No. 2," Kelly said. "He'll still be the
No. 2. But I think there's more conver-
sations — at least I've had more conver-
sations — with possibly utilizing him in
a smaller role in certain situations."
The outing at Clemson Oct. 3 was
perhaps not considered ideal. A hos-
tile atmosphere in a road game versus
a ranked team is much different from
cruising against an overwhelmed Mas-
Sophomore DeShone Kizer settled into the starting QB role nicely, connecting on 67.6 percent of his
passes for 541 yards with five touchdowns and two interceptions through four games.
PHOTO BY BILL PANZICA