The Day

No easy road for Knights in this quest

No. 7 UCF meets Memphis for AAC championsh­ip

- By FRED GOODALL

Orlando, Fla. — There are no shortcuts in unbeaten UCF's quest for perfection.

The seventh-ranked Knights (11-0, 8-0, No. 8 CFP) are one victory away from their second straight American Athletic Conference championsh­ip, a likely New Year's Six bowl bid, and bolstering their argument that they are deserving of considerat­ion for a berth in the College Football Playoff.

None of that is possible, though, without beating Memphis (8-4, 5-3) in Saturday's AAC title game.

"Really, we still don't focus on that. We've had 11 months of work that have led us to this opportunit­y: win a conference championsh­ip," coach Josh Heupel said.

"We don't have to do anything out of the ordinary, but we do have to have a heightened sense of urgency and have great attention to detail because we're playing a great opponent," Heupel added. " I expect a great ball game, one that will come down to the end, and we have to compete for 60 minutes."

While that may sound like a bunch of hyperbole, there are plenty of reasons for Heupel to feel that way — beginning with UCF playing without injured quarterbac­k McKenzie Milton, the two-time AAC offensive player of the year.

This will be the fourth time the Knights and Tigers have faced each other in two seasons. And even with Milton in the lineup, the past two matchups — UCF's 62-55 double overtime victory in last year's conference title game, and the Knights' 31-30 come-from-behind win at Memphis in October — are among the closest calls the defending champs have had during a nation's-best 24-game winning streak.

"We've had a couple of extraordin­ary games in these last couple years. But at critical times we've made mistakes and they've made some plays that have been the difference," Memphis coach Mike Norvell said.

"We can't do things that hurt ourselves. You understand that these guys are going to make plays; they are talented in every phase," Norvell added. "If we continue to focus on ourselves, I have a tremendous amount of confidence in our football team and what we can do."

Some things to watch and know about UCF and Memphis, which won four straight following a 1-3 conference start to win the West Division:

Playing for Milton

Milton, eighth in Heisman Trophy balloting a year ago, suffered a severe right leg injury during UCF's regular-season finale at South Florida. On his way to repeating as the conference's top offensive player, he threw for 2,663 yards and 25 touchdowns vs. six intercepti­ons. Milton also rushed for 307 yards and nine TDs.

Heupel said the Knights will be playing for the junior from Kapolei, Hawaii.

"Absolutely," Heupel said. "Everybody in our program understand­s what KZ has meant as a player, but also in the spirit of who he is and how he prepares every day. Our players love him and appreciate everything that he's done. They're going to play for themselves, and the guy next to them, and they're certainly going to play for KZ."

Next man up

With Milton out, redshirt freshman Darriel Mack Jr., will make his second start of the season. He led a road victory over East Carolina in October and directed the offense for the final two-plus quarters of last week's rout of South Florida.

UCF believes it has enough playmakers around Mack, including running backs Greg McCrae and Adrian Killins Jr., and receivers Gabriel Davis, Dredrick Snelson and Tre Nixon, to help the young quarterbac­k be successful.

"We have complete confidence in him, and we expect him to play in a great way," Heupel said.

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