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OPENING ACT: Sluggish Rebels still dominate

Trotter, defense spur charge in big second half







UNLV coach Mike Sanford was right, there is no such thing as a preseason game in college football.

But this was pretty darn close.


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The Rebels never were in real danger Saturday night against overmatched Sacramento State, not even when leading by just seven points at halftime.

Led by tailback Channing Trotter's three 1-yard touchdown runs, UNLV broke open the game in the second half for a 38-3 season-opening victory at Sam Boyd Stadium.

"In college football, there are no mulligans," Sanford said. "There are no preseason games, no scrimmages, there's no nothing. And so you have to come out of the blocks playing good right away."

The Rebels certainly played well enough on this night, but they weren't in midseason form, either. They must raise their level of play with Oregon State visiting next Saturday.

Getting up for the Beavers, of course, will be easier than getting fired up to play the Hornets, a Football Championship Subdivision team.

The statistics bared the difference between the teams.

UNLV outgained Sacramento State 466 yards to 228 and had 21 first downs to 12 for the Hornets.

Individually, Trotter made a statement in trying to keep the starting tailback job he won in preseason. He became the first Rebel to rush for three touchdowns in a game since quarterback Jason Thomas in 2002, and Trotter gained 102 yards on 16 carries.

"I felt I wasn't really in rhythm in the first half," said Trotter, who rushed for 46 yards in the first half. "I needed to get all the carries I could under my belt because this was my first time out there starting and being the guy."

Quarterback Omar Clayton was sharp in completing 13 of 17 passes for 213 yards, including a 55-yard touchdown toss to wide receiver Rodelin Anthony with 6:53 left in the game for 31-3 lead.

Linebackers Starr Fuimaono and Ronnie Paulo each had 11 tackles. Fuimaono also had a sack and Paulo two tackles for loss. This was Fuimaono's first action since injuring his left knee in the second game of last season.

"It was great to see Starr play," Sanford said. "He loves playing the game ... and came out of the game healthy, which is awesome."

Though the defense played well, it did allow Hornets running back Terrance Dailey, a Washington transfer, to rush for 101 yards on 19 carries.

"I felt at times we gave up a little too much in the run game on defense," Sanford said. "We've got some things we've got to improve there."

There is uncertainty regarding UNLV end/linebacker Jason Beauchamp, who apparently sprained an ankle. Sanford didn't have further information on his status.

UNLV, at first, looked like it wouldn't need to wait until the second half to put away the Hornets. The Rebels scored on their first two drives to take a 10-0 lead but then seemed to play down to the competition the first half.

But Trotter's 1-yard scoring run late in the third quarter gave the Rebels a 17-3 lead, and they scored three touchdowns in the fourth quarter for a convincing first victory.

"One of the things we want to develop is a killer instinct," Sanford said. "When we have somebody down, we've got to put the throttle down and put them away. We didn't do that in the second quarter, but in the second half we did."

Contact reporter Mark Anderson at manderson@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2914. Read the latest UNLV football updates at lvrj.com/blogs/unlv_sports.

HOW THEY SCORED
UNLV 38
Sacramento 3








Sac. State 0 3 0 0 3
UNLV 10 0 7 21 38


FIRST QUARTER
UNLV 7, Sacramento State 0, 10:43 — Channing Trotter 1 run (Kyle Watson kick). Drive: 9 plays, 69 yards, 4:17. Key play: The Rebels open the drive with quarterback Omar Clayton completing a 31-yard pass to wide receiver Ryan Wolfe to the Hornets 38-yard line.
UNLV 10, Sacramento State 0, 5:25 — FG Watson 39. Drive: 9 plays, 43 yards, 4:07. Key play: Clayton converts on third-and-15 with a 24-yard pass to wide receiver Phillip Payne to Sacramento State’s 21.

SECOND QUARTER
UNLV 10, Sacramento State 3, 0:00 — FG Chris Diniz 44. Drive: 5 plays, 43 yards, 0:41. Key play: Hornets running back Evander Wilkins rushes 12 yards to UNLV’s 27 with 3 seconds left to set up the field goal.

THIRD QUARTER
UNLV 17, Sacramento State 3, 4:43 — Trotter 1 run (Watson kick). Drive: 9 plays, 59 yards, 4:52. Key play: On third-and-2, Clayton connects with Wolfe for a 7-yard gain to the Hornets 44.

FOURTH QUARTER
UNLV 24, Sacramento State 3, 12:33 — Trotter 1 run (Watson kick). Drive: 11 plays, 67 yards, 5:31. Key play: UNLV’s drive is kept alive when an 8-yard pass interference on Sacramento State safety Zach Schrader converts a third-and-3 and gives the Rebels the ball at the Hornets 39.
UNLV 31, Sacramento State 3, 6:53 — Rodelin Anthony 55 pass from Clayton (Watson kick). Drive: 2 plays, 80 yards, :33. Key play: Just before the scoring play, Trotter busts loose for a 25-yard run to the UNLV 45.
UNLV 38, Sacramento State 3, 1:06 — Mike Clausen 4 run (Watson kick). Drive: 7 plays, 67 yards, 3:32. Key play: Wide receiver Renan Saint Preux takes a handoff 40 yards to Sacramento State’s 9.
A —•22,195.

