New Mexico Bowl Prospect Preview: UTEP Miners vs. Fresno State Bulldogs

New Mexico Bowl Prospect Preview: UTEP Miners vs. Fresno State Bulldogs #PicksUp #GoDogs

The second game up on the Saturday bowl slate features the UTEP Miners (7-5) of the C-USA against the Fresno State Bulldogs (9-3) of the Mountain West. Fresno State is favored by double digits, but after losing their starting quarterback to the transfer portal and their head coach to Washington, this game maybe more up for grabs than the experts think.

Both teams feature pretty exciting passing offenses, but the Bulldogs of the Mountain West have had more reliable success as evidenced by their 4-1 record against the spread the last five games, but that is not why we are here. Let’s breakdown the top prospects!

Fresno State vs UTEP: PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl Prediction, Game Preview

Fresno State vs UTEP: PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl prediction, game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might or might not win.

Fresno State vs UTEP: PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl prediction, game preview, how to watch 


Fresno State vs UTEP: PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl How To Watch

Date: Saturday, December 18
Game Time: 2:15 pm ET
Venue: Dreamstyle Stadium, Albuquerque, NM
Network: ESPN, Live stream on ESPN+
Records: Fresno State (9-3), UTEP (7-5)

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Fresno State vs UTEP PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl Preview

You want a bowl game with a team that’s going to care? UTEP hasn’t been to a bowl since 2014, and this is just its second winning season since 2005.

It’s been a wonderful breakthrough year for the program that’s used to being the free-space on everyone’s schedule. It didn’t exactly play a killer slate, but it managed to get through with a solid defense that was great at getting off the field – the Miners finished second in Conference USA in total D – and an offense that hit its deep shots down the field whenever it had the chance.

Fresno State just missed out on playing for the Mountain West title, it was good enough to beat UCLA and San Diego State, and it’s now going through a transition with head coach Kalen DeBoer off coaching the Washington Huskies and with Jeff Tedford coming aboard for next season. Running backs coach Lee Marks will take over the head coaching duties in this.

Fresno State QB Jake Haener was off with DeBoer to Washington, changed his mind, and now he’s back. The talent is there defensively – the Bulldog run defense allowed just 127 yards per game – it’s got a great offensive line and a strong running game, and the attack that led the conference in total yards is going to be dangerous.

Why Fresno State, UTEP Will Win
Prediction, What’s Going To Happen, History
PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl Top Players To Know

NEXT: Why Fresno State Will Win, Why UTEP Will Win, PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl Prediction

Hawaii 28, Houston 14: New Mexico Bowl 10 Things To Know

Hawaii 28, Houston 14. The 10 ten things you need to know about the Hawaii win over Houston in the New Mexico Bowl.

Hawaii 28, Houston 14. The 10 ten things you need to know about the Hawaii win over Houston in the New Mexico Bowl.


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Hawaii 28, Houston 14: New Mexico Bowl

10. Houston started cold, and that was it. QB Clayton Tune gave up a weird interception deep in Cougar territory, Hawaii capitalized with a quick touchdown, and that was it … sort of.

There was one burst for Houston coming out in the second half down 21-0, but it was too late. Just when it looked like it was going to make something special with a comeback, Hawaii dropped the hammer with a kick six.

9. As this game showed, turnovers mean everything so far in this bowl season. Houston turned it over three times, Hawaii didn’t. Memphis turned it over three times in the Montgomery Bowl win over Florida Atlantic, but that’s been it so far in the first six bowls. In the other five – including this – the winning side didn’t turn the ball over and came up with a combined 11 takeaways.

8. The American Athletic Conference got that Memphis win, but that was as mismatched a game as it could get so far. Tulane got beat by Nevada in the Famous Idaho Potato, UCF was never in it in the Boca Raton, and now this.

7. You know that cliché about a bowl team wanting it more? Hawaii apparently wanted it a whole lot. It came out with an energy and gameplan that worked from the start. Houston needed a little while to get going, and by then it was way too late. Hawaii did the same thing to Fresno State to start the season, but it was way too inconsistent.

6. You wouldn’t think of Hawaii as tough – it’s the place the world goes to relax – but the teams always play nasty. They might not have the talent, and they might not have the facilities, but there’s a chip on this program’s shoulder.

5. Chevan Cordeiro had a bit of an up-and-down year, and the Hawaii quarterback didn’t connect on any downfield passes other than the backbreaking 75-yard pass play to RB Calvin Turner. But he didn’t turn the ball over – his counterpart Clayton Tune threw three picks – and he completed 15-of-32 passes for 136 yards and three touchdowns with 33 yards rushing.

