Mountain West Preview

Lumi

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Mountain West Preview


Just in case you missed it last year? a geography refresher: ranging in altitudes from 7 feet to 7,220 feet, the MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE looks to be growing to new heights.

Utah is perched atop and of last year?s perfect season is ready to reclaim its position in the Conference pecking order. Meanwhile BYU and TCU just might have something to say about who sits where in the MWC this year. The bottom line is this mini-Conference is scaling to new levels?

Returning starters are listed alongside each team?s name (returning QB?s designated with an *)

AIR FORCE - *6/7
Team Theme ? TWO THUMBS UP
With 17 wins in two seasons, Troy Calhoun marks his spot in service academy annals with the 2nd winningest record of head coaches in their first two years at a military helm. Ironically all three military teams managed to win a game last year without completing a pass. That?s what can happen when you manufacture the majority of your yardage on the ground. Because of its preference for ground warfare, the Force has finished in the Top 10 in rushing offense 21 years in a row. Playing 12 consecutive Saturdays in 2009 shouldn?t bother the disciplined Falcons. After all, they are 9-3 SU and ATS in their final six games of the season under Calhoun. The Falcons might not make many highlight reels but, like Siskel and Ebert, we like Calhoun.
PLAY ON: vs. Utah (10/24)



BYU ? *4/8
Team Theme ? THE PERFECT STORM
The Cougars fell short of their goal of playing in a BCS bowl game last season. A season ending loss at Utah sealed their fate. Still, a third straight 10-win effort puts them in elite company as only Boise State, Florida, Ohio State and Oklahoma own more victories over the same span. Three key players from the offense are back, including QB Max Hall, RB Harvey Unga and WR Dennis Pitta. Hall was the nation?s 6th ranked passer in 2008 (330 of 477 for 3957 yards and 35 TD?s) while Unga has rushed for 2380 yards and 24 TD?s the last two seasons. Pitta, who had 83 receptions for 1083 yards last year, softens the loss of star WR Austin Collie. Perfect at home the last three years for the first time in school history, the Mormons should be stormin? once again in ?09.
PLAY ON: vs. Utah (11/28)

COLORADO STATE ? 7/5
Team Theme ? WHY NOT?
When most teams lose their starting quarterback and a pair of 1,000 yard rushers, it?s generally a time to panic. Such is not the case in Ft. Collins. 2nd year head coach Steve Fairchild committed his team to a strong off-season conditioning program and is actually excited about his chances this year. ?What we needed to define us last year was establishing a toughness, a work ethic, an accountability? now I?d like to start aiming at something. And if we don?t get there this year, so be it. But at least we aimed high,? said Fairchild. Ever the optimist, Coach Fair backed his words up with results in his first season with the Rams last year, winning a bowl game after inheriting a 3-win squad. Yes, the foundation is in place. As the team media guide says, ?Why not Colorado State??
PLAY ON: as a dog vs. Nevada

NEW MEXICO ? *6/3
Team Theme ? ROCKY ROAD
The new slogan in Albuquerque says it all, ?New Era, New Energy, New Mexico.? Out, after 11 years as head coach, is Rocky Long (65-69). In is new blood Mike Locksley, the offensive coordinator at Illinois the last four years. Locksley brings 17 years of coaching experience and he?ll need to rely on all of it. That?s because he takes over a team that was just saddled with a 3-year NCAA probation, resulting in 5 lost scholarships each year. Amazingly, the Lobos have been the only team in the country with a 1000-yard rusher every year since 2002. The bad news is that none of last year?s starting running backs return. QB Donovan Porterie is back but, he started only 4 games before being sidelined with injuries last year. With just about everything new this year, the Lobos are, indeed, starting over.
PASS

SAN DIEGO ST ? *8/7
Team Theme ? BRADY?S LEAP
After spending cold winter months in Muncie, Indiana the past six years, Brady Hoke decided it was time for a change of scenery. Like Jed Clampett, he packed up the family and headed to the hills, of scenic San Diego. He has relieved Chuck Long of his coaching duties with the Aztecs, where a failed three-year experiment resulted in a 9-27 effort. The truth be known, Hoke?s flight to sunny San Diego was mostly due to the departure of QB Nate Davis, who improved on the Cardinals? record in each of his 4 years as the signal caller at Ball State. Hoke will turn to SO QB Ryan Lindley who started 11 games and finished No. 24 in the country in passing average last year. Remember, it took Hoke four years to turn the Cardinals into a winning team. He should have a nice tan when it finally happens here.
PLAY AGAINST: vs. UCLA (9/5)

