Cincinnati Bearcats
Oct. 22---College Football---
Louisville 46 ... Cincinnati 22---College Football---
Louisville broke open a tight game with two Michael Bush touchdown runs in the third quarter as part of a 33 point run finally halted late in the fourth quarter on a one-yard touchdown pass to Earnest Jackson. Bush finished with three touchdowns, but he fumbled three times. Cincinnati was creative in its play calling with a fake punt and a pass to QB Dustin Grutza in the first half, but couldn't get the offensive moving in the second half, and it couldn't stop the Louisville offense. Elvis Dumervil came up with three sacks for the Cardinals.
Player of the game: Louisville QB Brian Brohm completed 21 of 26 passes for 303 yards and two touchdowns.
Stat Leaders: Cincinnati - Passing: Nick Davila, 9-15, 136 yds, 2 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Greg Moore, 16-75. Receiving: Earnest Jackson, 4-53, 1 TD---College Football---
Louisville - Passing: Brian Brohm, 21-26, 303 yds, 2 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Michael Bush, 17-127, 3 TD. Receiving: Montrell Jones, 6-73, 1 TD---College Football---
What to take away from this game: Give Cincinnati credit for being able to hang around with Louisville for a half, but the defense couldn't come up with a big play to stop two long, third quarter scoring drives and the rout was on. Is Nick Davilla going to be the answer at quarterback? With Dustin Grutza struggling so much, the Bearcats might do a little experimenting and tinkering with the offense to be more consistent and generate more big plays. The run defense is going to have to be tighter over the next few weeks against Syracuse, West Virginia and South Florida.
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Oct. 15---College Football---
Cincinnati 28 ... Connecticut 17---College Football---
Bradley Glatthaar helped give Cincinnati its first Big East win with two touchdown runs including a 72-yard sash in the fourth quarter to put the game away. Dustin Grutza threw a seven-yard scoring pass to Connor Barwin and Butler Benton added a 27-yard scoring run for the Bearcats. UConn struggled with new quarterback D.J. Hernandez going without a touchdown until late in the third quarter. Hernandez threw two touchdowns passes, but couldn't get the ball back after a 13-yard scoring pass to Seth Fogarty with 2:40 to play. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Cincinnati RB Bradley Glatthaar ran 15 times for 123 yards and two touchdowns.
Stat Leaders: Cincinnati - Passing: Dustin Grutza, 9-21, 125 yds, 1 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Bradley Glatthaar, 14-123, 2 TD. Receiving: Earnest Jackson, 3-38---College Football---
Connecticut - Passing: D.J. Hernandez, 19-43, 191 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Terry Caulley, 21-87. Receiving: Dan Murray, 6-70---College Football---
What to take away from this game: There are still major issues after the loss to Connecticut, but there's no knocking the team's first Big East win. The running of Brad Glatthaar carried the offense when QB Dustin Grutza was once again having problems, while the defense took advantage of a green UConn quarterbacks forcing D.J. Hernandez to misfire way too much. To have any prayer of hanging around with teams like Louisville and West Virginia, Grutza has to start making more plays, especially on third downs. He isn't able to generate much deep, and has to start completing more than 50% of his passes on a regular basis.---College Football---
Oct. 8---College Football---
Pitt 38 ... Cincinnati 20---College Football---
Pitt got out to a 16-0 lead in the first half, but it was the special teams that starred setting up a five-yard Tyler Palko touchdown run with a blocked kick, and getting a 79-yard punt return for a score from Rashad Jennings in the third quarter. Cincinnati was down 30-7 before getting a few cosmetic scores on a 47-yard touchdown pass to Brent Celek, and a 22-yard touchdown pass to Earnest Jackson. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Pitt RB Rashad Jennings ran 11 times for 102 yards and a touchdown.---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Pitt - Passing: Tyler Palko, 14-32, 175 yds, 1 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Rashad Jennings, 11-102, 1 TD. Receiving: Greg Lee, 3-77, 1 TD---College Football---
Cincinnati - Passing: Dustin Grutza, 9-19, 180 yds, 2 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Bradley Glatthaar, 16-63, 1 TD. Receiving: Earnest Jackson, 3-85, 1 TD---College Football---
What to take away from this game: Cincinnati is playing like a young team in need of a passing game to get a whole bunch better. Early errors on special teams and defense against Pitt put the Bearcats behind the eight-ball, but the passing game wasn't able to get back in the game as QBs Dustin Grutza and Nick Davila combined to complete a mere 13 of 32 passes for 199 yards and two touchdowns with an interception. To be fair, the line didn't do a great job of keeping the quarterbacks clean, but the quarterbacks have to make quicker, better decisions.---College Football---
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Sept. 28
Miami Univ. 44 ... Cincinnati 16---College Football---
Miami picked off Cincinnati QB Dustin Grutza five times and got three Josh Betts touchdown passes on the way to the easy win. The RedHawks took a 17-0 lead on a 16-yard catch-and-run for a score by Martin Nance, and broke open a tightening game in the fourth quarter on a second Nance touchdown catch and a 35-yard touchdown from Ryne Robinson. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Miami QB Josh Betts completed 22 of 35 passes for 359 yards and three touchdowns with one interception.---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Miami Univ. - Passing: Josh Betts, 22-35, 359 yds, 3 TD, 1 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Brandon Murphy, 27-120, 1 TD. Receiving: Martin Nance, 8-119, 2 TD---College Football---
Cincinnati - Passing: Dustin Grutza, 22-39, 199 yds, 5 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Bradley Glatthaar, 12-36, 1 TD. Receiving: Derick Ross, 7-57---College Football---
What to take away from this game: Cincinnati hasn't exactly impressed so far this year, but the loss to Miami University was the first team the team looked really, really inexperienced. From QB Dustin Grutza's inability to consistently connect with his receivers, to the five interceptions, to all the penalties, this was one to forget. The offense has to find something it can count on, because the passing game isn't there at the moment.
