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PIVOTAL GAME: Rebels come to fork in road

UNLV visits Rams, eager to keep UNR loss from setting bad trend

FORT COLLINS, Colo. -- Optimism was high inside and outside UNLV's football program after four games last year. Then UNR handed the Rebels a heartbreaking loss that began a season-ending eight-game losing streak.

The Rebels are at a similar crossroad this season, coming off a disheartening 49-27 loss to the Wolf Pack that halted the momentum of a fast start.


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  • UNLV (3-2) must show today at Colorado State (2-2) that unlike last season, losing to UNR isn't the beginning of the end.

    "When people start losing those consecutive games, that's when people might start to get down on themselves," Rebels quarterback Omar Clayton said. "People definitely don't want to hit the wrong path. This team is definitely looking to avoid any kind of slump."

    The Rams are 2-point favorites in their Mountain West Conference opener, and it figures to be a tough matchup for UNLV (0-1 MWC). Colorado State has won five in a row in the series and 11 of the last 12, and the Rebels are on a 16-game conference road losing skid, tying a school record.

    Colorado State quarterback Billy Farris struggled last Saturday at California and was replaced by Klay Kubiak, son of Houston Texans coach Gary Kubiak. Farris will start again today, but if he falters, Kubiak could get the call. The Rams also rely on tailbacks Gartrell Johnson and Kyle Bell, who have combined to average 109 yards rushing per game.

    Colorado State hopes to take advantage of a UNLV defense that allowed 620 yards to the Wolf Pack, including 444 rushing. But the Rams might have trouble duplicating those numbers because they run a more conventional offense compared to UNR's triple option.

    Unlike many recent meetings, the Rebels have plenty at stake. A victory would give them a major step toward bowl eligibility, especially with a remaining schedule filled with beatable opponents.

    Winning also would send a signal this is a different Rebels team, that the loss to UNR was a blip in the big picture.

    "I think going into the bye week it would help the team, it would help the coaches, it would help the student body and the community really buy into this program this year," linebacker Jason Beauchamp said. "(A 4-2 record) sounds a lot better than 3-3 going into the bye week. A win could help keep the tempo of the bye week's practice."

    A loss, of course, could have the opposite effect. The usual community-wide muttering would begin anew after being mostly muted during UNLV's best start in five years. Fans would wonder if fourth-year coach Mike Sanford truly has the program on the right track.

    Players also might begin to question themselves. Their confidence appeared to be lacking after the UNR loss last season when they failed to capitalize on key chances.

    Losing to Colorado State could send them down the same route.

    "The immaturity of the team a year ago, I would say yes," Sanford said. "I don't even think about losing, but I do think this is a different team. There's a different attitude. There's different leadership. There's a whole different feel to this team. How we react is going to be different than how our players reacted in the past."

    UNLV could lose today, and all wouldn't necessarily be lost, but getting to the postseason would become much more difficult. Beat the Rams, and the conversation changes.

    "There are implications of this game to the whole season," Sanford said. "I look at it like this is the playoffs."

    Contact reporter Mark Anderson at manderson@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2914.

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    Reb fan wrote on October 04, 2008 03:06 PM: You're hired. LOL

    Correction though. . . this program will always be a joke under the current coaching staff.

    I like how Sanford threw his players under the bus again in the post game. What a scum bag. "We wanted to attack but our players didn't execute."

    And that after he rushes 3 on 3rd and forever. Let's their QB have all day to tear us apart.

    Almost 1200 yards allowed in the last two games. And both teams really only had one key guy we needed to stop (UNR's QB and CSU's RB).

    No D = No bowl game.

    We'll be lucky to beat SDSU. And book it now, AFA will put up at least 500 yards on us next game. Probably more if CSU can put up 500+.


    Steelers#1 wrote on October 04, 2008 02:20 PM: I just watched UNLV lose again to Colorado State (the finish was great). I think all of those who were even considered UNLV to be a bowl caliber team are fools (yes, people were saying bowl game). This program is a joke and has been a joke for most of it's existence.

    I have a brilliant idea. Hire me as the next coach. I have no coaching experience, played only HS ball and will guarantee the same results all of these overpaid losers we call coaches over the years have provided us, which is more losses.

    Get a clue people this program is a joke and always will be.


    Bill wrote on October 04, 2008 10:48 AM: "But the Rams might have trouble duplicating those numbers because they run a more conventional offense compared to UNR's triple option."

    UNR didn't run a triple option! The triple option consists of:
    1.) a fake or handoff to a fullback or up-back
    2.) the QB keeping the ball after the fake or
    3.) the QB pitching the ball to a trailer, usually the RB

    All Kaepernick did was fake the dive to Taua and keep the ball when UNLV's defenders went inside. There was NO pitch man anywhere since the Pack usually had 3 WRs, a TE and one RB. The play is no different than what Texas did with Vince Young or what a lot of other spread teams do, UNR just uses the pistol instead of the shotgun.
    No wonder the Rebels couldn't stop UNR. Sanford and Co. didn't even know what offense they were up against.


    Jerry Wayne wrote on October 04, 2008 10:41 AM: Boo this man. Down with Willy D. Tomany and the Rams!


    William D. Tomany wrote on October 04, 2008 09:30 AM: Go Rams beat The Rebels again