TCU ? *6 / 4
Team Theme ? TWO LEGS UP
When you are able to hold 10 opponents to season-low yardage marks, don?t be surprised if you lead the nation in total team defense. That?s the reason why 10 of 11 TCU starters landed a spot on the All-MWC team in 2008. It didn?t stop there, either. Last year?s offense established a school record for points scored and TD?s. It?s been quite a run for the Frogs under head coach Gary Patterson. TCU has enjoyed five 10-win seasons in the last seven years. In fact, the Horned Frogs? 26-13 record on the road over the last six years is better than Florida and Oklahoma. It?s where TCU handed the Sooners their only home loss since 2002. In closing, keep this thought in mind: The Frogs are 30-2 in games when they hold foes to less than 333 yards. Both of the losses were versus Utah.
PLAY ON: vs. Utah (11/14)

UNLV ? *6 / 8
Team Theme ? REBELS WITH A CAUSE
Here?s head coach Mike Sanford?s take on last season? ?The victories at Arizona State and against Iowa State were tremendous. Then we had a very disappointing and frustrating loss at the end of the season (San Diego State). We had an opportunity to do a lot more in 2008, but fell short. It serves as a motivating factor. Now we have to get it done.? While the Rebels just missed bowl-eligibility with a sobering loss to the Aztecs, they did snap a three-year run of 2-victory seasons in 2008. When he was hired at UNLV, Sanford?s ?To Do? list included: a winning record, a bowl game and a league title. Behind an offense that tied Ohio State as tops in the land in red-zone scoring efficiency last year and with seven home games on the slate, we believe his wish list will be shortened this season.
PLAY ON: vs. San Diego State (11/28)

UTAH ? 4 / 7
Team Theme ? RINSE CYCLE
Some said the Utes were out of their element - their league! Because there is no playoff system, all they ended up being out of was a No. 1 ranking. Despite its brilliant 13-0 season, Utah was hung out and left to dry. It?s time for the NCAA to wake up and smell the coffee! This year the Utes? offense faces the daunting task of replacing the MWC Player of the Year at QB, three wide receivers, the starting RB, two starting OL, the OC and the OL coach. Then again, the WR position is loaded with talent and game experience, the 2nd-string RB led the team in rushing last year and three of the best O-linemen in the conference return. QB Corbin Louks played in 19 games the past two seasons and appears ready to take the reins. Choose your spin.
PLAY AGAINST: as a favorite vs. UNLV (10/17)

WYOMING ? 7 / 8
Team Theme ? GO WITH THE FLOW
In the end, it all came down to Joe Glenn?s inability to win conference games. After a decent start with the Cowboys, Glenn bottomed out like Liquid Drano, going 9-27 in his last four and a half years, including a clog-busting 1-18-1 ATS the final twenty games. Enter Dave Christensen, the offensive coordinator at Missouri the last eight years. ?He?s going to take that program to levels it?s never seen,? said Chase Daniel, former Tiger QB. ?What he?s going to bring is an offense that?s just insane.? To which Christensen said, ?I can?t tell you how excited I am to be given the opportunity to lead the Wyoming football program. The opportunity to be a head coach is something I?ve been preparing for my entire life. I know we will win here.? We don?t doubt for a minute that Dave will have the victories flowing in short order.
PASS
 

thomas_howard

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Wyoming 1-18-1 ATS in their last 20?? I gotta find these ones before they happen...or at least while they're going on...
 

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MOUNTAIN WEST FOOTBALL MEDIA DAYS: Rising Rebels get respect

MOUNTAIN WEST FOOTBALL MEDIA DAYS: Rising Rebels get respect

MOUNTAIN WEST FOOTBALL MEDIA DAYS: Rising Rebels get respect

UNLV picked fifth in conference preseason poll

You know college football season is near when UNLV players are again asked to explain how they feel about being picked last in the Mountain West Conference.

