OT to win against West Virginia. UC led 20-7 with 1:19 remaining . . . IN THE GAME !
It should have never went to OT.
Still, a very big win for UC . . . :weeew:
Quote
By Bill Koch • bkoch@enquirer.com • November 8, 2008
MORGANTOWN, W.V. – Playing in a BCS bowl game is no longer just a distant possibility for the University of Cincinnati football team.
After their thrilling 26-23 overtime upset of No. 20 West Virginia on Saturday before 59,834 fans at Milan Puskar Stadium, the Bearcats (7-2 overall, 3-1 in the Big East) have pulled into a three-way tie for first place in the Big East Conference with the Mountaineers (6-3, 3-1) and Pitt, which improved its league record to 3-1 earlier in the day with a win over Louisville.
“Everybody is on cloud nine in there,” said wide receiver Mardy Gilyard, standing just outside the UC locker room. “It feels like we won the Big East championship. It feels like a championship in there.”
They haven’t won anything yet, of course, but they took a major step in that direction.
• Photos: UC 26, West Virginia 23
• Stats and scoring summary
UC, which is now bowl eligible, can win the Big East title and the BCS bowl berth that goes with it if it can win its final three league games at Louisville next Friday followed by home games vs. Pitt and Syracuse.
The victory over West Virginia was only the Bearcats’ second in 17 tries against West Virginia and its first in four attempts since UC joined the Big East in 2005.
But it did not come easily, with West Virginia coming back from an 11-point deficit in the final 1:11 to send the game into overtime on Pat McAfee’s 52-yard field goal as time expired in regulation.
“West Virginia is a great program,” said UC coach Brian Kelly, “to take the bell from them you’ve got to keep playing.”
The UC defense, which played well most of the night, did its job, holding the Mountaineers to a 27-yard McAfee field goal on their first possession of overtime.
UC, aided by a roughing-the-passer penalty on WVU’s Sidney Glover, clinched the victory on a 2-yard touchdown pass from Tony Pike to tight end Kazeem Alli, with Pike rolling out to find a wide open Alli in the end zone.
“It’s a play that we rely on in the red zone,” Pike said. “We’ve got the option of a run off of it and I think that’s what West Virginia was banking on. To come out and see Kazeem wide open, that’s probably the hardest throw I’ve had to make in my career. To see him come down with that, that’s the happiest I’ve been in a long time.”
It was one of two catches for Alli in the game.
“It felt like the ball was in the air for 30 minutes,” Alli said. “I just had to wait and make sure I had the ball securely.”
The Bearcats got off to a great start when Mardy Gilyard ran back the game’s opening kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown, the second time this year he has a returned a kickoff for a touchdown.
“I think that definitely took the jitters off our football team,” Kelly said. “That really helped us in terms of hey, we’ve got some speed, too. We can play. I think that helped us a lot.”
The UC defense limited West Virginia to just 98 rushing yards and came up with a huge goal-line stand late in the game that appeared to seal the win.
West Virginia had a first-and-goal at the UC 2-yard line after a pass interference call on Mike Mickens. After quarterback Pat White was stopped twice on running plays, cornerback DeAngelo Smith made a diving interception of a White pass on fourth down with 3:22 to go.
On UC’s next possession, punter Kevin Huber intentionally took a safety with 1:11 remaining to make it 20-9, but it still appeared the Bearcats were firmly in control.
“Fans were leaving,” Kelly said. “I would have been leaving. But they just kept battling and they’ve got Pat White. And if you’ve got Pat White on your team, it don’t matter. You’ve got a chance to win a football game.”
Behind White, West Virginia drove down the field and scored on a 3-yard touchdown pass from White to Dorrell Jalloh with 18 seconds left. White ran in for the 2-point conversion to pull the Mountaineers to within three points.
West Virginia then executed an on-side kick, which was recovered by Mortty Ivy at the Mountaineer 44-yard line with 17 seconds remaining.
A White pass to Jalloh moved the Mountaineers to the UC 35, and McAfee kicked a 52-yard field goal to send the game into overtime.
http://news.cincinna.../311080040/1064

Sign In
Register
Help




MultiQuote