4. And here’s the really crazy part – the Hawaii offense didn’t really work. The Rainbow Warriors only generated 267 yards of total offense, had little happening with the ground game, and struggled to move the ball. This isn’t the high-octane passing Hawaii of the past, but the team was still able to get the job done.

3. West Virginia famously beat Dabo Swinney’s Clemson team 70-33 in the 2012 Orange Bowl. Since then, Holgorsen has gone 1-6 in bowl games. Even so, he was supposed to be a big upgrade for the Houston program that wanted to take things to a whole other level, and instead it’s 7-13 in two years.

Last season was supposed to be about building up for 2020, and he should get a free pass for now because of the obvious overall issues in the world. A bowl win would’ve done wonders, but after this, 2021 needs to rock.

2. The Hawaii defense was fantastic throughout. It started right away, the pressure didn’t stop, and it was over fast. Hawaii finished with five sacks, nine tackles for loss, and three takeaways, but it was the run D that totally dominated allowing just 58 yards on the ground because …

1. The pass rush was an anomaly. Hawaii only generated 13 sacks on the year before this, with three coming against Fresno State and three more against UNLV. The team had just seven sacks in the other six games, but playmaking safety Khoury Bethley and linebacker Jeremiah Pritchard brought the pressure throughout.

Chalk this up to the players coming up with a big day, and also give credit to Todd Graham and the coaching staff that had a little extra time to work with and showed what they could do.Their team had the far, far better gameplan from the start.

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Houston vs Hawaii: New Mexico Bowl Prediction, Game Preview

Houston vs Hawaii: New Mexico Bowl prediction and game preview.

Houston vs Hawaii: New Mexico Bowl prediction and game preview.


Houston vs Hawaii: New Mexico Bowl Broadcast

Date: Thursday, December 24
Game Time: 3:30 pm ET
Venue: Toyota Stadium, Frisco, TX
Network: ESPN

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All of the CFN Fearless Predictions

Houston (3-4) vs Hawaii (4-4) Game Preview

For latest lines and to bet on the NFL, go to BetMGM 


Three Reasons Why You Should Watch The New Mexico Bowl

It’s just about the most 2020 bowl game possible. It’s the New Mexico Bowl, moved from Albuquerque to Frisco, Texas, involving a Hawaii (4-4) team whose most-likely bowl destination would’ve been the Hawaii Bowl. However, the game was canceled and Aloha Stadium is being all but shut down, meaning the football program has to find a future settled home. This is the program’s second bowl game away from Hawaii since 1992.

Few schedules were affected by the coronavirus as much as Houston’s with delay after delay to get the season started. Even though QB Clayton Tune has been strong, this isn’t the high-powered attack it’s supposed to be, and the record is hardly impressive, but don’t be fooled. All the losses were to strong teams including BYU and Cincinnati.

This isn’t your normal Hawaii high-powered passing attack team under first-year head coach Todd Graham, but it can throw well, the running game is solid, and the team played several thrillers over the second half of the season.

Can Hawaii give the Mountain West a second bowl win? There are only four teams in the post-season and Nevada already took down Tulane. Can the American Athletic Conference finally do something right? Tulane’s loss in the Famous Idaho Potato and the UCF blowout to BYU have made it a rough start.

Why Houston, Hawaii Will Win
What’s Going to Happen, Prediction, History

NEXT: Why Houston Will Win, Why Hawaii Will Win, Houston vs Hawaii Prediction

New Mexico Bowl: Central Michigan vs. San Diego State odds, lines, picks and best bets

Previewing Saturday’s New Mexico Bowl between Central Michigan and San Diego State college football matchup, with college football betting odds, picks and best bets

The Central Michigan Chippewas (8-5) and San Diego State Aztecs (9-3) lock horns Saturday in the New Mexico Bowl. Kickoff at Dreamstyle Stadium in Albuquerque is set for 2 p.m. ET. We analyze the Central Michigan-San Diego State odds and betting lines, while providing college football betting tips and advice on this matchup.

Central Michigan vs. San Diego State: Three things you need to know

1. Central Michigan is 28th in the nation with 445.6 yards per game and 44th in scoring at 31.9 points per game. The Chippewas are 20th against the run, allowing just 115.1 yards per game on the ground.

2. San Diego State, on the other hand, struggles to move the ball. The Aztecs are 115th in the nation in total yards (329.3), tied for 97th in passing yards (195.6), 103rd in rushing yards (133.7) and 119th in scoring (19.0). Defensively, though, the Aztecs are an outstanding fifth in total yards allowed (288.7), second against the run (72.3) and fourth in points allowed (12.8) per game.