That's most seasons, anyway. This time was different.

The Rebels not only were not picked at the bottom of the nine-team league, they were voted in the middle at fifth.

They haven't been picked that high since tying Brigham Young for fifth in 2004. Since then, UNLV was picked last three times and eighth once.

"It's good to have some good things said about our program," UNLV senior wide receiver Ryan Wolfe said Tuesday at conference media days at Green Valley Ranch.

"But at the same time, in no way, shape or form are we satisfied with fifth place. The goals of this team are to be much better than that."

Texas Christian, which went 11-2 last season and finished No. 7 in The Associated Press poll, was picked to win the conference. The Horned Frogs, second in the MWC last year, received 15 first-place votes.

"What matters is what happens in December," TCU junior quarterback Andy Dalton said. "That preseason ranking is the potential. We want to prove it right."

TCU dominated the major preseason player-of-the-year awards, with senior lineman Jerry Hughes for defense, junior Jeremy Kerley for special teams and running back Ed Wesley for freshman.

BYU, which received six first-place votes, was picked second. The Cougars went 10-3 last season.

Senior quarterback Max Hall was chosen the conference's top offensive player.

Defending Mountain West champion Utah received the three remaining first-place votes. The Utes finished 13-0 and No. 2 in the rankings last season after dominating Alabama in a 31-17 Sugar Bowl upset, but they lost some key players, including quarterback Brian Johnson.

UNLV is coming off its best season since going 6-6 in 2003. They went 5-7 in 2008, ending a four-year stretch of two-victory seasons.

The Rebels placed two players on the preseason all-conference team -- Wolfe and senior linebacker Jason Beauchamp.

"It feels like this year the stage is set," Beauchamp said. "It feels like everything is in place more so this year than in the past."

Even though there is more optimism, coach Mike Sanford and the players also know there is work to be done.

Beauchamp emphasized the importance of staying healthy, and Sanford talked about finishing. UNLV lost players such as quarterback Omar Clayton and linebacker Starr Fuimaono to injuries last season, and it lost three consecutive games despite leading in the fourth quarter.

Then there was the season-ending 42-21 loss at San Diego State that eliminated any chance for a bowl bid, a loss that hit hard that November night and serves as motivation for this season.

"I still have a bad feeling in my stomach," Sanford said, "and I know our players do, too."
 

Lumi

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PRESEASON POLL

PRESEASON POLL

PRESEASON POLL

Order of finish, as voted by media members in the Mountain West Conference. First-place votes in parentheses

1. Texas Christian (15) 207

2. Brigham Young (6) 190

3. Utah (3) 179

4. Air Force 130

5. UNLV 108

6. Colorado State 107

7. New Mexico 60

8. San Diego State 53

9. Wyoming 46


Preseason All-conference Team

OFFENSE

QB?Max Hall, Sr., BYU

WR?Ryan Wolfe, Sr., UNLV

WR?Rashaun Greer, Sr., Colorado State

WR?Vincent Brown, Jr., San Diego State

RB ?Harvey Unga, Jr., BYU

RB?Matt Asiata, Sr., Utah

OL?Zane Beadles, Sr., Utah

OL?Nick Charles, Sr., Air Force

OL?Shelley Smith, Sr., Colorado State

OL?Erik Cook, Sr., New Mexico

OL?Marshall Newhouse, Sr., TCU

TE?Dennis Pitta, Sr., BYU

DEFENSE

DL?Jan Jorgensen, Sr., BYU

DL?Jerry Hughes, Sr., TCU

DL?John Fletcher, Sr., Wyoming

DL?Koa Misi, Sr., Utah

LB?Daryl Washington, Sr., TCU

LB?Jason Beauchamp, Sr., UNLV

LB?Stevenson Sylvester, Sr., Utah

DB?Chris Thomas, Sr., Air Force

DB?Rafael Priest, Sr., TCU

DB?Nick Sanders, Sr., TCU

DB?Robert Johnson, Sr., Utah

SPECIALISTS

P?Anson Kelton, So., TCU

PK?Mitch Payne, Jr., BYU

Ret.?Jeremy Kerley, Jr., TCU


Offensive Player of the Year:

