 53 54 U -10.0 G
09/19/09 Sat HI 34 - 33 W -6.5 -7 L -6 55 56 O +-11.0 G


Wyoming Cowboys
LINE OVER/UNDER
DATE DAY OPP SCORE SU OPEN CLOSE ATS &
MARGIN OPEN CLOSE O/U &
MARGIN G/T
09/05/09 Sat WEB 29 - 22 W 0 0 W 7 0 0 O +-51.0 G
09/12/09 Sat TX 10 - 41 L +31 +31.5 W 0.5 0 0 O +-51.0 G
09/19/09 Sat @CO 0 - 24 L +9 +7 L -17 51.5 51.5 U -27.5 G



PREVIOUS MEETINGS:

LINE OVER/UNDER
DATE DAY VIS SC HOM SC OPEN CLOSE ATS &
MARGIN OPEN CLOSE O/U &
MARGIN G/T
10/01/05 Sat UNLV 17 WY 42 -17.0 -19.5 WY +5.5 52.0 49.5 O +-9.5 G
11/18/06 Sat WY 34 UNLV 26 +11 +9.5 UNLV +1.5 NL NL O +-60 G
10/27/07 Sat UNLV 24 WY 29 -13.5 -10.5 WY --5.5 50.0 45.0 O +-8 G
11/13/08 Thu WY 14 UNLV 22 -7.0 -6.5 UNLV +1.5 47.0 48.5 U -12.5 G




STATISTICAL AVERAGES:


AWAY/HOME RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM
UNLV (off)
WY (def) 31.5 23 29 140 4.8 51 32 0.6 338 6.6 478 3.0 0.0
RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM
UNLV (def)
WY (off) 19.5 21 41 166 4.0 41 20 0.5 188 4.6 354 0.0 1.0
ALL GAMES RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM
UNLV (off) 31.0 23 34 139 4.1 33 23 0.7 273 8.3 412 1.0 0.3
WY (def) 29.0 22 34 144 4.2 44 27 0.6 283 6.4 427 2.0 0.3
RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM
UNLV (def) 19.7 18 29 114 3.9 33 22 0.7 258 7.8 372 0.7 0.0
WY (off) 13.0 18 39 136 3.5 39 18 0.5 177 4.5 313 0.0 1.0



SCORING AVERAGES:

UNLV Rebels (away) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR
POINTS ALLOWED



Wyoming Cowboys (home) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR 3.5 9.5 13 3.5 3.0 0.0 6.5
POINTS ALLOWED 5.0 5.0 10 10.5 11.0 0.0 21.5



UNLV Rebels (all) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR 5.7 2.3 8 7.0 16.0 0.0 23
POINTS ALLOWED 3.3 6.3 9.6 4.7 5.3 0.0 10



Wyoming Cowboys (all) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR 2.3 6.3 8.6 2.3 2.0 0.0 4.3
POINTS ALLOWED 5.7 6.7 12.4 9.3 7.3 0.0 16.6



VALUE INDEX COMPARISON TO LAS VEGAS LINE:

LV POINTSPREAD VALUE INDEX VALUE INDEX
OPEN CURRENT RATING LINE EDGE
UNLV Rebels 46
Wyoming Cowboys 44 -2.0 8.0
LV OVER/UNDER VALUE INDEX VALUE INDEX
OPEN CURRENT RATING EDGE
OVER/UNDER 56.5 UNKNOWN
 

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U-N-L-V (2-1) at Wyoming (1-2)

U-N-L-V (2-1) at Wyoming (1-2)

U-N-L-V (2-1) at Wyoming (1-2)




DATE & TIME: Saturday, September 26th, 3:00 p.m. (et).

FACTS & STATS: Site: War Memorial Stadium (33,500) -- Laramie, Wyoming. Television: None. Home Record: UNLV 2-1, Wyoming 1-1. Away Record: UNLV 0-0, Wyoming 0-1. Neutral Record: UNLV 0-0, Wyoming 0-0. Conference Record: UNLV 0-0, Wyoming 0-0. Series Record: UNLV leads, 9-8.

GAME NOTES: Losers of two straight, the Wyoming Cowboys try to get back into the win column this weekend as they kick off their Mountain West Conference schedule against the UNLV Rebels at War Memorial Stadium in Laramie.

Wyoming started off the 2009 campaign on the right foot for new head coach Dave Christensen with a 29-22 triumph over Weber State at home, but after that the team suffered back-to-back losses against a couple of Big 12 Conference opponents. First it was a 41-10 setback to nationally-ranked Texas in Laramie, and then last weekend the team made the trip to Boulder, only to be routed by the Colorado Buffaloes in a 24-0 shutout.

