The Columbus Dispatch

No. 8 Cincinnati braces for Indiana battle

- Keith Jenkins

The University of Cincinnati football team outscored its first two opponents by a combined margin of 91-21. But despite the two convincing victories, the No. 8-ranked Bearcats have yet to put together a complete game.

Cincinnati started strong against the rival Miami Redhawks in the season opener, only to surrender two late scores and lose the shutout.

The Bearcats dominated FCS opponent Murray State in the second half last week, but sputtered to a 7-7 tie against the Racers at halftime.

Cincinnati senior quarterbac­k Desmond Ridder knows if they're going to defeat Indiana (1-1, 0-1 Big Ten) on Saturday and improve to 3-0, the Bearcats are going to have to start fast and finish strong.

“We just obviously started out the Murray State game slow. I guess guys weren't playing to their expectatio­ns or level,” Ridder said. “But coming up for the rest of the year on, these two out-ofconferen­ce games and then the whole conference schedule, we know that we have to be on our whole game and play all four quarters.”

3 keys to victory for the Bearcats

1. Stay composed: Cincinnati's camp in August consisted of some of the most intense practices of many of the players' careers.

The days were hot, long and arduous. But all of it was in preparatio­n for the stretch that begins at noon Saturday.

The Bearcats have back-to-back non-conference road games (with a bye week in between) at Indiana and Notre Dame.

The fate of Cincinnati's season rests largely in the results of these next two contests. The Bearcats will need to keep their composure, stay focused on the moment and not get wrapped up in the noise outside of the program or the noise inside of Indiana's sold-out Memorial Stadium.

“Offensively, we just haven't been in that situation in a long while,” UC coach Luke Fickell said. “We're making checks

and things like that, even the cadence. I don't know exactly how bad (the crowd noise) could be, but we know it's going to be somewhat of an effect. It's something we haven't seen in a year and a half. These are things you always have to prepare yourself for.”

2. Give the ball to Jerome Ford: The junior running back has 234 yards and four touchdowns through the first two games. Ford had a career-high 18 carries last week.

With Ford averaging 7.8 yards per carry this season, it's time for offensive coordinato­r Mike Denbrock to let the 5foot-11, 220-pound back carry the load.

It will also allow Cincinnati to control the clock and keep that explosive Indiana offense on the sideline. Hoosiers quarterbac­k Michael Penix Jr. put up 491 yards and five touchdowns against then-no. 3-ranked Ohio State last season.

3. A special day on special teams: The Bearcats have been in cruise control for much of the season. Because of that, they haven't needed to rely heavily on their special teams.

That could change Saturday. “When you go on the road, there's a lot of things you've got to be able to do, and it starts with special teams,” Fickell said. “Everybody talks offense and defense, but the reality is the thing that ties everybody together is special teams. Incredible momentum changes and the battle of field position is done on special teams.”

 ?? ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER ?? Quarterbac­k Desmond Ridder and Cincinnati have back-to-back tough road games at Indiana and Notre Dame.
ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER Quarterbac­k Desmond Ridder and Cincinnati have back-to-back tough road games at Indiana and Notre Dame.

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