TEAM STATISTICS































SAC ST. UNLV
First downs 13 21
Rushes-yards 36-129 41-216
Passing 99 250
Comp-Att-Int 9-19-1 17-21-0
Return Yards 4 26
Punts-Avg. 7-39.4 3-45.0
Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0
Penalties-Yards 5-38 2-30
Time of possession 29:38 30:22


INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING — Sacramento State, Dailey 19-101, Wilkins 12-43, Loeliger 1-2, Bethel-Thompson 1-1, Smith 3-(minus 18). UNLV, Trotter 16-102, Saint Preux 1-40, Clayton 5-20, Johnson 4-19, Clausen 4-13, Brogdon 2-7, Thompson 2-7, Wolfe 1-5, Cox 4-3.
PASSING — Sacramento State, Smith 8-17-1 85, Bethel-Thompson 1-2-0 14. UNLV, Clayton 13-17-0 213, Clausen 4-4-0 37
RECEIVING — Sacramento State, Wilkins 3-23, Hendershott 2-20, Kirebs 2-4, Reed 1-32, Lane 1-20. UNLV, Wolfe 5-67, Payne 4-55, Anthony 2-73, Robinson 1-18, Cox 1-12, Saint Preux 1-9, Barefield 1-8, Watkins 1-7, Trotter 1-1.
MISSED FIELD GOALS — None.
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Comments (16)

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citi wrote on September 06, 2009 05:28 PM: Sorry Blackie,

posting from my home overlooking the 11th tee box of my private golf club...and yes I did play d2 ball and half the teams on our schedule could have beaten Sac State...so STFU and put down the crack pipe...


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Vegas John wrote on September 06, 2009 02:30 PM: The reported attendance was 22,195. The east side of the stadium had some holes but the endzone and west side were pretty full. Not a bad crowd at all for a lower quality opponent. All in all the team played well, I am looking forward to the Beavers coming in next week. Should be an exciting game. Go Rebs.


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blazer wrote on September 06, 2009 01:50 PM: To Hater: Shut up.


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BetOnBlack wrote on September 06, 2009 01:49 PM: Bob, Citi, Hater, Poor Performance:

All of you are morons, you know nothing about football and it is obvious you have never played, with stupid posts like these. Do us all a favor and stop posting from your mamma's basement, get jobs, get life's, get a girl, get something other then a keyboard and a mouse. For the love of God spare us all you idiots!!


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common wrote on September 06, 2009 11:05 AM: There was not 20,000 people there last night.. stadium only holds 35,000 and it sure as heck was not over half full....about 14,000 which is still good for the Rebels,when at the end of last season they were bringing in 9-10k.

Thankfully OSU and Hawaii will bring fans to help fill the stadium next two weeks

Good win for the program...lets repeat it next week


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AJ wrote on September 06, 2009 10:30 AM: Well Hater, you should probably grow up with the expectations that ARE up for this year. If you've been paying attention (Which I assume you haven't) UNLV has much higher expectations from the college football community as a whole. Phil Steele predicted a bowl, S.I. predicted an 8-4 season, and Mel Kiper Jr. predicted UNLV to be one of the more successful sleepers in the country. Granted these are only predictions, and the games must be played on Saturdays, but I'm just making a direct reference to your post. The fact that there were close to, if not over 20,000 people to watch UNLV play Sac St. says that there are many people on board with what this team has the potetial to do. In years past you would be hard pressed to find 20,000 at an SDSU, WYO, or CSU game...and those are conference opponents. Hopefully this is a fun year, and not full of disapointment. Sanford finally has what hes wanted...Media expectations, university expectations, and fan expectations all expecting a December game...now its time for him to deliver.


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bob wrote on September 06, 2009 10:29 AM: You got the cream puff out of the way.
Lets see what happens this week.
I still say UNLV will win 3 games only.
I can see the weekly excuses coming.


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omega7 wrote on September 06, 2009 10:27 AM: Good win. Go Rebels worry about yourselves not us nerds who write our opinion on the internet.


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citi wrote on September 06, 2009 10:21 AM: the rebels should stick with D2 and weak I-AA(FCS) opponents.....just be grateful they didn't play Montana ...that would have turned out badly for the runny rebs...OSU will massacre the rebs next week


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Hater wrote on September 06, 2009 09:44 AM: Great win for the rebels. Bring on Tim Tebow, Urban Meyer and the Florida Gators. Nothing like satisfying LOW EXPECTATIONS to feel good about yourself. I am a hater and talking junk about UNLV football brings me autumn joy EVERY YEAR! EVERY SINGLE YEAR! This year will be no exception. I will continue to talk trash until UNLV grows up to some higher expectation for itself, the fans, and college football as a whole.


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