San Diego Union-Tribune

CAN CINCY KEEP UP SUCCESS?

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The University of Cincinnati has played football for more than a century in the long shadow of Ohio State.

After all these years, little brother is making some big noise.

For Cincinnati (13-0), playing in the under-theradar American Athletic Conference, everything fell into place in 2021. The Bearcats landed as the No. 4 seed in the College Football Playoff, crashing what has been the domain of college football’s bluebloods, the first school outside a Power Five conference to do so.

Meanwhile, back in Columbus, Ohio State fans are still working through the grief of last month’s disastrous loss to Michigan, which to many was worse than being shut out of the playoff for the first time in three seasons.

The Bearcats scaled the CFP mountain and can see the top from there.

Now fifth-year coach Luke Fickell has to figure out how to keep the Bearcats up there as the program prepares to transition to a Power Five conference — the Big 12 — in the next few years.

“When I came here, a mindset of mine was, ‘I hope someday, that we could become a rival to my alma mater,’ ” said Fickell, who played at Ohio State and was on its coaching staff for 16 years.

“I mean that, all of the sudden, maybe they look at you and recognize that they have to battle against us,” he said.

“Whether we play them on the football field or not, a lot of the other opportunit­ies are in recruiting. That’s where we continue to want to be — and that’s not just the Ohio State stuff. That’s being a top-10 program.”

Cincinnati has a wellearned national reputation as a basketball school. But it could never compete with the tradition, fan base, facilities and recruiting advantage of the juggernaut Buckeyes.

It has, however, had enough football success in the past two decades to become a mid-major stop on the coaching ladder for the likes of Mark Dantonio, Brian Kelly, Butch Jones and presumably Fickell, though he has spurned opportunit­ies to leave.

Urban Meyer, the former Ohio State coach, suggested the trajectory of the Cincinnati program could depend on how the Bearcats show against No. 1 Alabama on New Year’s Eve with 25 million people watching on TV.

“It can be that doubleedge­d sword,” Meyer said. A competitiv­e game boosts the profile of the program; a blowout looks bad and raises doubts about whether the Bearcats belonged.

“There is a lot of responsibi­lity at Cincinnati to go perform well,“said Meyer, who was fired as the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars coach last week. “It is great for them.”

Curiously enough, Cincinnati

and Ohio State, 100 miles apart, have never been football rivals. They’ve played each other just 17 times, with the Bearcats winning twice — in 1896 and 1897. The last time they met was in 2019, when the Buckeyes sent Fickell and the Bearcats back to the bus with 42-0 loss. The schools once went nearly 70 years without a gridiron clash.

Cincinnati football fandom is regional, closer to Ohio’s six Mid-American Conference schools than Ohio State, which a few years ago tried unsuccessf­ully to trademark the word “The” as in “The Ohio State University.”

Fickell built his 2021 team around seniors and transfers who will be gone next season, including quarterbac­k Desmond Ridder, running back Jerome Ford (an Alabama transfer) and most defensive starters. Sustaining the success will be challengin­g, but Fickle has prioritize­d recruiting and building for the future.

Dunkle leaving Aztecs

San Diego State junior right guard William Dunkle announced Friday on social media that he will forego his senior season and declare for the 2022 NFL Draft.

The 6-foot-5, 330-pound Dunkle is an Eastlake High graduate who earned firstteam all-Mountain West honors this season. He was a three-year starter for the Aztecs.

Bruins hire DL coach

UCLA filled its defensive line vacancy with Chad Kauha’aha’a, adding the former UNLV assistant to replace Johnny Nansen, who was hired as defensive coordinato­r at Arizona.

A 15-year college coaching veteran, Kauha’aha’a has coached defensive line at nine colleges.

As with recently hired outside linebacker­s coach Ikaika Malloe, Kauha’aha’a will work as an analyst for the Bruins through the Holiday Bowl.

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