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Sept. 17---College Football---
Cincinnati 7 ... Western Carolina 3---College Football---
Bradley Glatthaar ran for a seven-yard touchdown run in the second quarter and the Bearcat defense did the rest as Dominic Ross picked off two passes helping to hold Western Carolina to a 23-yard field goal. Cincinnati only gained 273 yards, Western Carolina gained 284.---College Football---
Player of the game: Cincinnati SS Dominic Ross made two tackles and stopped two drives with interceptions., RB Bradley Glatthaar ran 18 times for 107 yards and a score. ---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Cincinnati - Passing: Dustin Grutza, 10-24, 88 yds, 1 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Bradley Glatthaar, 18-107, 1 TD. Receiving: Antwuan Giddens, 3-10---College Football---
Western Carolina - Passing: Justin Clark, 19-39, 201 yds, 3 IN---College Football---T---College Football---
Rushing: Darius Fudge, 17-66. Receiving: Lamont Reid, 5-29---College Football---
What to take away from this game: Cincinnati is a very young team with a lot of problems to work out, but this lousy performance against Western Carolina is a big concern before going on the road over the next two games. The passing attack was non-existent as Dustin Grutza appeared to take a step back. Fortunately, RB Bradley Glatthaar carried the offense and appears to be steady enough to revolve the offense around until Grutza can find his accuracy.
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Sept. 10---College Football---
Penn State 42 ... Cincinnati 24---College Football---
Michael Robinson threw for a career high three touchdown passes and ran for another as Penn State coasted to an easy win. Jumping out to a 28-3 lead, Robinson connected with freshman WR Justin King for a 59-yard touchdown and Deon Butler for a 59-yard score. Cincinnati scored 14 points in the final :39. Penn State outgained Cincinnati 148 yards to 31 on the ground. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Penn State QB Michael Robinson completed 11 of 17 passes for 220 yards and three touchdowns with an interception. He also led the team with 62 rushing yards with a touchdown on ten carries.
Stat Leaders: Cincinnati - Passing: Dustin Grutza, 27-47, 286 yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: Butler Benton, 3-15. Receiving: Brent Celek, 7-73---College Football---
Penn State - Passing: Michael Robinson, 11-17, 220 yds, 3 TD, 1 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Michael Robinson, 10-62, 1 TD. Receiving: Derrick Williams, 4-60---College Football---
What to take away from this game: A young Cincinnati team will have problems with tough teams like Penn State, but the turnovers and penalties have to stop. The offense couldn't generate anything on the ground, but QB Dustin Grutza looked decent under fire. It's going to take a while for this team to grow up. Considering it held on to the ball for over 35 minutes, Cincinnati should've had more success.---College Football---
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Sept. 1
Cincinnati 28 ... Eastern Michigan 26---College Football---
Cincinnati QB Dustin Grutza threw two touchdown passes and ran for a 21-yard score as the Bearcats overcame a 20-14 halftime deficit for the win. Eastern Michigan scored 17 straight first half points highlighted by the first of two Tim Connor touchdown runs, but the Bearcat ground game proved to be too much and controlled the action in the second half. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Cincinnati QB Dustin Grutza completed 17 of 26 passes for 170 yards and two touchdowns and ran seven times for 49 yards and a score. ---College Football---
Stat Leaders: UC - Passing: Dustin Grutza, 17-26, 170 yds, 2 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Bradley Glatthaar, 14-76, 1 TD. Receiving: Greg Moore, 1-38, 1 TD---College Football---
EMU - Passing: Matt Bohnet, 22-33, 162 yds, 1 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Matt Bohnet, 10-64. Receiving: Eric Deslauriers, 6-43, 1 TD---College Football---
What to take away from this game: Considering how many new starters the Bearcats had to break in, coming away with the win is strong no matter who it was against. The defense was able to keep the high-powered Eastern Michigan offense from exploding, while UC QB Dustin Grutza was as efficient as Bearcat fans could've hoped for. Keeping the chains moving on third downs like the offense was able to is a big step for the opening game.
