Sunday, September 10, 2017

Three Thoughts on Utah's win over BYU


Nobody can deny Utah has gained the upper hand over BYU in the Holy War.

The Utes notched a 19-13 win over the Cougars on Saturday night to win their seventh straight game in the rivalry series. Utah last won seven straight over BYU when it ran off seven consecutive wins over BYU from 1951 to 1957. That was part of a 12-game unbeaten stretch extending back to 1946 which saw the Utes post an 11-0-1 record.

Even though final score indicates a close hard-fought game, Utah never trailed and led by as many as 16 points early in the third quarter. BYU struggled to move the ball with any consistency, punting on six drives and coughing up turnovers on three others. The Utes possessed a decided advantage in speed, athleticism and depth in every phase of the game and never let the Cougars generate a sustained rhythm.

What transpired reveals quite a bit about the paths both teams seem poised to travel as the season progresses. Here are three observations from Utah's 19-13 win over BYU:

1. Utah has an elite quarterback

There's no question Tyler Huntley is a star in the making. Huntley's skills are a perfect match for the offensive schemes of Utah Offensive Coordinator Troy Taylor. He is an elusive runner, an accurate passer and an effective decision maker.

Huntley gave a good BYU defense fits for four quarters. He threw for 300 yards on 27-of-36 passing, becoming the first Utah quarterback with a 300-yard game since Travis Wilson passed for 311 yards in a 38-34 win over Colorado in 2014. He also rushed for 89 yards and a touchdown on 19 carries. His mobility and accuracy kept the Cougars scrambling to keep up with him.

Darren Carrington has become the sophomore's favorite target. Carrington had ninth career 100-yard receiving game – and second straight at Utah – after totaling 129 yards on seven catches. Through two games with the Utes, the Oregon transfer has caught a total of 17 passes for 256 yards.

2. BYU needs to make major changes on offense

Unless BYU does something different on offense soon, the Cougars will face an uphill climb just to post a winning record this season. Elite defenses at LSU and Utah have exposed some serious deficiencies in what the Cougars are doing on offense.

It starts with ineffective quarterback play. Tanner Mangum has struggled with accuracy and decision making in all three of BYU's games up to this point. Mangum threw for 170 yards and a touchdown on 21-of-39 passing while also tossing three interceptions. Utah scored 10 points off of Mangum's interceptions, making them a major deciding factor in another BYU's loss.

The time has come for BYU to scrap the pro-style West Coast offense that Cougars offensive coordinator Ty Detmer installed last season and introduce some up-tempo spread concepts. Mangum has a tendency to panic and get happy feet in the pocket, leading to poor timing and accuracy on his throws. Putting him in shotgun and going no-huddle will give him a chance to react instead of overthink and bring him back to the promising form he showed as a freshman.

BYU also needs to attack the middle of the field more often. The Cougars best offensive weapons in the passing game are tight end Matt Bushman and slot receiver Aleva Hifo. Getting the ball to Bushman and Hifo consistently will draw the defense to the middle and open things up for speedier receivers like Talon Shumway, Micah Simon and Jonah Trinnaman who can snag deeper passes.


3. Utah needs to clean up the penalties

Playing disciplined football has been a serious problem for Utah through the first two games of the season. The Utes are killing their own drives and giving opponents second life on offense with tons of untimely penalties.

Against BYU, Utah totaled 11 penalties for 97 yards. In the Utes' season opening 37-16 win over North Dakota, they accumulated 11 penalties for 135 yards. Utah has totaled 22 penalties for 232 yards. Utah ranks 128th in the FBS in total penalties and 127th in penalty yardage.

This trend can't continue against Pac-12 opponents. Utah is talented enough on both sides of the ball to compete with virtually any team. A lack of discipline and a horde of mental errors can counteract that talent, however, and leave the Utes taking home an unexpected loss in a game they should win.


1 comment:

  1. So agree on number 3. The Utes can't continue be so sloppy or we will get killed once we play a real team

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