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Warriors, MWC struggling to impress

Ferd Lewis
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ASSOCIATED PRESS / SEPT. 10

San Diego State running back Donnel Pumphrey helped the Aztecs beat the Cal Bears.

As the University of Hawaii football team catches its breath during this open week in the schedule, it is an opportune time to see what the rest of the Mountain West conference has been up to.

Which, up to this point, you’d have to say is not much.

This is the last big week of nonconference games for the MWC before it dives whole-heartily into league play with only Utah State and Air Force opening in the MWC on Saturday. And, on balance, it has done little to distinguish itself on the national stage.

With just seven nonconference games remaining after this week, the mild, mild MWC is 9-15 against fellow NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision teams. It is favored in three of the seven nonconference games it plays this week.

So, it isn’t exactly Murderer’s Row that awaits UH over the eight weeks of conference play that begin with the Oct. 1 opener against Nevada. UH’s season finale, Nov. 26 vs. Massachusetts, is its last nonconference game as well.

Overall the MWC can claim a 20-15 record. But on closer inspection, that is heavily built on an 11-0 record against lower tier FCS members such as Weber State, Abilene Christian, Sacramento State and Tennessee Martin.

Against so-called Power Five conference schools, the MWC is 2-11 and the vast majority of those games were over at halftime. If not when the contracts were signed.

The most impressive victory to date is Donnel Pumphrey-led San Diego State’s 45-40 triumph over unranked California. At the moment the Aztecs carry the conference banner with the only national ranking (22nd in the Associated Press poll but unranked by the coaches’ poll) and a 13-game winning streak.

And, in fact, the only other win over a Power Five conference opponent is Boise State’s 31-28 victory against Washington State.

Against non-Power Five FBS teams, the MWC is 7-4, though some of its teams, such as once-potent Fresno State, a 52-17 loser to Toledo last week, and New Mexico, a 32-21 loser to New Mexico State, have stumbled badly there.

Still, this is what passes for improvement in the MWC which experienced its worst out-of-conference showing in its 17-year history last year. Overall, the MWC was 23-33 in 2015.

It was disturbing enough that MWC commissioner Craig Thompson counseled members to avoid signing on the dotted line for too many tough games. This summer at the MWC media day Thompson told reporters that member schools should schedule “creatively” lest their records and the conference’s rating continue to slide, thereby endangering the opportunity to land a representative in one of the big money playoff games.

Thompson said the goal would be to have as many teams as possible come out of nonconference play “3-1 or, hopefully 4-0.”

So far only three of the 12 MWC members have winning records against FCS peers: San Diego State (2-0), Boise State (2-0) and Air Force (1-0).

Things are looking up for the MWC but at this point there are few teams that should strike fear into anybody’s heart come conference play.


Reach Ferd Lewis at flewis@staradvertiser.com or 529-4820.


6 responses to “Warriors, MWC struggling to impress”

  1. bleedgreen says:

    Surely you haven’t forgotten the thrashing by Boise St and Air Force last season where the Warriors lost 0-55 and 7-58, respectively. With the Warriors’ defense as porous as it is to both the run and pass, coupled with bad tackling, there is little to expect a better outcome this year. Fear? Perhaps not, but the outcome is expected to be about the same.

  2. mctruck says:

    Just viewing ESPN over last weekends play and the discussion among the panelists was which power5 conferences was still in the national race? All the panelists agreed that the Big12 was done and out already just after two weeks into the season.
    So UH shouldn’t feel all that bad. If you were a Big12 member and your top 5 teams had either upsets or just blown out facing teams who were not in the power5, then that would be really disappointing.

  3. Tempmanoa says:

    It is not just the record of 1-3, but the blowouts that make this start (1-3, with 25.8 points scored vs 49.3 points given up) probably the worst even compared to Chow. Last year we were 2-2 with 25.8 points vs. 35.6 points given up as D and Wittek started well (but we won only 1 more game in 2015). In 2014, we were 1-3 scoring 19.3 vs 25.3 points given up (we won 3 more games that year to finish with 4 wins– Woolsey’s best year)

    • Pacificsports says:

      Believe or not, UH is 19th in the Nation in total offense with 1521 yards but only 93 with 25.8 pts per game. Defense is the worst in the Nation in not only total yards allowed but pts per game. Against Nevada we are close in pts per game scored, offense, but way behind in defense, 26.7/49.3. If the Defense doesn’t change, and I don’t think missing tackles is the major problem, you just can’t go mano on mano, UH may not win the games they really have a chance to win.

  4. nomu1001 says:

    Would you rather watch a team lose with players who give 100% and play for their teammates, or players who seem to have no problem giving less than 100% and just as bad, don’t show up with effort at practice?

    • nomu1001 says:

      Same for fans watching their team win. So, our questions is, where is the leadership from the seniors and upper classmen? Ioho, players should realize by now that loyal fans will stick with them and support them, win or lose, if the effort is there and it shows on the field.

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