SOUTH BEND—Everett Golson spotted tight end Ben Koyack alone in the back of the end zone just in time.On fourth-and-11 from the 23 and trailing 14-10, Golson dropped back to pass and managed to avoid the Stanford rush just long enough to find Koyack as two Cardinal defensive backs tried to recover from the blown assignment.Koyack caught the pass as he fell out of bounds, while safety Jordan Richards dove to try to break it up, and scored the winning touchdown with 61 seconds left to give the No. 9 Irish the 17-14 victory on a cold, rainy Saturday. ”I went to my first read and it wasn’t there and I needed to begin improvising a little bit,” Golson said. ”I guess they busted the coverage a little bit and I found Koyack in the back of the end zone.” Koyack said he broke off his route when he saw the coverage and hoped Golson would see him. ”He did,” he said. ”It felt like the ball was in the air for about an hour.” Stanford coach David Shaw was asked what coverage the No. 14 Cardinal were in on the play. ”There was no coverage on Notre Dame’s touchdown pass,” he said. ”That sounds sarcastic but he was wide open. There was nobody on him.” Richards said Koyack got behind the Cardinal defense. ”I was just trying to head over there as fast as I could but I just couldn’t do it,” he said. Golson struggled with accuracy at times and threw an interception and had a fumble that was hard to overcome, but still managed to pull it out.ND coach Brian Kelly called Golson a winner, pointing out he is 15-1 as a starting quarterback. That 93.8 percent winning percentage is the best in school history. ”The kid’s a winner and he keeps competing and he keeps playing,” Kelly said. ”And he has a bunch of winners around him. So you never feel like you’re out of it. You just keep playing and keep giving it a shot.” The Fighting Irish improved to 5-0 for just the third time since Lou Holtz left in 1996 and the second time in three seasons. The Cardinal (3-2) have two losses this early in the season for the first time since opening 1-2 in 2008 in Jim Harbaugh’s second season as coach.Golson also threw a 17-yard TD pass to Chris Brown and Notre Dame amassed 370 yards of total offense against the nation’s top defense. The game wasn’t as exciting as Notre Dame’s 20-13 overtime victory two years ago on a goal-line stand, but it was close.The Irish defense held the Cardinal to 139 yards total offense and just 47 yards rushing. Stanford receiver Ty Montgomery, who entered the game averaging 69 yards a game receiving, was held to four catches for 12 yards. But he did have a 42-yard kickoff return that helped set up a Stanford touchdown late in the fourth quarter.Shaw was disappointed the Cardinal defense couldn’t hold on. ”We had a chance to seal it and we didn’t,” he said. Stanford entered the game giving up 198 yards a game total offense and had given up only two runs of 25 yards or more. The Irish had 192 yards total offense at halftime and Golson had a career-long 33-yard run to set up a touchdown and C.J. Prosise had a 26-yard run that set up a s27-yard try. Notre Dame kicker Kyle Brindza kicked the ball into the line and Stanford’s A.J. Tarpley returned it 39 yards to the Stanford 44. The Irish also had a failed field goal attempt in the first quarter when Smith bobbled another snap and Brindza missed wide right on a 41-yard attempt.coring chance. Amir Carlisle had a 26-yard catch.Golson was 20-of-43 passing for 241 yards with one interception and a fumble a week after having four turnovers against Syracuse. Kevin Hogan was 18 of 36 for 158 yards with two interceptions for Stanford.Notre Dame had a chance to take the lead with 12 minutes left in the game, but holder Hunter Smith bungled the snap on a
Monthly Archives: October 2014
Illini still awful in Big Ten….now lose at Home to Purdue.
CHAMPAIGN—Illinois remains awful in Big Ten pla under Tim Beckman, and Purdue not much better.The Boilermakers gashed the Illini for 349 yards rushing and first-time starting quarterback Austin Appleby threw for a touchdown and ran for two more to lead Purdue to a 38-27 upset on Saturday at Illinois.Appleby was 15 of 20 for 202 yards. He ran for another 76 yards on seven carries.Akeem Hunt carried the ball 30 times for 177 yards and a touchdown.The Boilermakers (3-3, 1-1 Big Ten) took a 24-14 lead on an 80-yard touchdown pass from Appleby to Danny Anthrop in the third quarter.Big plays sank the Illini (3-3, 0-2). Besides the 80-yard touchdown, Purdue had plays of 62, 54 and 53 yards.Wes Lunt led Illinois with 332 yards and three touchdowns. But he limped off the field with help early in the fourth quarter after a big hit and did not return.Anthrop’s touchdown capped a jarring momentum swing early in the third quarter that turned the game for Purdue.Trailing 17-14, Illinois moved deep into Boilermakers territory on a flea-flicker from Lunt to Mike Dudek. The freshman receiver wrestled the ball away from two defenders as he came down to set Illinois up at the Purdue 12.Dudek finished with eight catches for 200 yards.But on the next play Lunt threw the ball to Josh Ferguson in the left flat and the back dropped the ball. The play was initially ruled an incomplete pass but the Boilermakers fell on the ball. Replays showed Ferguson was 2 yards behind Lunt when he dropped the ball and after a review the play was called a fumble.On the next play, Appleby found Anthrop. Illini safety Zane Petty lunged for the ball, missed and fell as Anthrop glided up the right sideline for a touchdown.Facing the prospect of trailing again, the Boilermakers instead found themselves leading 24-14 with 9:59 left in the third quarter.And Illinois, down by two scores, was playing catch-up.All three Illini wins this season have required second-half comebacks, but on Saturday the Illinois defense couldn’t get the stop it needed against a Boilermakers offense that came in struggling.Purdue entered the game with one of the Big Ten’s least-effective offenses. The Boilermakers were averaging 23.8 points and a conference-worst 312 yards a game. They were 13 yards short of topping that yardage mark by halftime.For most of the fourth quarter, the Illini also were without the player who engineered those comebacks.Lunt went down hard on a sack by Ryan Watson that forced him out of the game.He missed last week’s Nebraska game with a right-knee injury but details about the injury against Purdue weren’t immediately available.His backup, Reilly O’Toole, was 9 of 14 for 118 yards and an interception.Hunt found big holes in Illinois’ defense and made the most of them. But Appleby did too.The quarterback’s biggest carry didn’t find the end zone but it set up one of his touchdowns.With just over 4 minutes left in the third quarter, the 6-foot-5 quarterback dropped back but saw daylight through the middle of the Illinois defense and ran into it. Leaving an Illinois defender on the ground beneath him just past the line of scrimmage, Appleby sprinted 62 yards to the 1.He punched the ball into the end zone on the next play. With a 31-21 lead, Purdue wouldn’t need anything else.Early on it looked like Illinois might run away from the Boilermakers.The Illini led 14-7 on a 13-yard Lunt touchdown to Tyler White and a 2-yard run by Josh Ferguson and midway through the second quarter were driving again. But on a fourth-and-2 play at the Purdue 23 Lunt missed Martize Barr in the end zone.