From Deseret News archives:
BYU football: Cougars get ready for Pac-10 foe
"It's another statement game. We feel like with the Mountain West this year, we're one of the better conferences in the West," Cougar linebacker David Nixon said. "This is one more opportunity for us to show that it is that way. We're in third place in the Mountain West and Arizona is in fifth place in their league. You've got some programs in the middle that are going to duke it out. It's going to say a lot about the Mountain West and about our program, where it's headed."
The MWC has posted a 6-1 record against the Pac-10 this season, including the Cougars' pair of victories over Washington (28-27) and UCLA (59-0) as well as New Mexico's 36-28 win at home over Arizona.
Yet the Wildcats are favored in this contest, relegating BYU to the role of underdogs.
"We've had some success in the Pac-10 this year. Everybody in our conference has," said BYU quarterback Max Hall. "But that's behind us."
Hall noted that the Wildcats fell to the Lobos early in the season, "but the second half of the season, they're a totally different team.
They're playing a lot better football. It's another great Pac-10 matchup for BYU."
Two years ago, the MWC-champion Cougars entered their Las Vegas Bowl showdown against a struggling Oregon team. Days before the game, Duck coach Mike Bellotti was asked to compare BYU to teams in the Pac-10 and said they couldn't compete with the elite and that it would be a midlevel team in that league. Even after his team's 38-8 shellacking at the hands of the Cougars, Bellotti wasn't convinced.
"We didn't play like a midlevel Pac-10 team, but no, my opinion of them hasn't changed," Bellotti said. But he did credit BYU. "I think we got out-coached, outplayed and out-hustled. They played with great discipline and they are a very, very good team."
Last year, UCLA interim coach DeWayne Walker was told about Bellotti's quote that BYU would have a difficult time competing with the middle of the Pac-10. "I don't know what team he played against, but having played BYU earlier this year, knowing their coaching staff and players, I think they definitely could compete in the upper tier of the Pac-10," Walker said.
Arizona coach Mike Stoops, whose team has already lost to a MWC team that finished with a losing record and has split two meetings with BYU since 2007, said his program respects BYU.