3. Aztecs leading rusher RB Juwan Washington (ankle) is listed as questionable. If he cannot go it would be RB Chase Jasmin leading the charge, and he was more than capable with a team-best 4.6 yards per carry on 69 attempts while leading the team with three rushing TDs.


College football season is almost over! Place your bets on this game, or others, at BetMGM now. Place your bets and win, win, win!


Central Michigan vs. San Diego State: Odds, betting lines and picks

Odds via BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Thursday at 2:25 p.m. ET.

Prediction

Central Michigan 23, San Diego State 15

Moneyline (ML)

CENTRAL MICHIGAN (+145) is worth a roll of the dice, as it sports a decent offense and should be able to solve the San Diego State defense. The Aztecs (-176) really struggled offensively this season, Washington is iffy to play, and QB Ryan Agnew suffered a calf injury last time out (although he should be fine). Still, he is more of a caretaker than playmaker, and if CMU scores early it isn’t San Diego State’s forte to score a lot of points and come from behind.

Against the Spread (ATS)

CENTRAL MICHIGAN (+3.5, -115) is a super attractive play catching three and a hook. Even if the Chippewas can’t win outright, San Diego State (-3.5, -106) isn’t going to blow anyone out — ever. So light the fire up with the Chips and enjoy the payout.

For a little extra fun, take CMU +0.5 (-134) on the first-quarter line, and look for the Chippewas to fire out to an early lead. It’s bowl season, build that bankroll with some early fun.

Over/Under (O/U)

PASS. The total 40.5 is just too risky here. If there was a lean, it’s to the under, as San Diego State struggles offensively. A more attractive play is betting the UNDER 21.5 (-125) on San Diego State’s team point total.

Get some action on this game or others, place a bet with BetMGM today. And for more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @JoeWilliamsVI and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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New Mexico Bowl: A Central Michigan Q&A With James Jimenez

We get to know SDSU’s New Mexico Bowl opponent, the Central Michigan Chippewas, with James Jimenez of SB Nation’s Hustle Belt.

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New Mexico Bowl: A Central Michigan Q&A with James Jimenez


We get to know SDSU’s New Mexico Bowl opponent, the Central Michigan Chippewas, with James Jimenez of SB Nation’s Hustle Belt.


Contact/Follow @MattK_FS & @MWCwire

A drastic turnaround, but not a fluke.

The kickoff to college football’s bowl season is mere days away and the Mountain West’s seven-game slate kicks off, in part, this weekend when the San Diego State Aztecs and Central Michigan Chippewas face off in the New Mexico Bowl on Saturday, December 21.

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The last time CMU played against a Mountain West opponent, it was in former Wyoming quarterback Josh Allen’s collegiate finale at the 2017 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. That game didn’t go particularly well for the Chips and neither did the entirety of 2018, when they had a case as the worst team in the country, but the arrival of a familiar coach, Jim McElwain, spurred one of college football’s biggest 180s this fall.

To learn more about the Chippewas, we reached out to our friends at SB Nation’s Hustle Belt and spoke with James Jimenez.

Mountain West Wire: It seems safe to say no one expected Central Michigan to be one failed Hail Mary away from winning the MAC title this fall, especially after bottoming out in 2018. Can you give us the short version of what spurred the drastic turnaround?

James Jimenez: The short version of what spurred the turnaround is a new coaching staff. Coach Bono (John Bonamego) was very well-beloved by players and fans alike (myself included), and was known to be someone who was very loyal to his guys. That’s not a terrible surprise, given he learned under Jim Caldwell while a member of the Lions and Sean Payton under the Saints before coming to Central. He was also an excellent recruiter, especially in-state. What he wasn’t was an X’s and O’s guy. He ran the wrong personnel and a bad scheme and stayed maybe a little too loyal to his guys until the very end, when it resulted in the worst season in program history.

What Jim McElwain brought to Mount Pleasant was a culture of accountability and a thorough understanding of the play-calling side of the sport. He brought in coaches from a lot of different backgrounds and experience levels on the staff to help build up the players who stayed, and he wasn’t afraid to mix things up when the situation called for it. That’s the mark of an excellent coach.

It also helps that the 2018 Chips were a very young squad, so that meant a lot of the players on the roster were motivated to prove a lot of their doubters wrong.

MWwire: What kind of a skill set has quarterback Quinten Dormady brought to the Chippewas offense?

Jimenez: Last year, the Chippewas rotated between Tony Poljan (now the starting tight end) and Tommy Lazzaro (the current Wildcat quarterback) and the result was one of the worst offenses in the FBS. Part of the reason it was so bad was because the QBs were abysmal whenit came to reading defenses; Lazzaro finished with twice as many interceptions as passing touchdowns, while Poljan was converted to a receiver halfway through the season. An inompatible offense is also to blame there.

