The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Louisville tackles tough challenge

Petrino, Cardinals open season against SEC powerhouse Auburn.

- By Gary B. Graves

LOUISVILLE, KY. — Bobby Petrino has some wins in hand entering his second season as Louisville’s coach even before his Cardinals open Saturday against No. 6 Auburn in Atlanta.

Defensive coordinato­r Todd Grantham and offensive counterpar­t Garrick McGee passed up opportunit­ies with the NFL’s Oakland Raiders and Oklahoma respective­ly to keep the coaching staff intact as it aims to build on last year’s 9-4 finish and bowl appearance.

“I think that gives us a chance to take a step forward and get better,” Petrino said of the continuity.

Recruits are also buying into Petrino’s appeal, and his current roster has been trouble-free off the field. The coach’s task is turning everything into game victories for Louisville, which begins unranked and picked third in the Atlantic Coast Conference’s Atlantic Division.

Saturday’s Kickoff Classic in the Georgia Dome against Auburn is the first meeting between the schools since the Tigers won 16-3 in 1974. Auburn is the first of two ranked opponents Louisville will face in the season’s first 12 days. The Cardinals will host No. 12 Clemson on Sept. 17.

Louisville enters the neutral-site contest with new faces on both sides of the ball, but especially on offense.

Petrino’s biggest issue is deciding whether Reggie Bonnafon, Will Gardner or Kyle Bolin will start at quarterbac­k against Auburn, and indication­s are it will be a game-day decision.

On the other side of the ball, Louisville’s defense appears capable of being as stingy as 2014’s sixth-ranked unit despite losing seven starters.

One question is how the Cardinals will respond to the big-game atmosphere against Auburn, which is favored to win the tough Southeaste­rn Conference.

“We have a lot of newness, so it’s almost like starting over as far as teaching and executing offensivel­y,” Petrino said Monday. “But I really like our talent. It’s just a matter of how quickly can we get them to operate at the execution (level) that we need. ...

“Normally in Year 2, you would say everybody understand­s what we’re doing now and can take further steps ahead. But we really are young offensivel­y.”

Former Louisville coach Howard Schnellenb­erger, who left Miami after winning the national championsh­ip in 1983 and turned a moribund Cardinals program into conference and bowl winners, believes the team will be fine.

Schnellenb­erger notes Petrino’s only losing season as a college coach was his first at Arkansas (5-7 in 2008), which eventually became an SEC contender. He credits his successor for taking over a Louisville squad that lost star quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r to the NFL and leading the Cardinals from unranked start to a fourth straight bowl game and No. 24 final ranking in its first ACC season — with three QBs yet.

“The first year is always the hardest because everybody has to get to know each other and believe in each other,” said Schnellenb­erger.

 ?? TIMOTHY D. EASLEY / AP ?? Louisville head coach Bobby Petrino, monitoring sophomore Kyle Bolin, has yet to pick who’ll start at quarterbac­k.
TIMOTHY D. EASLEY / AP Louisville head coach Bobby Petrino, monitoring sophomore Kyle Bolin, has yet to pick who’ll start at quarterbac­k.

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