Max Hall, Sr., QB, BYU


Defensive Player of the Year:

Jerry Hughes, Sr., DL, TCU


Special Teams Player of the Year:

Jeremy Kerley, Jr., KR/PR, TCU


Freshman of the Year:

Ed Wesley, RB, TCU
 

Lumi

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BYU's Mendenhall prefers ending Las Vegas bowl streak

BYU's Mendenhall prefers ending Las Vegas bowl streak

BYU's Mendenhall prefers ending Las Vegas bowl streak

Cougars have appeared in four straight games


It's not true. Brigham Young doesn't have hotel rooms booked for Las Vegas' bowl.

Actually, the Cougars are about ready to try another city after four consecutive appearances in what was called the Las Vegas Bowl, losing last year's game 31-21 to Arizona.

"I underestimated maybe the effect that would have on our players," BYU coach Bronco Mendenhall said. "We had come off not winning the Utah game and then going back to the same bowl game. So there are a lot of things that I could've learned that I take responsibility for.

"(Another bowl) would've been my preference, but the idea of preparing my team, not just schematically but emotionally, is something I could've done a better job of."

Maybe there is a sign BYU -- the driving force behind four consecutive sellouts -- won't be back. The game itself changed, and is called MAACO Bowl Las Vegas.

* MOVING ON -- Now that new management will be in place, UNLV coach Mike Sanford said he didn't feel additional pressure entering his fifth season.

But that doesn't mean he isn't affected by the departure of athletic director Mike Hamrick to Marshall. Hamrick, who leaves in mid-August, was hired by his alma mater on Monday.

"I'm very appreciative that Mike Hamrick gave me the opportunity to be the head coach at UNLV," Sanford said. "I was surprised that Mike left, but I also understand this profession and I understand different things come into play in people's decisions.

"He's going back to his alma mater and basically his home, and I completely understand that and I wish him well."

* NO NEW RULES -- The "Rooney Rule," which requires NFL teams to interview at least one minority head coaching candidate, generally has been seen as a success. Two of the past three Super Bowl winners were led by black coaches, and there are six minority heads in the 32-team league.

Of the 120 major colleges, only nine minorities are head coaches, including New Mexico first-year coach Mike Locksley. So maybe college football need its own version of the "Rooney Rule."

"I think the NFL is a different animal than college football," Locksley said. "People that make the decisions in college sometimes are not even in the room. I've been afforded the opportunity to coach here based on my merit and hard work."

* STAYING ON -- Mountain West Conference commissioner Craig Thompson received a contract extension through June 2012.

He gives his annual state-of-the-league news conference this morning. How often do you think the Bowl Championship Series will be mentioned?
 

Lumi

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MWC chief battles BCS

MWC chief battles BCS

MWC chief battles BCS

Thompson spends offseason pushing for more inclusion

Whether it was testifying in front of a Congressional committee or submitting a playoff proposal to Bowl Championship Series officials, Craig Thompson became the face of the fight against college football's postseason system.

The Mountain West Conference commissioner took on that role seemingly from the moment Utah finished off Alabama 31-17 in the Sugar Bowl.

The Utes, despite going undefeated, never had a realistic shot at the national championship. Florida and Oklahoma, each with one loss and from more esteemed conferences, played for the title, with the Gators winning, 24-14.

Thompson's fight for now is over, but he hopes it has moved forward with his major push last winter and spring. The newest four-year BCS deal, which is already completed, runs from January 2011 through January 2015, so no major changes will occur in the next five years.

"We feel change needs to be made and inclusion to be broader, and we've communicated that to a lot of people," Thompson said Wednesday at MWC football media days at Green Valley Ranch.

"We did that now because we didn't want to wait four years to begin talking about change."

There is something the Mountain West can do before then, however. Last season began the four-year cycle of evaluating conferences for automatic BCS status.

The Mountain West failed to get in after the first cycle. In 2008, three teams were ranked in the final Associated Press poll, including two -- Utah at No. 2 and Texas Christian at No. 7 -- in the top 10.

Should the conference qualify for automatic inclusion in three years, it will not replace a current league. Instead, there would be seven automatic-qualifying conferences and one open spot.

