There's virtually nothing not to like surrounding today's Cincinnati-Marshall football clash.
Playmakers are prevalent on both sidelines, ESPN provides a national stage and Marshall fans are set to deliver a 'White Out' with approximately 30,000 involved on-lookers producing an electric Joan C. Edwards Stadium vibe.
The Bearcats (3-1, 0-0 Big East) and Thundering Herd (3-2, 2-0 Conference USA) both cap non-conference play today. Kickoff is 8 p.m.
"When we come out of that tunnel and all that going, I would love to see everybody up making as much noise as they can with their white on and waving the towels and the kickoff comes out and they play that song ('Thunderstruck'). Have the whole stadium rocking," Marshall head coach Mark Snyder said. "That's kind of what I envision. And when they go on offense, constant noise."
As for the game, Cincinnati enters as a 3.5-point favorite, despite uncertainty at quarterback. Redshirt freshmen Zach Collaros and Chazz Anderson likely will share time under center, taking over an offense that already has lost two starters to injury.
"Chazz is a very cerebral kid," Cincinnati head coach Brian Kelly said. "He understands the offense very well. Generally he will not get us into bad plays. But he's a red-shirt freshman.
"Zach Collaros is extremely athletic, very mobile and can make plays down the field. But sometimes you'd like to slow him down a little bit. He gets a little too anxious at times.
"Zach is a guy who can do some things outside the pocket. He's very athletic. He has quick feet. He keeps his eyes downfield."
Collaros and/or Anderson own the luxury of a deep, big-play receiving corps. Dominick Goodman leads the Bearcats with 28 receptions for 389 yards and three touchdowns, but Mardy Gilyard is the difference-making home run threat.
The 6-foot-1, 180-pound junior totals 435 yards and five touchdowns on 26 catches and leads the nation in kickoff returns, averaging 36.3 yards a runback. Marshall counters with Darius Marshall ranked No. 3 nationally with a 35.4-yard kickoff return average.
"Fans are going to get to see the No. 1 kickoff returner in the country and the No. 3 kickoff returner in the country in Gilyard and Marshall," Snyder said. "(Gilyard) is explosive. He can bust the game wide open. Again, we're going to have to play superior special teams, not turn the ball over and put points on the board. We can't let them manufacture points in the kicking game, which he has done."
Gilyard boasts a 97-yard touchdown return on his resume; Darius Marshall sprinted downfield on a pair of scoring near-misses totaling 77 and 64 yards last week at West Virginia. Snyder couldn't resist a jab at his talented returner in comparison to Gilyard.
"The only difference is, Gilyard outruns the kickers and our guy doesn't or else he might be No. 1 in the country. He's going to kill me," Snyder said of Marshall with a laugh. "... If we can just get him past the kicker, we'll be in great shape. I think (WVU placekicker Pat) McAfee has tackled him five times now in two years. That's bad."
Marshall is coming off a lackluster effort in last week's 27-3 loss at West Virginia. The Thundering Herd similarly was uninspired -- and decidedly less talented -- in last season's 40-14 lopsided setback at Cincinnati.
Like virtually every 2008 opponent, UC players and coaches have dismissed last year's Marshall film.
"Oh, much improved football team," Kelly said. "I think the first thing that stands out is the defense. They've really done a nice job of mixing things up.
"They've still got some young players on that team. But I think (Marshall defensive coordinator and former UC head coach)Rick (Minter) has done a very nice job of putting them in good positions to succeed.
"I think when we look at it as coaches, we look at, 'Are you putting your kids in a good position?' I think he has done a great job of putting his kids in position to be successful.
"Offensively, I think they're still trying to search and find themselves. I think they have some big-play players. (Wide receiver Darius) Passmore, obviously, has shown himself to be a big-time player.
"I think they're probably wanting a little more consistency from the quarterback position.
"But I think the big picture here is Marshall is a much improved team over the one that we played last year."
Playmakers are prevalent on both sidelines, ESPN provides a national stage and Marshall fans are set to deliver a 'White Out' with approximately 30,000 involved on-lookers producing an electric Joan C. Edwards Stadium vibe.
The Bearcats (3-1, 0-0 Big East) and Thundering Herd (3-2, 2-0 Conference USA) both cap non-conference play today. Kickoff is 8 p.m.
"When we come out of that tunnel and all that going, I would love to see everybody up making as much noise as they can with their white on and waving the towels and the kickoff comes out and they play that song ('Thunderstruck'). Have the whole stadium rocking," Marshall head coach Mark Snyder said. "That's kind of what I envision. And when they go on offense, constant noise."
As for the game, Cincinnati enters as a 3.5-point favorite, despite uncertainty at quarterback. Redshirt freshmen Zach Collaros and Chazz Anderson likely will share time under center, taking over an offense that already has lost two starters to injury.
"Chazz is a very cerebral kid," Cincinnati head coach Brian Kelly said. "He understands the offense very well. Generally he will not get us into bad plays. But he's a red-shirt freshman.
"Zach Collaros is extremely athletic, very mobile and can make plays down the field. But sometimes you'd like to slow him down a little bit. He gets a little too anxious at times.
"Zach is a guy who can do some things outside the pocket. He's very athletic. He has quick feet. He keeps his eyes downfield."
Collaros and/or Anderson own the luxury of a deep, big-play receiving corps. Dominick Goodman leads the Bearcats with 28 receptions for 389 yards and three touchdowns, but Mardy Gilyard is the difference-making home run threat.
The 6-foot-1, 180-pound junior totals 435 yards and five touchdowns on 26 catches and leads the nation in kickoff returns, averaging 36.3 yards a runback. Marshall counters with Darius Marshall ranked No. 3 nationally with a 35.4-yard kickoff return average.
"Fans are going to get to see the No. 1 kickoff returner in the country and the No. 3 kickoff returner in the country in Gilyard and Marshall," Snyder said. "(Gilyard) is explosive. He can bust the game wide open. Again, we're going to have to play superior special teams, not turn the ball over and put points on the board. We can't let them manufacture points in the kicking game, which he has done."
Gilyard boasts a 97-yard touchdown return on his resume; Darius Marshall sprinted downfield on a pair of scoring near-misses totaling 77 and 64 yards last week at West Virginia. Snyder couldn't resist a jab at his talented returner in comparison to Gilyard.
"The only difference is, Gilyard outruns the kickers and our guy doesn't or else he might be No. 1 in the country. He's going to kill me," Snyder said of Marshall with a laugh. "... If we can just get him past the kicker, we'll be in great shape. I think (WVU placekicker Pat) McAfee has tackled him five times now in two years. That's bad."
Marshall is coming off a lackluster effort in last week's 27-3 loss at West Virginia. The Thundering Herd similarly was uninspired -- and decidedly less talented -- in last season's 40-14 lopsided setback at Cincinnati.
Like virtually every 2008 opponent, UC players and coaches have dismissed last year's Marshall film.
"Oh, much improved football team," Kelly said. "I think the first thing that stands out is the defense. They've really done a nice job of mixing things up.
"They've still got some young players on that team. But I think (Marshall defensive coordinator and former UC head coach)Rick (Minter) has done a very nice job of putting them in good positions to succeed.
"I think when we look at it as coaches, we look at, 'Are you putting your kids in a good position?' I think he has done a great job of putting his kids in position to be successful.
"Offensively, I think they're still trying to search and find themselves. I think they have some big-play players. (Wide receiver Darius) Passmore, obviously, has shown himself to be a big-time player.
"I think they're probably wanting a little more consistency from the quarterback position.
"But I think the big picture here is Marshall is a much improved team over the one that we played last year."