As for the Rebels, they've been trapped in a couple of nail-biters the last few weeks after opening with a 38-3 thrashing of Sacramento State. First there was the 23-21 setback to Oregon State in the final moments and then last Saturday night saw the team pick up a 34-33 victory against visiting Hawaii at Sam Boyd Stadium. The two wins in the first three games means the Rebels have already tied their win total for each year between 2005-2007 and could be well on the way to surpassing last year's 5-7 mark should things fall into place.

The Rebels posted a 22-14 win in last year's contest, giving UNLV a slim 9-8 advantage in the all-time series. The victory for the Rebels snapped a four- game win streak for the Cowboys in the series as well.

UNLV scored single touchdowns in each of the first three quarters last Saturday, but then came up with 13 points in the fourth frame to capture the one-point win over the visiting Warriors. More specifically, Omar Clayton hit Phillip Payne with a 15-yard TD strike with just 36 seconds to play to give UNLV the triumph. Clayton, who was named the MWC Offensive Player of the Week for his efforts, converted 28-of-43 passes for a career-high 340 yards and three touchdowns, but was also picked off twice in the event. Payne was responsible for eight catches, leading to 94 yards and two TDs, while Ryan Wolfe reeled in nine balls for 130 yards. With just under eight catches per game in the early going Wolfe, who is a candidate for all-America honors, paces the program with his 288 yards, yet he has not found his way into the end zone to this point. Payne, on the other hand, has taken three of his 18 catches in for scores, which means the Rebels have two receivers that opponents have to worry about. Running back Channing Trotter broken into the new season with 102 yards and three touchdowns versus the Hornets, but the last two games have seen him register just 103 yards and no scores.

The UNLV defense limited Hawaii to a mere 28 yards rushing on 15 attempts, but before anyone gets too excited about that stat they have to remember that the Warriors are one of the weakest running teams in the nation and have been for several seasons. Where the Rebels have to have some concern is in the secondary because they permitted UH's Greg Alexander to throw for a career- best 477 yards and three scores. Senior linebacker Jason Beauchamp tried to slow down the aerial attack by logging 1.5 sacks and another tackle for loss in the contest. While it has only been three games, the pass defense has to be a concern for coach Sanford and his staff because at the moment the unit is ranked eighth in the MWC and 99th nationally with an average of 258 ypg allowed. Another disturbing stat is the one that shows UNLV without a single fumble recovery. Add to that a mere two interceptions and the defense is clearly not making enough impact plays to put the Rebels into the win column on a consistent basis.

Very little went right for the Wyoming offense last Saturday, especially starting quarterback Robert Benjamin who quickly found himself on the bench and just another spectator to the shutout loss to Colorado. Benjamin completed just one of his four passes for a mere two yards, prompting coach Christensen to replace him with Austyn Carta-Samuels, who finished the outing a modest 11- of-24 for 125 yards. Just 4-of-18 on third-down attempts, the Pokes couldn't get their running game moving either as Carta-Samuels finished as the top ground gainer with his 36 yards on nine attempts. The scoring offense has gotten progressively worse for the Cowboys in the first three games of the season and now the team is eighth in the conference and 111th in the nation with just 13 ppg. The issue at quarterback won't make things any easier as the staff tries to figure out which signal-caller gives them the best chance to win. Last season it was much the same story, only now former starter Karsten Sween has been demoted to the third team. While the quarterbacks for this squad have yet to throw an interception, they have not yet tossed a touchdown pass either.

The pass defense for the Cowboys did a fine job keeping Colorado quarterback Cody Hawkins under wraps, allowing the son of the coach to hit on 17-of-31 for just 175 yards. The real concern, however, came with Rodney Stewart who carried the ball 32 times and finished with a game-high 127 yards and two touchdowns. Because of all the time they spent on the field, four Cowboys registered at least 10 tackles, with Brian Hendricks heading the list with his 18 stops, adding one tackle for loss and a fumble recovery to his stat line. Hendricks has been a beast in the early going, already with 39 tackles to rank second in the Mountain West and tied for fourth in the country with an average of 13 stops per outing. As is the case with UNLV, the Pokes have also had trouble slowing down passing attacks of the opposition and now rank 110th in the country and ninth in the Mountain West with 283.3 ypg permitted to this point. The run defense might appear to be a bit stronger, but that's only because Weber State gained just 89 yards and failed to get into the end zone in the opener. The last two contests show a run defense that has allowed five rushing touchdowns and more than 170 ypg.

With solid quarterback play and a couple of outstanding receivers, the Rebels are in the perfect position to earn their third win in four tries as they take to the road for the first time this season.

Sports Network Predicted Outcome: UNLV 21, Wyoming 10
 
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