Jeff Brohm owned the loss. You don’t have to worry about that. He might not like being the face of a three-game losing streak, but he understands football life, and his place in it.
Louisville fell 38-6 to SMU — its third straight loss and worst since a 45-13 thrashing at Kentucky in 2019. For a team that was a handful of plays away from coming into this game undefeated, this flat spin in November is as stunning as it is painful.
An outlook that wasn't looking great before the ACC injury update hit Thursday night is a good bit darker a day before Louisville travels to SMU looking to end a two-game losing streak.
On Sunday at Littlejohn Coliseum, scheduling gave way to good sense. No. 20 Louisville didn’t get sentimental. It got serious.
A minute left, a tie game, the ball at midfield, and everything to play for. After this stinker of a game, in this stinging city, the Louisville football team still was a couple of decent pass plays from calling it a night.
The Louisville late-game rally never came. Despite numerous chances, the Cardinals could not beat a team that practically begged them to. And in overtime, a gutsy fourth-down call by Cal paid off for a 29-26 Golden Bears win.
Louisville football is facing an offensive transition from the "Isaac Brown Experience" to something less familiar and far less welcome. An AI interlude. After Isaac.
Louisville spent a week hearing from most of the country how good it was. Saturday night at L&N Stadium, the No. 19 Cardinals spent half the game trying to prove the country wrong.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) – Eight days after the signature win of the Jeff Brohm era, Louisville faces the next challenge: building on it.
Jeff Walz made it clear the standard hasn't changed.