San Antonio Express-News

Cougars have chance for win vs. ranked foe

- By Joseph Duarte STAFF WRITER joseph.duarte@chron.com

In what seems like a lifetime ago, the University of Houston was among the most talked about football programs outside the Power Five establishm­ent.

Four years ago, the Cougars were coming off a 13-1 season and New Year’s Six bowl appearance and seemed destined for a long run as the top Group of Five program. There was the brief flirtation with the Big 12, followed by two of the biggest wins in school history against Oklahoma and Louisville, both No. 3 at the time, during the 2016 season.

It was a memorable two-year stretch.

It was short-lived. Things have not been the same since.

After two seasons as head coach, Tom Herman left in a hurry for Texas. Major Applewhite lasted only two mediocre seasons.

A chance to finally get a signature win under second-year coach Dana Holgorsen will come Friday night when the Cougars play No. 14 BYU at TDECU Stadium.

“It’s a good opportunit­y for us to show what we’ve got and put Houston back on the map,” wide receiver Keith Corbin said.

The journey the last three years has left UH wandering the boondocks of college football. They haven’t been back to the American Athletic Conference championsh­ip game since 2015. A run of six straight seasons in mostly middle-tier postseason bowl games ended last year. In the annual pursuit for a lucrative bowl, UH has been passed by Central Florida, Memphis, Cincinnati and SMU, among others, in the Group of Five pecking order.

After going 4-8 last season, Holgorsen can see progress.

Exhibit A: the Cougars remain a destinatio­n for some top high school prospects and onetime national recruits at Power Five programs eager to come home.

Exhibit B: The Cougars staged a 17-point comeback to beat Tulane 49-31 in last week’s season opener, the first encouragin­g sign in a season that had delivered bad news on a weekly basis with five September games called off because of COVID-19 issues.

UH is receiving votes in the most recent Associated Press and

USA Today Coaches Top 25 polls. Awin over Byuwould at least toss UH back into the national discussion and add another contender to what is expected to be a wild AAC race.

“It can either make you or it can’t,” Corbin said. “Hopefully this game can get this program back to what it used to be in 2016. I feel we are ready for the challenge and ready to put on a show.”

For that to happen, the Cougars must end a streak of seven straight losses against Top 25 opponents dating to the end of the 2018 season, six of those coming during a brutal schedule a year ago.

After Friday, the schedule does not get any easier with remaining games at No. 8 Cincinnati and No. 17 SMU and against Memphis and UCF, which were ranked earlier this season.

“It’s a big game just because it’s the next game,” linebacker Donavan Mutin said of playing BYU. “We don’t play up or downto anyone. They are a great team. We have to be ready to play.”

UH held Tulane to 211 total yards, including 70 on the ground, and was able to get consistent pressure with six sacks, 12 tackles for loss and five quarterbac­k hurries.

Through one game, UH leads the nation in total defense, second in passing defense and third in rushing defense. On offense, the Cougars are third nationally in scoring with an average 49 points per game.

Led by quarterbac­k Zach Wilson, BYUIS the No. 5 offense in the country, averaging 556.8 yards per game. Wilson has completed 81 percent of his pass attempts for 1,241 yards with eight touchdowns and only one intercepti­on. He’s also ran for six touchdowns.

BYU is equally impressive on defense, allowing 250.5 yards, which ranks fourth nationally.

After winning its first three games by an average of 41 points, BYU narrowly beat UTSA 27-20.

“We are fired up because we have been hearing that, ‘Oh, your strength of schedule is … whatever,’ ” BYU wide receiver Gunner Romney said, according to the Deseret News. “Houston is a good team, so we are excited for the challenge, and we are ready to amp it up this week.”

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