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NIU football preview: Defense has been strong, but who will start at QB?

For the past three weeks, NIU has struggled to put up points - an opening-week win at Boston College has devolved into three straight losses heading into the start of Mid-American Conference play Saturday at Toledo.

The offense hasn't scored more than 2 touchdowns during its current three-game losing streak. And the Huskies (1-3) will face a defensive front for Toledo (3-1, 1-0 MAC) that includes Judge Culpepper (4.5 sacks), Jeremiah Peters (3.5 sacks) and Terrance Taylor (2.5 sacks).

But which quarterback of NIU's will they be trying to get to? Here are three things to watch in Saturday's game, which kicks off at 2:30 p.m. at the Glass Bowl in Toledo.

Who's at quarterback?

After an unforced fumble led to a Tulsa safety in a 22-14 home loss last week, Rocky Lombardi was pulled, and Ethan Hampton came in to play quarterback. But Hampton threw 2 interceptions, and Lombardi saw some more playing time.

Coach Thomas Hammock said the team is evaluating who will start at quarterback. He said both have been practicing well and are engaged despite the struggles - Hammock said 8 of the Huskies' 9 turnovers have been from the quarterback spot.

"They have an energy about them. They want the chance to prove themselves," Hammock said. "You never want to switch quarterbacks. That's not ideal. But we're in the process of trying to figure out how to play better offensively.

"I'm confident with both those guys. Whoever gives us the best chance to win on Saturday will be the guy who goes out there."

Hampton led the Huskies' only touchdown drive in the closing minutes against Nebraska in a 35-11 loss. He finished 13-of-23 passing for 97 yards and 2 interceptions against Tulsa. Lombardi has completed 51% of his passes this year for 566 yards, 1 touchdown and 4 interceptions.

NIU is in the bottom 30 in the country in most major offensive categories, including total offense (285.5 yards per game, 125th), rushing offense (106.5, 117th), passing offense (180, 109th) and scoring offense (15.8, 126th).

Defense looks to continue strong play

One of the things that Hammock said has him optimistic the Huskies can get back on track is that it's much easier to fix an offense than a defense, and right now the defense has been performing well.

"On offense, you are one play away, one block away, one long run away from the confidence necessary," Hammock said. "Defense is a lot more challenging to fix. I think our defensive staff has done a phenomenal job. ... One quarter, one play, one game away from really turning it around."

Hammock said he has told the team that when the offense starts clicking, the defense can't let up.

NIU is third in the country in pass defense, allowing 143 yards per game. The Huskies also are 24th in total defense (298.5 yards per game) and 42nd in sacks (2.5 per game).

"We have to have each others' backs," defensive end Demond Taylor said. "Offense is struggling, defense has to pick it up. Defense struggling, offense has to pick it up"

Special teams also struggling

The offensive woes have gotten a lot of attention, but there have been a lot of special teams miscues, as well. Hammock said the play has been inconsistent on special teams.

"We have a penalty, we have a long return, and then we get a penalty that takes us back," Hammock said. "We put the ball on the ground on kickoff returns. We shank a punt. We miss a field goal. It's just been sporadic."

Ohio State transfer Jake Siebert has been the most sporadic, making 2 of 5 field-goal attempts. He missed two field goals in a 14-11 home loss to Southern Illinois. He also missed a 30-yarder.

Prediction: Toledo 27, NIU 14

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