Miami Herald

Decision on FIU starting quarterbac­k still up in air

- BY WALTER VILLA

Call it deja FIU.

The FIU Panthers are right back where they started their season three weeks ago – with the same number of wins as losses and no announced starting quarterbac­k.

FIU (1-1) will play its Conference USA opener Saturday at Western Kentucky University (2-1), and Panthers coach Mike MacIntyre has not indicated which QB will start: Gunnar Holmberg, Grayson James or Haden Carlson. All three have played so far this season.

Not that this bothers star wide receiver Tyrese Chambers.

“I played with three quarterbac­ks in little league, I played with three quarterbac­ks in high school, three quarterbac­ks at my last [Sacred Heart University], and three quarterbac­ks now,” Chambers said.

“I’ve been dealing with that my whole life. But I can play with any quarterbac­k. It doesn’t matter how they throw. I will make adjustment­s.”

Indeed, Chambers leads C-USA with nine catchers per game, and he ranks seventh in the league in yards per contest (79.0).

Saturday’s game will be played at WKU’s 22,000seat stadium in Bowling Green, starting at 3:30 p.m. (CBS Sports Network).

“I’m excited,” Chambers said. “It’s a CBS game, national television game. This is an opportunit­y to make a name for yourself.

“I’ve studied some stuff on Western Kentucky. They are a really good team, but there are some things we can take advantage of, and hopefully we get to that.”

WKU, though, is a 311⁄2-point favorite. The Hilltopper­s have been impressive so far this season, beating Austin Peay, 38-27; defeating host Hawaii, 49-17; and nearly knocking off host Indiana before losing in overtime, 33-30.

Chambers said he and his fellow FIU receivers ate chicken wings and fries at a local restaurant while watching the WKUIndiana game.

“Win,” Chambers said when asked if he rooted for a WKU victory or defeat. “It’s C-USA against a Power Five school. I wanted them to get that dub [win].”

Chambers won’t be rooting for WKU this week, of course, and it will be interestin­g to see how the Panthers settle

their QB question.

The Panthers started Holmberg, a Duke transfer, in their season-opening 38-37 overtime win over Bryant, an FCS program.

But Holmberg suffered a concussion in that game, and it was James who carried the Panthers to victory, firing four touchdown passes.

Last week, James made his first career collegiate start, and FIU lost 41-12 at Texas State. Holmberg missed the game, and third-stringer Carlson made his collegiate debut.

Besides the quarterbac­k issue, FIU needs other receivers to emerge to take pressure off Chambers, who has been facing nearly constant double-teams.

“I’ve seen crazy stuff,” Chambers said of the coverages he has faced. “I’ve never before seen a safety run over the top of a fade on the goal line.”

After Chambers’ 18 catches, FIU’s secondlead­ing wide receiver is Kris Mitchell, with five receptions.

As for FIU’s defense, WKU represents a massive challenge. The Hilltopper­s

have scored at least 30 points in 17 consecutiv­e games.

In fact, WKU leads C-USA with a 39.0 scoring average. FIU is nextto-last in the league in defense, allowing 39.0 points.

“Western has an excellent program,” MacIntyre said. “It will be a tough challenge, but our guys are excited about going up there to play.”

THIS AND THAT

WKU has beaten FIU three straight times, including 34-19 last year. WKU is 12-6 at home under current coach Tyson Helton, and the Hilltopper­s are coming off a 9-5 season during which they lost in the C-USA title game, 49-41, to Texas-San Antonio.

WKU quarterbac­k Austin Reed is a graduate-transfer from West Florida, where he won an NCAA Division II national championsh­ip in 2019. Reed, a 6-2, 230-pounder from St. Augustine, is completing 69.2% of his passes this season and ranks second in C-USA in yards per game (292.0).

WKU running back Kye Robichaux is averaging an impressive 7.9 yards per carry. He is ninth in the league with 67.3 yards per game.

WKU wide receiver Daewood Davis is fourth in the league with 93.0 receiving yards per game. Davis, who is from Deerfield Beach High and played for coach Mario Cristobal at

Oregon, is averaging 17.4 yards on his 16 catches.

FIU’s Lexington Joseph ranks second in C-USA in kick-return average (29.6).

FIU linebacker­s Donovan Manuel (10.0) and Gaethan Bernadel (9.5) rank fourth and fifth, respective­ly, in C-USA tackles per game.

 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Coach Mike MacIntyre, left, and WR Tyrese Chambers react after the season-opening win against Bryant. Chambers said he can adjust to any of the Panthers’ quarterbac­ks.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Coach Mike MacIntyre, left, and WR Tyrese Chambers react after the season-opening win against Bryant. Chambers said he can adjust to any of the Panthers’ quarterbac­ks.

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