Sabtu, 28 Juli 2012

BYU football focused on halting trend toward slow starts

Brigham Young Cougars head coach Bronco Mendenhall leaves the field after beating Ole Miss in Oxford, Miss Saturday, Sept. 3, 2011. BYU won 14-13.

Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

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PROVO — There's a frustrating trend at BYU that senior quarterback Riley Nelson is striving to put an end to this season.

In five of the past seven years, the Cougars have suffered two losses early in the campaign. Those disappointing defeats in the first month have quickly squelched the program's dreams of reaching its loftiest goals.

As an independent, BYU has no conference championship to play for, and a schedule that is frontloaded with tough opponents — which places increased emphasis on the first part of the season.

"I'm glad you brought that up," Nelson told reporters during BYU's media day last month when he was asked about slow starts. "No one's really talked about that. It has been a focus of ours. We can't afford to do it anymore. We did it again last year. It's over, man. It's the same old song. We're tired of doing the same stuff."

In coach Bronco Mendenhall's seven years at the helm, BYU has posted a lackluster 15-13 mark in the first four games of the season. And that includes five consecutive victories in season-openers.

Most of the trouble has come in Week 3 — the Cougars are 1-6 in the third game of the season under Mendenhall.

Last September, BYU opened with a dramatic victory at Ole Miss, which was followed by a one-point setback at Texas, then a humiliating, 44-point drubbing at home at the hands of arch-rival Utah.

The Cougars open the 2012 season at home against Washington State (Aug. 30), then host Weber State (Sept. 8). They make back-to-back road trips to Utah (Sept. 15) and Boise State (Sept. 20).

"I'm most anxious about coming out of the gate strong," Nelson said. "Utah's our third game and Boise State is right after Utah. You take it one game at a time, but let's get rolling that first month. If we continue that, can you imagine? By the end of the season, we'll be the team we want to be."

Mendenhall is well-aware of his teams' slow starts and said he's spent a lot of time thinking about it — though no more this offseason than previous offseasons. Mendenhall points to playing tough games early in the season. "That's maybe a simple explanation," he said.

He is also aware of BYU's success in openers, adding that the key "is to sustain it, usually on the road against good teams."

It's an issue Mendenhall hinted he is planning to address in fall camp, which opens on Aug. 2.

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