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Arizona State's Kenny Dillingham defends players' brash comments

ATLANTA -- Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham defended the brash comments of players Cam Skattebo and Sam Leavitt heading into the College Football Playoff Quarterfinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.

During the final news conference Tuesday prior to the game against Texas, Dillingham was asked how he felt about his players coming across as confident and loose in the days before the matchup. He gave an impassioned response.

"Our players are just being themselves," Dillingham said. "A lot of times there's a lot of, 'How are you supposed to talk to the media?' What are you supposed to say?' I just firmly believe in say what you believe. I'm not going to try to prevent our players from saying what they believe."

Skattebo, who finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting, was asked repeatedly about facing the No. 1 Longhorns defense in Wednesday's game and said, "They continue to keep saying that people are going to try to stop me. There's nobody out there that can stop me."

Leavitt recently said he was looking forward to squaring off against Quinn Ewers and proving "why I'm the better quarterback."

Dillingham pointed out both players had an uphill climb to get to where they are, and at times were the only ones who believed they could make it this far. This is especially true for Skattebo, who started out taking the FCS route at Sacramento State before getting an opportunity with the Sun Devils. He had a breakthrough season this year, rushing for 1,568 yards and 19 touchdowns while catching 37 passes for 506 yards and three touchdowns.

"Nobody thought he was on an NFL draft board going into the year. If he didn't have that own self-belief in himself that he believes he's the best, then who else would have his entire life?" Dillingham said. "So when people ask him a question, and he gives you the truth of what he believes, because his belief is what got him here, and then people twist it on him as if he's being cocky or confident, that's not the nature of what he's trying to say.

"What he's trying to say is, 'My entire life I was the only one who believed in me.' I'm not changing that."

Leavitt was the 2022 Gatorade Oregon Football Player of the Year but rated a three-star recruit with a handful of power-conference offers. He transferred to Arizona State this season after one year at Michigan State.

"Those guys have a lot of self-belief because there was a point with the chip on their shoulder that they were one of the only people that believed in themselves," Dillingham said. "If you're a competitor and you don't believe you're the best, are you really a competitor?

"Those are just two really, really competitive people. It's nothing about the opponent. It's about their own self-belief. Sam probably thinks he could beat Michael Jordan in basketball. Skatt thinks he's probably the great running back of all time. Sometimes when you verbalize those things, it gets twisted in a negative light. But I'm happy that we have those guys on our team because they're ultra-competitors, and I have their back."