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2005 Schedule ---College Football---
Sept. 3 – Eastern Michigan (3-8, 2-6 in MAC) – Offense: There might not be a better unknown quarterback-running back-receiver combination in America than Matt Bohnet, Anthony Sherrell and Eric Deslauriers. Sherrell is back after flirting with transferring this off-season, and the coaching staff thinks he can regain his 1,000-yard form even in the wide-open passing offense. Deslauriers is simply too big and too good for most MAC cornerbacks, while Bohnet should light up most secondaries like a Christmas tree. Expect 35 points per game, but struggles against the top teams on the slate.---College Football---
Defense; Even with changes and a renewed emphasis on becoming physical, the Eagles still had one of the nation's worst defenses unable to stop anyone's passing game and not doing much against the run. For good or bad, there's major turnover with the loss of six starters needing newcomers throughout the linebacking corps and at tackle.
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Sept. 10 – at Penn State 6-5, 3-5 in Big Ten) – Offense: A ton of experience returns to one of the worst Penn State offenses ever averaging 17.73 points per game with five games scoring seven points or fewer. The line has all five starters returning (if C E.Z. Smith and G Tyler Reed are back from spring suspension) and it has to be much, much better. The receiving corps got a major boost this recruiting season with lightning-fast Derrick Williams and Justin King adding some desperately needed pop. There has to be more from the quarterbacks with the underwhelming Michael Robinson getting the nod since star prospect Anthony Morelli hasn't progressed enough yet. There's talent in the backfield; now it has to do more.---College Football---
Defense: The nation's tenth best defense and fifth best scoring D should be even better with almost all the parts returning and FS Chris Harrell coming back after missing all of last year with a neck injury. The defense didn't allow more than 21 points per game coming up with a shockingly good season. The corners will be among the best in the nation as will the starting linebackers. Overall depth and a lights-out pass rusher are the slight weaknesses, but that's nitpicking.---College Football---
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Sept. 17 – Western Carolina---College Football---
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Sept. 24 – at Miami University (9-2, 7-1 in MAC) – Offense: Consistency will be the key after blowing up against the bad teams and struggling against the better ones. Expect more production with Josh Betts experienced enough grow into one of the MAC's best quarterbacks, and a loaded receiving corps good enough to make any passer look good. The line is loaded with size, experience and talent ready to pave the way for a young, but talented backfield.
Defense: The defense should be tighter than last year when it allowed 339 yards and 23 points per game thanks to a loaded linebacking corps and a line that'll camp out in opposing backfields. The pass defense has work to do losing Matt Pusateri and Alphonso Hodge, but the return of safeties Joey Card and Steve Burke from injury, along with lightning-fast corner Darrell Hunter, will help.---College Football---
Oct. 8 – at Pittsburgh (9-2, 6-1 in Big East) – Offense: There will be a slight shift in the offense from Walt Harris West Coast offense to more of a balanced, running style under offensive coordinator Matt Cavanaugh. Even so, there are more than enough weapons to have an explosive air attack with QB Tyler Palko, WRs Greg Lee and Joe DelSardo, and a fantastic tight end pair of Erik Gill and Steve Buches to keep the nation's 24th best passing offense going. The ground game won't be 105th in the nation again with a loaded backfield soon to be led by freshman sensation Rashad Jennings. The line is experienced, but it needs to be more consistent.---College Football---
Defense: Inconsistent throughout last year and average against the pass, there's hope for improvement with the return of seven starters and a truckload of depth. The strength is the back seven led by a linebacking corps that has several talented options to work with. The secondary has good corners in Josh Lay and Darrelle Revis, but they have to be better at not giving up the deep ball. The front four will be a concern if a reliable pass rusher doesn't develop
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Oct. 15 - Connecticut (6-5, 3-4 in Big East) – Offense: All the focus is on the quarterback situation where Matt Bonislawski and D.J. Hernandez will try to replace heart-and-soul leader Dan Orlovsky, but the winner of the derby will be more than capable of putting up big numbers. The backfield is the best in the Big East with Terry Caulley returning from a knee injury to join defending Big East rushing champion Cornell Brockington. The receiving corps is more than solid despite some key losses. And then there's the offensive line. The interior could be a nightmare early, there aren't any true tackles and there's no depth whatsoever.---College Football---
Defense: Is this the Big East's best defense? It'll be close with a deep and experienced front four and secondary. While the numbers are there as far as good retuning players, the star quality is gone with the departure of LBs Alfred Fincher and Maurice Lloyd along with CB Justin Perkins. Even so, don't expect much of a drop-off from the D that finished 27th in the nation last year unless there's a major fallout from losing five players to suspension due to the shooting of a vehicle window with a pellet gun.---College Football---
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Oct. 22 - Louisville (10-1, 6-1 in Big East) – Offense: Talk about reloading. Louisville loses all-star quarterback Stefan LeFors, NFL-caliber, 20-touchdown running back Eric Shelton, and 73-catch receiver J.R. Russell, but should be just as strong as the offense that was the nation's best last year. There's plenty of talent returning and several great options among the reserves to keep the party rolling. QB Brian Brohm will instantly become one of the nation's top quarterbacks now that he's the full-time starter. The Cards are loaded with talented running backs and receivers and blessed with one of the nation's deepest and most athletic lines. However, the party could crash if Brohm gets hurt with no experience behind him.---College Football---
Defense: The Louisville defense was overlooked last year due to the brilliance of the offense. The Cardinal D ranked number one in Conference USA in almost every category and finished second in pass defense. It won't be quite as strong this year replacing three starters in the secondary, some stars on the line and leader and top tackler Robert McCune. Even so, it's a very fast, very athletic defense that should rank near the top of most Big East categories.