"Our whole argument this spring is it should be more performance-based," Thompson said. "The automatic qualifying standard is so much higher and so different for the five that don't have the automatic qualification than for the six that have it. It's a challenge, but it's a challenge we're ready to face.

"We're trying to say we're not doing this with smoke and mirrors. We are saying we are performing at a level that equates to automatic qualification. We need to continue to perform. You're not going to talk your way into the BCS."

As for the grand change Thompson envisions, he knows there are plenty of fights ahead. Schools and conferences with power aren't in any hurry to give any of it up, no matter what polls say about the public's overwhelming support for a playoff.

But even among playoff proponents, there are no problem-free solutions. How large is the field? Who qualifies? Do you play the first round or two at home?

"It looks simple on the surface," Thompson said. "It's a complex topic."
 

Lumi

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Sylvester coming off huge effort

Sylvester coming off huge effort

Sylvester coming off huge effort

Ex-Valley standout helped Utah post Sugar Bowl upset


From Bourbon Street to the Strip, this has been a year to celebrate for Utah linebacker Stevenson Sylvester.

His Sugar Bowl performance -- three sacks and a fumble recovery -- helped the Utes to a 31-17 upset of Alabama.

On Saturday, the Valley High School graduate turned 21, and he enjoyed a family barbecue at his Las Vegas home before going out with friends.

But now it's time to get serious, and the Mountain West Conference media days at Green Valley Ranch were the unofficial start of football season.

"I've had too much time off," Sylvester said Wednesday. "I lost my edge a little bit, so I've got to get back."

He's in the limelight after that bowl performance, and his team is nationally known.

"I just had a lot of fun in the Sugar Bowl," Sylvester said.

? GOING AFTER THE QB -- UNLV's Jason Beauchamp had only his job of linebacker to concentrate on last season, and he excelled in leading the conference with 127 tackles.

Now more is expected of Beauchamp, who began working at rush end in the spring. He still is primarily a linebacker but will move up to the line in obvious passing situations against certain teams.

"That's where college football and NFL football is moving toward, hybrid players and guys that can get to the quarterback," Beauchamp said. "You can have 100,000 tackles. But how many guys can tackle and can pass rush?"

? A PERFECT 10? -- In the past, Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson quickly shut down expansion speculation, but he seemed more open to it this year.

He said the topic often comes up in informal discussions with league presidents and athletic directors.

If the Mountain West expands, it probably will be to add just one team to get to 10.

Thompson said expansion must move the conference toward Bowl Championship Series qualification. But no potential addition -- not even Boise State -- should get excited.

"We've looked at the numbers, and no one there puts us over the top," Thompson said.

? BRING ON THE CHAMP -- MAACO Las Vegas Bowl officials are pleased that they have the freedom to choose whichever Mountain West team best suits their needs each season, but they are considering taking the conference champion beginning next year.

The bowl also hopes to secure the No. 4 pick outright from the Pac-10 Conference, rather than share the fourth and fifth selections with the Emerald Bowl.
 

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Thompson won?t stop fighting for BCS changes

Thompson won?t stop fighting for BCS changes

Thompson won?t stop fighting for BCS changes
Mountain West Conference commissioner hopes league?s play in big non-conference games this fall speaks for itself

For the time being, the dust has settled around Mountain West Conference Commissioner Craig Thompson.

The league's battle against the monster that is the Bowl Championship Series ? a fight for a change to the current system ? has technically subsided for the next four years.

But Thompson believes something was accomplished, and that's the notion that while nothing will change in the immediate future, the discussion won't necessarily be left in the wake.

"I really didn't have great expectations," Thompson said on Wednesday at MWC media day at Green Valley Ranch. "They weren't going to accept a playoff. And nothing that we brought up or talked about hadn't been presented in some form or fashion previously.

"We're just trying to raise the interest, raise the conversation and get people thinking, 'That does kind of make sense' or 'That would work.' That has been accomplished. People are devoting more time and attention in looking at the BCS."

Thompson's not blowing smoke.

Almost every college football special airing on major sports networks during the offseason has at some point touched on the Mountain West's argument and its proposed eight-team playoff system.

It's already been made known that the Mountain West Conference and its backers in Congress -- namely Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) -- are not giving up the fight.

