CINCINNATI — Cincinnati has had one of the nation's stingiest defenses the past three years. But last season, East Carolina scored 43 points and piled up 638 yards against the Bearcats.
Cincinnati coach Luke Fickell said his returning defensive players haven't forgotten.
"For us, it's a redemption tour," Fickell said. "Whether it's Memphis, who beat us twice, or ECU with the numbers they put up against us. Things that happen last year don't easily go by the wayside. You don't easily forget."
No. 7 Cincinnati (6-0, 4-0 AAC) faces the Pirates again on Friday night, with the Bearcats looking to extend their school-record home winning streak to 19 and keep alive their hopes of crashing the College Football Playoff.
The Bearcats have held their last five opponents to fewer than 13 points, including the high-octane offenses of Houston, Memphis and SMU. ECU (1-5, 1-4 American) is averaging nearly 30 points and 400 yards per game.
"Sometimes the record isn't indicative of a team," Fickell said. "If you've got a quarterback like they do, it gives them a lot of confidence. It's a team on the rise."
ECU senior quarterback Holton Ahlers has passed for 1,354 yards and 12 touchdowns. The Bearcats also are wary of sophomore receiver C.J. Johnson, who has 13 catches for 286 yards and a team-leading four touchdowns this season. In last year's meeting, a 46-43 Bearcats victory, Johnson had 12 catches for 283 yards and a TD.
Cincinnati has outscored opponents 236 to 70 this season.