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Arizona's offense revolves around quarterback Matt Scott.
A projected star before spending two seasons behind Nick Foles, Scott has been a dynamic force in the desert after finally getting his shot at being The Man.
The fifth-year senior has been a perfect fit for Rodriguez's read-option offense, ranking fourth nationally with 395 total yards per game. He's the Pac-12's leading passer with 995 yards passing and is eighth in rushing with 190 yards.
"He's a good passer, a good runner, everything," Oregon defensive lineman Isaac Remington said.
Rodriguez was a trailblazer for the current no-huddle trend sweeping college football today, creating a 2-minute-drill-all-the-time offense while at Glenville State back in the 1990s. He took the offense with him to Clemson, West Virginia, Michigan and now Arizona, adding little tweaks along the way.
Kelly has done the same thing after meeting Rodriguez in 1999.
An assistant coach at New Hampshire at the time, Kelly had gone down to Clemson to visit with Rodriguez, then the Tigers offensive coordinator. Kelly took some of the ideas he got there and added a few wrinkles of his own to create an offensive juggernaut at New Hampshire, then injected it with jet fuel in Eugene.
"Unless you were in the room with Knute Rockne and those guys back in the day, you took it from somebody," Kelly said.
Thirteen years later, these no-huddle maestros will face off for the first time to see who can rev up faster.
Yards will come in bunches. Numbers on the scoreboard could roll like a slot machine.
"It's going to be interesting to see who is going to out-tempo who," Aliotti said.
It sure will. Just don't look away for very long.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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