The league said in a released statement last week that "it had no choice" but to sign the agreement between the BCS and ESPN, which will run through 2013. The Mountain West was the last conference to sign.

"The truth of the matter is it works for six (conferences)," he said. "It works very well for six. There needs to be a catalyst for change, and it's not going to be the Mountain West particularly pushing someone anywhere.

"I think they're listening, but they're not forced to action. Again, there's a couple of factors that will change that perspective. General public is number one. Ticket-buying fans saying, 'I'm not going to go to those bowl games anymore until you change the system.' We're all college football fans, that's not going to happen. They're still going to go; they will still watch. Maybe it's the congressional piece. Maybe it's the presidential piece."

The much-debated current system, which hasn't changed much since 1997, gives automatic BCS berths to the winner of the six major conferences ? the Pac-10, Big Ten, Big 12, ACC, Big East and SEC. There are then two at-large bids given based on the final BCS rankings.

The Mountain West's major huff came after last season, when Utah went undefeated through the regular season, yet took on an at-large SEC foe in Alabama in the Sugar Bowl while a pair of one-loss teams ? Oklahoma and Florida ? met for the national championship.

Utah won handily, 31-17, but still never got the shot it felt it deserved at the crown.

Call it a slap in the face, call it what you will.

Either way, the league calls it injustice, and plenty in the general public don't disagree.

"We're fighting for our guys," Thompson said. "We think that we have earned something different and now can't stop or slow down. It's day-to-day; it's recorded every week. People are going to be watching us like never before."

Call it a clich?, but the Mountain West has now officially stepped to the plate in the public eye.

For years, MWC teams have scheduled non-conference games against schools from the BCS conferences and have held their own.

Now, with more people keeping tabs on the league than ever, there is little room for complete failure.

Plenty of marquee games await the Mountain West early on.

BYU will open the season against Oklahoma ? a sure-fire Top-5 team in both polls ? in Dallas, then host Florida State two weeks later in Provo.

TCU ? the preseason favorite in the MWC ? goes on the road to face a pair of ACC foes in Virginia and Clemson.

Utah plays non-conference games at home against Louisville and at Oregon.

That's just the start of it.

"I can read the scorecard in September. If we don't do well, they'll say, 'Yep, see, they can't do it. They're not there.' If we do have success, they'll say, 'Maybe they're right, maybe they've got an excellent point and can play at this level.' The SEC doesn't have to schedule (like that), because they've got those games within. Our biggest games are Oklahoma, at Virginia, at Clemson, at Oregon, Florida State at BYU. Those are our biggest games.

"It needs to be a successful year in terms of how we do in those big non-conference games. In 15 games, if we go 2-13, that's not going to help the cause on any level."
 

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UNLV picked fifth in MWC preseason football poll

UNLV picked fifth in MWC preseason football poll

UNLV picked fifth in MWC preseason football poll


It was no surprise that TCU grabbed 15 of 24 first-place votes in the Mountain West Conference's preseason poll, but UNLV landing in fifth turned some heads.

The Rebels, who return several key pieces off of last season's 5-7 squad -- which started the year 3-1 with wins over then-ranked Arizona State and Iowa State -- received 108 points in the media poll. That's one point ahead of Colorado State, who was picked sixth after winning the New Mexico Bowl and finishing 7-6 a year ago.

This is the highest the Rebels have been picked since 2004, when they were tied for fifth with BYU in the preseason poll. The Rebels highest slot ever in the preseason poll was back in 2001, when they were predicted to finish second.

BYU came in second, grabbing six first-place votes, while Utah took the other three and is predicted to finish third.

Air Force comes in one spot ahead of the Rebels, while Mike Sanford's club is followed by CSU, New Mexico, San Diego State and Wyoming, respectively.

"I'm enouraged that the media sees there's progress in the program," Sanford said. "On the other side of the scale, it doesn't mean anything. It's all about what we do on the field. However, I'm very excited about our football team."

UNLV opens its season on Sept. 5 at home against Sacramento State.
 

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MWC belongs with the big boys in college football

MWC belongs with the big boys in college football

MWC belongs with the big boys in college football

The last time we heard from the Mountain West, Utah was dismantling Alabama as 14-point underdogs in the Sugar Bowl.

