Las Vegas Review-Journal

Upstart UNLV not intimidate­d by Boise State’s past successes

- By Mike Grimala This story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com at 2 a.m. today.

From a historic perspectiv­e, the Boise State and UNLV football programs could not be any further apart.

Boise State has a trophy case full of Mountain West Conference championsh­ips, a highlight reel of bowl-game memories and a long list of successful coaches who have kept the machine humming for decades. UNLV has a metal pineapple, a lonely loss in the Heart of Dallas Bowl and the Marcus Arroyo years.

And yet, when the two teams meet Saturday for the MWC championsh­ip, they will be on equal footing.

This may be UNLV’S first trip to the Mountain West title game, but even after nine consecutiv­e losing seasons, coach Barry Odom is determined to get his team to play like it’s been there before.

Odom convened his players Monday morning to deliver that message.

“The historical significan­ce of how many (championsh­ip games) we have or have not played in should have no bearing on how we prepare and play on Saturday,” Odom said. “It’s exciting for us to be the first one. We’re going to embrace that.”

The two opponents took different routes to get to the final weekend.

Boise State was picked to finish first in the preseason Mountain West media poll, while UNLV was tapped to finish ninth. Once the games began, UNLV sprinted out to a surprising 3-0 start in conference play while Boise State floundered.

Three weeks ago, after the Broncos fell to 4-2 and seemingly were out of the championsh­ip race, Boise State fired its coach, Andy Avalos.

Six days after Avalos was dismissed, UNLV locked up its spot in the title game with a stirring comeback win Nov. 18 at Air Force.

Boise State turned its fortunes around under interim coach Spencer Danielson, winning its final two contests and forcing a three-way tie for first place with UNLV and San Jose State.

The Mountain West used computer rankings as its tiebreaker, and UNLV and Boise State emerged as the unlikely top two.

Both teams had their doubters along the way, but UNLV skeptics were legion. And that’s fine with Odom. He believes his players perform better when they’ve got something to prove.

“We are a good football team

when we have a chip on our shoulder,” Odom said. “Whatever that chip is, it needs to be large.”

Now that they’re matched against Boise State and that program’s four Mountain West championsh­ips, the Scarlet and Gray are back in their element as the underdogs; Boise State opened as a 2.5-point favorite despite the game being played on UNLV’S home turf.

One area where UNLV doesn’t have to look up at anyone is the running game. Under first-year offensive coordinato­r Brennan Marion, the Scarlet and Gray have a top-tier ground attack that leads the nation in rushing touchdowns (36) and ranks 24th in rushing yards (2,253). Even against Boise State’s respectabl­e run defense (4.2 yards per carry allowed), Unlvshould­havethe edge.

Senior running back Donavyn Lester has served as the battering ram this season, powering his way to 449 yards and five touchdowns as part of the team’s stable of ball carriers. In his view, the championsh­ip will be determined by which team is best equipped to withstand an afternoon of physical football — not by which program has more banners hanging in their practice facility.

“This is a heavyweigh­t matchup,” Lester said. “The team with the least mistakes is going to win the game, so we’re just trying to have a perfect game and play four quarters of our best football.”

Because of the conference’s unique scheduling quirk, this will be the first meeting between UNLV and Boise State since 2019 (a 39-13 victory for the Broncos). The Mountain West changed its scheduling strategy in 2022 to eliminate divisional play, which member schools reasoned would give the league’s top teams more opportunit­ies to advance to a New Year’s Six game. For the Scarlet and Gray, that 2019 beating was two coaches and one stadium ago. Only three current players were on that UNLV team.

Junior cornerback Cameron

Oliver was still in high school the last time Boise State put UNLV in its place, and that makes it all but meaningles­s.

According to Oliver, there will be no David vs. Goliath storyline when they do battle on Saturday.

“They’re a regular football team, just like us,” he said. “I feel like we’re evenly matched on both sides of the ball.”

 ?? WADE VANDERVORT ?? UNLV coach Barry Odom yells to his team Saturday in their game against San Jose State at Allegiant Stadium. The Rebels, who were picked to finish ninth in a preseason poll, will play Saturday against perennial contender Boise State in the Mountain West Conference Championsh­ip at Allegiant. Boise State is the favorite, but Odom is nonplussed. “We are a good football team when we have a chip on our shoulder,” he said Monday. “Whatever that chip is, it needs to be large.”
WADE VANDERVORT UNLV coach Barry Odom yells to his team Saturday in their game against San Jose State at Allegiant Stadium. The Rebels, who were picked to finish ninth in a preseason poll, will play Saturday against perennial contender Boise State in the Mountain West Conference Championsh­ip at Allegiant. Boise State is the favorite, but Odom is nonplussed. “We are a good football team when we have a chip on our shoulder,” he said Monday. “Whatever that chip is, it needs to be large.”

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