Tuesday, September 4, 2007

BYU vs UCLA

In case you've just crawled out of a cave on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, BYU and UCLA play each other this coming Saturday in the Rose Bowl.
3:30 Pacific, 4:30 Mountain, 5:30 Central, 6:30 Eastern. My place is open for all who either cannot be there in person or who cannot get it on TV. See you then!


Here is what the Los Angeles Times is saying about the matchup...

By Chris Foster, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 4, 2007

UCLA's football team leaves Pacific 10 Conference play this week to get tested. That may not be the national image the conference hierarchy up in the Walnut Creek offices covets, but the truth -- much like watching Stanford play defense -- can hurt. The Bruins take a step up in competition this week, playing host to Brigham Young at the Rose Bowl. The Cougars have an 11-game winning streak and are fresh from dominating Arizona, 20-7. It was their second consecutive victory over a Pac-10 school -- BYU beat Oregon, 38-8, last season in the Las Vegas Bowl. "This offense is more seasoned" than Stanford, Bruins Coach Karl Dorrell said. "The BYU offense is pretty entrenched, and they do a great job of utilizing all their skills," the UCLA coach added. "The backs are very good ballcarriers and pass receivers. The receivers are tough guys who make great plays. If you try to think they can't run, they'll run by you. "With Stanford being in a new system and a new coach, they had their first-game jitters and miscommunication. These guys know what they're doing. They know how to attack a defense. If they find a weakness, they'll exploit it." Such were the sky-is-falling thoughts on a Monday afternoon. But the Bruins do have reason to take care. The Cougars limited Arizona to 41 total yards in the first half and didn't allow the Wildcats inside the 20-yard line until the last drive of the game. Running back Harvey Unga had 194 total yards and two touchdowns. Quarterback Max Hall, in his first collegiate start, threw two touchdown passes. All of which left the Cougars wanting more. "When we take on somebody who has that type of hype, we want to get some notoriety too that we are a powerhouse team," BYU sophomore wide receiver Austin Collie told the Salt Lake Tribune after the game. "I feel that we are one of the best programs in the nation, and that is what we are striving to do -- get to that BCS bowl game -- and we are willing to take on whoever we have in front of us." The Bruins, though, did not seem to be shaking in their cleats. "They're a good team, we respect them, but we're very confident in what we can do," quarterback Ben Olson said. "We feel like if we play our game, we'll be all right."

6 comments:

Bryan & Bobbie said...

I didn't even think Fooseball was around still.

Anonymous said...

Who are we supposed to root for?

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
brettsherrie said...

Who won BYU's opening game?-Sherrie

The Real Jim Heywood said...

BYU beat Arizona 20-7.

brettsherrie said...

They "freakin" killed them-Sherrie