The upset capped the Utes? second undefeated season in the last five years and gave the MWC ammunition to make its case to be included in the BCS.

The BCS pushed aside the Mountain West like it was the WAC.

Don?t make that same mistake by underestimating teams from by far the most underrated conference in college football.

The MWC was an impressive 28-13 in non-conference games last season, including 6-1 against the Pac-10.

Why will this year be any different?

TCU, BYU and Utah remain at the top of the pack, with Air Force and UNLV a notch below. San Diego State, with new coach Brady Hoke, could be the league?s most improved squad. Colorado State lost a lot and should struggle to build off last year?s success. Wyoming and New Mexico are bringing up the rear. They both could stink.

BYU was a trendy BCS pick last year, but it was Utah, which blossomed into the No. 2 team in the country.

That?s probably not going to happen again this year, but, if it does, it could be just the kind of event to finally force the BCS into some change.

Projected Finish (against the spread - ATS - records are from last three seasons)

TCU Horned Frogs

ATS: 22-13-1 (Home: 13-3. Away: 7-9-2)

Thing to remember: The Horned Frogs own the best ATS record in conference play, going 21-9-2 against the number the last four years.

BYU Cougars

ATS: 19-17-1 (Home: 10-6. Away: 8-9-1)

Thing to remember: The Cougars boast the league?s top quarterback in senior Max Hall. But there are question marks about an offensive line with only one returning starter.

Utah Utes

ATS: 22-14-1 (Home: 10-5-1. Away: 10-8)

Thing to remember: The Utes head into August with three quarterbacks vying to be the starter. Junior Corbin Louks seems to be the favorite, but it will be hard to keep Terrance Cain, the National JUCO Player of the Year, off the field.

Since Kyle Whittingham has been at Utah, including the two seasons he was Urban Meyer?s top assistant, the Utes are an astounding 50-26 against the spread.

UNLV Rebels

ATS: 16-18-1 (Home: 10-8. Away: 6-11-1)

Thing to remember: UNLV has a favorable schedule with seven home games. The Rebels are 11-5 ATS as home dogs during coach Mike Sanford?s tenure.

Air Force Falcons

ATS: 20-16 (Home: 9-7. Away: 10-7)

Thing to remember: Coach Troy Calhoun is attempting to jumpstart his offense by moving sophomore Asher Clark to quarterback. Clark played quarterback in high school and was the Falcons? second leading rusher as a freshman last year.

San Diego State Aztecs

ATS: 17-18 (Home: 9-6. Away: 6-12)

Thing to remember: It took a while for Brady Hoke to turn things around at Ball State. In fact, he suffered losing seasons in his first two years.
But he arrives at San Diego State at a good time. He inherits a team returning 15 starters, including talented quarterback Ryan Lindley.

The Aztecs took their licks last year, including an embarrassing 70-7 loss to New Mexico. So they quickly hired the Lobos? coach to be their defensive coordinator. New Mexico is at San Diego State on Halloween night. Keep an eye on that game as a possible big blowout.

Colorado State Rams

ATS: 16-18 (Home: 8-6. Away: 6-10)

Thing to remember: The Rams are a much different squad then the one that looked very good in beating Fresno State in the New Mexico Bowl. Quarterback Billy Farris and running back Gartrell Johnson are both gone. And second-year coach Steve Fairchild has only five returning starters on defense.

Wyoming Cowboys

ATS: 10-24-1 (Home: 6-11-1. Away: 4-13)

Thing to remember: New head coach Dave Christensen is installing an uptempo, no-huddle spread offense. Perfect for the wintery conditions up in Laramie.

This has disaster written all over it. But can it get any worse for the Cowboys, who are 4-18-1 ATS the past two seasons? They?ve covered in just one of their last 15 conference games.

New Mexico Lobos

ATS: 18-7-1 (Home: 11-7-1. Away: 6-10)

Thing to remember: Longtime coach Rocky Long wouldn?t bolt to become a defensive coordinator at San Diego State if the Lobos had anything coming back.

A conference low nine starters return on a team that could be this year?s whipping boy in the MWC.
 
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