Las Vegas Review-Journal

Rebels determined, upbeat despite long winless stretch

Attitude positive, senior LB Ajiake says

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

The losing is definitely disappoint­ing.

But it hasn’t deterred UNLV from fighting for its first football victory since the 2019 season finale.

“Guys are bought in. Locked in,” said senior linebacker Austin Ajiake. “It’s tough losing these games, but people come the next day ready to work with a good attitude. It’s always a good atmosphere. It’s easy to be down on each other right now, but there’s none of that. Which is great.”

The Rebels are moving past the 51-20 shellackin­g they endured Friday at the hands of rival UNR in Reno and are refocused on ending their 14-game losing streak. They fell into a 34-0 hole against the Wolf Pack and didn’t find their rhythm until the game had been decided.

UNLV coach Marcus Arroyo said Monday that the emotion of the rivalry may have played a factor in the team’s poor performanc­e.

“The psychology of that, that many of all alluded to in the rivalry and all that stuff that builds it up, there’s a delicate balance there and there’s an inherent danger to putting all your emotional and psychologi­cal power into that and not focused in on what to get done to get the win,” he said.

“When you start getting emotionall­y and pyshcologi­cally overpowere­d, you lose sight of all the little fundamenta­l intricacie­s that put you in position to win those games,” he added. “That’s the balance we’re learning there.”

Arroyo said “99 percent” of the roster attended a voluntary weightlift­ing session Saturday, indicating that the Rebels (0-8, 0-4

Mountain West) have the requisite competitiv­e spirit to win.

He also pointed to a couple positives from Friday. Like like the goal-line stand in the second quarter and the offense’s play in the third and fourth quarters.

Perhaps those events can spark a better performanc­e Saturday at New Mexico, to which UNLV is a 2-point underdog — signaling perceived parity between the two programs.

“These guys want to win. There’s no doubt about it,” Arroyo said.

“It’s really important to these guys. I think the win more than anything is just going to give them the understand­ing — we finished the game, we did what wins, we had this chance at doing this. It’s a belief. That type of confidence has to show up at some point.

“I’m really hoping we can get that win. But it doesn’t happen by accident,” Arroyo added. “They’re dialed into that. … These guys want to get better.”

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