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Oct. 29 – at Syracuse (5-6, 4-3 in Big East) – Offense: The offense struggled way too much failing to get anything going in the passing game and finishing 100th in the nation in passing. Quarterbacks Perry Patterson and Joe Fields have to be more consistent, but they also need help with a young receiving corps that could struggle early on. The attack is being changed up a bit to throw it more in a West Coast attack, so the opportunities will be there. The offensive line is decent, but non-descript.---College Football---
Defense: The hiring of Greg Robinson as head coach should do nothing but help a defense that slipped into the abyss finishing 101st in the nation. There was little production against the run, nothing happening against the pass, and few clutch stops. There should be an improvement with a ton of returning experience led by a good-looking front seven. The corner is in the secondary where the corners have to make more plays after getting repeatedly torched last season.---College Football---
Nov. 9 - West Virginia (7-4, 5-2 in Big East) – Offense: Expect a major step back from Big East's number two offense of last year with almost all the skill positions going through a major overhaul hurt by a woeful lack of experience at quarterback and receiver. The running game will be up to the normally high Mountaineer standards with three good backs (Jason Colson, Pernell Williams and Erick Phillips) operating behind a good, veteran line. The winner of the three-man quarterback derby will have to be razor-sharp until the receiving corps comes around.
Defense: The defense had a strong year, but it has to replace some major players including all-everything corner Adam "Pac Man" Jones. Even so, the secondary is the strength of the defense with three solid All-Big East candidates in FS Jahmile Addae, S Mike Lorello and CB Anthony Mims. The front three will be a rock with 295-pound veterans ready to hold the line. The question mark is at linebacker where tough backups have to become reliable starters. There's solid depth everywhere. ---College Football---
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Nov. 19 – at South Florida (3-8, 1-6 in Big East) – Offense: The potential is there for a big improvement after struggling to be consistent. Andre Hall is Big East's best running back working behind a rebuilding, but decent line. The receiving corps is deep and experienced led by tall, speedy Johnny Peyton. The problem is at quarterback where Pat Julmiste couldn't hit water last year if he was standing in the ocean, and Auburn transfer Courtney Denson is a former defensive back. If a steady passer emerges, this should be the Big East's surprise offense.
Defense: The normally good Bull defense struggled last year with no pass defense and little success against the run with a line that was too small. Things should be better with a strong linebacking corps and the return of DT Tim Jones and SS Johnnie Jones after missing all of last year. The key will be the improvement in the corners after struggling to stop anyone, but they could use more of a steady pass rush.---College Football---
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Nov. 26 – at Rutgers (5-6, 2-5 in Big East) – Offense: QB Ryan Hart will once again lead one of the nation's most productive passing attacks with a loaded receiving corps highlighted by Tres Moses and tight end Clark Harris. Can the attack actually produce points on a regular basis? It struggled wildly with consistency and turnovers while getting nothing from a ground game that averaged 2.5 yards per carry and 83 yards per game. There's way too much experience in the backfield to have a repeat disaster.---College Football---
Defense: It's an interesting mix of talents and strengths with a great group of ends led by Ryan Neill and an experience linebacking corps, but there has been little in the way of overall results. With many newcomers to the mix last year in key spots, things got rocky finishing 104th in the nation in total defense and 88th in scoring D. The biggest area of improvement should be the secondary where Derrick Roberson and Joe Porter are good looking corners who should be over most of their struggles.---College Football---
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