Las Vegas Review-Journal

UNLV FOOTBALL Inconsiste­ncy plagues Rebels again

Showdown with Iowa State looms

- By Sam Gordon Las Vegas Review-journal Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Bysamgordo­n on Twitter.

Once again, there were flashes. Glimpses of what UNLV’S football team is capable of. Even on the road against a ranked team like No. 23 Arizona State with an inexperien­ced quarterbac­k making the first start of his college career.

Among those glimpses: The intercepti­on of an Arizona State pass in the UNLV end zone. Not one, but two scoring drives covering at least 10 plays and at least 70 yards. Two separate first-half leads and a manageable 1410 halftime deficit.

But the Rebels need more than flashes to secure their first victory under coach Marcus Arroyo, and he would seem to know it.

“We have to continue to coach our tails off. Be very introspect­ive … in regards to how we can finish a game and put two halves together,” Arroyo told reporters Saturday night after the 37-10 loss the Sun Devils. ”We’ve got a sour taste in our mouth in regards to how we put the whole thing together.”

For the second consecutiv­e game, the Rebels played a couple of good quarters. For the second consecutiv­e game, they played a couple of lousy ones, too.

Against Eastern Washington in the season opener, they managed a mere six points before uncorking quarterbac­k Doug Brumfield in the third quarter and scoring 14 in the fourth.

Against Arizona State on Saturday, they controlled pace and tempo in the first half, forcing a turnover and embarking on two successful drives. But they managed only 22 offensive plays on seven second-half possession­s.

Too little, too late in Week 1. Too little, period, in Week 2.

“We’ve got to put two halves together in all three phases of the game,” Arroyo said.

Arroyo made sure to credit Arizona State, which took advantage of UNLV’S fatiguing defense to score 23 unanswered points in the second half. The Sun Devils are in their fourth season under coach Herm Edwards and developing the kind of continuity that Arroyo hopes to cultivate with the Rebels.

The Sun Devils have a margin for error. Especially against a team like UNLV. The Rebels don’t. Not at this stage of Arroyo’s rebuild. Brumfield left the game midway through the third quarter after taking a big hit. Arroyo did not update his status afterward.

No. 9 Iowa State looms on Saturday at Allegiant Stadium.

“We’ve got to execute,” Arroyo said of Arizona State. “It’s going to take two halves of football to beat a team like that on the road.”

Or a team like the Cyclones at home.

 ?? Matt York The Associated Press ?? UNLV quarterbac­k Doug Brumfield’s status was not updated after he left Saturday’s loss to Arizona State.
Matt York The Associated Press UNLV quarterbac­k Doug Brumfield’s status was not updated after he left Saturday’s loss to Arizona State.

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