With the addition of Dormady, the Chippewas get an extremely intelligent leader who understands how the defense is making adjustments and audibles into a look which gives the offense the best chance to succeed. His ability to read the defense before the play has helped sustain many of CMU’s drives on offense, especially once they get into rhythm. Dormady also gives CMU a pretty good arm on short-and-intermediate routes, with the ability to launch deep when necessary. He might check down a bit too much at times, but with the weapons CMU has at the skill position, that isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

MWwire: San Diego State’s secondary has been a tough nut to crack for many opponents this fall, but wide receivers Kalil Pimpleton and JaCorey Sullivan will certainly try. How do the two all-MAC pass catchers complement each other?

Jimenez: Kalil and JaCorey, besides being first-team All-MAC receivers, were former high school teammates at Michigan HS football powerhouse Muskegon. They’ve got an incredible chemistry which really helps the offense get moving.

Kalil was one of, if not the best, receivers in the conference in 2019 after having to sit in 2018 due to transfer rules, picking up 79 receptions for 823 yards and six touchdowns. What makes him so good is his elite top speed; he’s a burner once he gets going, and has taken the top off of defenses several times throughout the season. CMU also employs him in a number of ways; he’s often in motion on jet sweeps, can alternate between the slot and the outside receiving positions and can even be a passing threat (given his background as a quarterback.) He’s a small, shifty slot receiver from Central, so the comparison for him is usually Antonio Brown, but I’d say he’s closer to Golden Tate III in the way he moves in the open field and can be used by the offense.

JaCorey took a bit to get going this season, but he still finished as a top 5 receiver in the MAC, with 54 receptions for 776 yards and three touchdowns. He’s a guy who lines up primarily on the outside and offers big-play ability, as he averages an astounding 14.3 yards per catch. He’s got decent size, standing at six-foot-two, 196 lbs., and allows CMU an outlet for deep passes without having to force the issue. He’s got reliable hands, and is a favorite receiver of Dormady’s to target when he needs a sure reception.

MWwire: Aztecs fans know all about their strong defensive line, but they may not know the Chippewas are actually number one in the FBS by defensive stuff rate. Who among linebacker Troy Brown and defensive linemen Sean Adesanya and LaQuan Johnson — all of whom finished in the top five of all MAC defenders in tackles for loss — has been the most valuable contributor, in your opinion?

Jimenez: All three of those players have been fantastic for the Chippewas in 2019, but Brown has been the heart and soul of this CMU defense for the most part at the outside backer position. Brown stands at 85 total tackles, 16 tackles-for-loss, a sack and three interceptions in 2019, and has proven to be one of the most versatile players on the CMU defense, as he uses his former background as a safety to diagnose passing plays and running plays alike. Unfortunately, he’ll miss the first half of the upcoming game due to a targeting call in the MAC Championship Game, which could leave the linebacking corps a little shallow to start.

I personally love what Sean Adesanya brings to the table. He’s an excellent run stuffer with a high motor who is also adept at getting to the quarterback; he’s got 15.5 tackles-for-loss and seven sacks on the season so far coming out of the end position, LaQuan Johnson is only a redshirt freshman, but he’s already shown a lot of promise coming from both the defensive tackle and defensive end spots; Johnson is probably CMU’s best pass-rusher, with 32 tackles and six sacks this season to go along with his 13 tackles-for-loss.

They’re all major contributors, and they help to man an aggressive front seven which has proven to be amonst the best rushing or short-distance defenses in the nation all season.

MWwire: It’s tempting to see this New Mexico Bowl as a classic “offense vs. defense” tilt, but it could also become a straight-up defensive showdown. How do you see the game unfolding and why?

Jimenez:It’s really hard to tell, mostly because I don’t really know which CMU team will show up. They’re 8-5, yes, but they’re also frustatingly inconsistent as soon as they leave Kelly/Shorts Stadium; they’re 2-5 in road/neutral games, with their average points per game diving double-digits from ~45 per game at home to ~28 on the road.

CMU got a little too cute against Miami in what was essentially a home game at Ford Field a couple weeks back, and that’s a problem which has plagued them a bit at times during the season. A couple things I think will happen: they’ll probably lean a bit more on the running game this time around after limiting themselves to 50 yards on 17 carries vs. Miami, and they’ll probably empty out the bag of tricks on offense and special teams when they think it’s appropriate.

I think they’re going to be hungry to take home hardware for the trophy case, after missing out on the Victory Cannon (vs. rival WMU) and the Michigan MAC trophy (retained by WMU), AND the MAC Championship trophy (vs. Miami). I think it’ll be a very streaky, very stop-and-start game, which ends up being won by the team who is more efficient with the ball in their hands.

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