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Falcons run (and run and run) past UNLV







AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. -- Doesn't matter whether it's UNR, Texas Christian or Air Force, if the opponent has a quality running attack, UNLV is in trouble.

And the Rebels were in big trouble Saturday night at snowy Falcon Stadium.


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Air Force ran all over the Rebels, rushing for 431 yards and six touchdowns to beat UNLV 45-17 and end its slim bowl hopes.

Now that the issue of bowl eligibility is settled -- UNLV misses the postseason for the ninth consecutive year -- the question turns to whether coach Mike Sanford returns next football season.

His future already was in doubt, and this loss ensures the Rebels (4-7, 2-5 Mountain West Conference) a losing season all five years under Sanford. His record is 15-43.

"I'm not going to comment any further," UNLV interim athletic director Jerry Koloskie said. "When the timing's right, we'll make the appropriate decision. We just want to get home tonight, regroup and go from there."

Unless an announcement is made in the coming days, this figures to be a quiet time for the Rebels, who have a bye. They finish their season Nov. 28 at home against San Diego State.

"We have a senior class that deserves to go out with a win," Sanford said.

Against Air Force (7-4, 5-2), UNLV once again failed to properly defend the run. Tailback Asher Clark led the Falcons with 160 yards and three touchdowns.

The Falcons are the fifth team to rush for more than 200 yards against UNLV and the third to break 300.

"I think today the main issue was the perimeter," Rebels defensive end/linebacker Jason Beauchamp said. "We started to control the stuff straight up the middle, and then all of a sudden, we got the speed-option game."

The Falcons entered this game leading the conference in rushing at 264 yards per game, and UNLV's run defense was last, allowing 211.2 yards. Those rankings don't figure to change.

Also not likely to change is Air Force's nation-leading pass defense (127.2 ypg). UNLV totaled 135 yards from quarterbacks Omar Clayton and Mike Clausen.

Clayton also threw an interception that ended any hopes the Rebels had.

Trailing 17-3 late in the first half, UNLV drove to Air Force's 11-yard line. On first down, Clayton threw into double coverage in the end zone to wide receiver Ryan Wolfe, and Falcons safety Chris Thomas intercepted.

"I didn't see the guy trailing Ryan," Clayton said.

If UNLV had scored a touchdown, it would have trailed by seven points and taken momentum into halftime. The Rebels also were to receive the second-half kickoff.

The Falcons made the mistake more damaging by then going 80 yards and scoring with 36 seconds left on tailback Savier Stephens' 10-yard run for a 24-3 lead.

"I think it is a different game (without that interception)," Sanford said.

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

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The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

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thedad wrote on November 15, 2009 09:02 PM: THEY ARE ALL FIRED!just announced to team


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Eliminate_UNLV_sports wrote on November 15, 2009 02:15 PM: They are wining at Utah-once a doormat. Look at Rutgers

The colleges which turnaround their Division I football programs are the ones that throw academic standards out-the-window. Like the established programs did long ago. But UNLV can't go this route. It has little or no standards to begin with.

Drop Division I sports. Pick the next football coach from among the applied science faculty. That he can use his influence with the more strapping applied science majors to recruit them for the team.

No more athletic scholarships. The jocks should only be allowed on Boyd's field to mow the lawn.


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Moos for AD wrote on November 15, 2009 01:28 PM: Moos is the right AD for UNLV. He is a class act and we can get him at a decent price. The reason being because of his buyout contract from Oregon he can't take a position at an automatic bid BCS school, or else it will cost him over a million. He has stated that he would love to come here and instill the kind of atmosphere it takes to WIN! He championed the drive to build the new Stadium at Oregon, so why not build one here. Yes Moos Can!
The deadline for AD applications is the 30th of this month.


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Mike Sanford wrote on November 15, 2009 11:25 AM: I have failed as a coach and I will accept my name being placed on the long and storied list of losing coaches at UNLV. Since the early 1980's this program has basically been very poor and I am leaving as such, poor, poor, poor....


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Ricky wrote on November 15, 2009 10:42 AM: Let's stop with the"get rid of football/all sports at UNLV nonsense".The basketball program brings in a ton of money,and you cannot be in any conference with just basketball. Let's find a decent football coach that can win at least seven games-just 2 more than last year-not impossible and get 35,000 per game.They are wining at Utah-once a doormat. Look at Rutgers (in New Jersey!) Cincinatti! Even Northwestern(Too academicly stringent!). Just find a decent coach,Las Vegas does have appeal, and if you want to say it's impossible to turn this around-you are a carpetbager that hates this community regardless if they win or lose.


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Carlos wrote on November 15, 2009 09:30 AM: OK Sanford, time to turn in your free car to Findlay and start packing - bye bye!!


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Fire Sanford Supporter wrote on November 15, 2009 08:46 AM: The Prosecution Rests, the Defense presented no argument. The Jury was out for 5 minutes and reached a just verdict, it was unanimous.
"FIRE MIKE SANFORD."


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Eliminate_UNLV_sports wrote on November 15, 2009 07:03 AM: UNLV interim AD Jerry Koloskie said "When the timing's right, we'll make the appropriate decision. We just want to get home tonight, regroup and go from there.

Koloskie should dump Sanford. Then Smatresk should dump Koloskie. Then the Chancellor should dump Smatresk. Then the Regents should dump UNLV Division I sports.


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AMBROSE wrote on November 15, 2009 04:37 AM: I was short by 31 yards when I claimed A.F. would run for 400 yards. But I still claim 400 people will show up for that epic game against SDSU. Sanford you were in over your head even at UNLV.