Wisconsin: 2021 Las Vegas Bowl Champions



LAS VEGAS – When Graham Mertz led Wisconsin’s offense back onto the field with a little less than 10 minutes remaining in the Las Vegas Bowl, the members of UW’s defense were hoping for just about anything but another three and out.


“We were gassed,” senior linebacker Noah Burks said.


What the members of Jim Leonhard’s unit got Thursday night at Allegiant Stadium was the rest of the game off.


Eighteen plays.


Ninety yards.


Nine minutes and 57 seconds.


When fullback John Chenal got the final handoff from Mertz, wrapped both arms around the football and gained 3 yards to run out the clock, UW’s 20-13 victory over Arizona State was secure.


“It was a perfect Wisconsin drive to go end it,” Burks said. “Let’s run the football. Let’s eat the clock. And let’s go win this game.”


Mertz said the same in few words.


“That drive,” Mertz said, “that’s what this program is about.”


BOX SCORE: Wisconsin 20, Arizona State 13


The drive was needed because UW (9-4) began the game without four starters – right tackle Logan Bruss, center Joe Tippman, cornerback Faion Hicks and wide receiver Danny Davis – and kickoff returner Stephan Bracey.


They lost wide receiver Kendric Pryor, tailback Brady Schipper and tight end Joe Ferguson to injuries during the game. 


Freshman tailback Braelon Allen carried 10 times for 49 yards on the drive and finished with 159 yards on 29 carries and the MVP trophy.


Mertz completed 2 of 2 passes on the drive, both for first downs, for 40 yards.


“We were mentally prepared to go out there again and put it back on our shoulders,” said safety John Torchio, who had a first-quarter interception to set UW’s first touchdown. “But that was awesome what they did. We were cheering them on.”


Play after play, yard after yard and second after precious second.


“They’re scary,” said Arizona State coach Herm Edwards, whose team finished 8-5.  "Because when you watch them on tape, that's what they can do, they can chew up some drives. They can chew up a lot of time.


“I kept looking up at that clock, trust me. Every time they made a first down I kept looking at the clock, I said: ‘We’re running out of time.’ ”


The Badgers’ final possession began at their 3 after a 44-yard punt.


UW’s first three series of the second half generated a total of zero yards on 11 plays.


"The second half we struggled offensively,” UW coach Paul Chryst said, “but it was a heck of a drive to finish it out.”


Allen gave UW some breathing room on the final series with runs of 5, 4 and 3.


Then five plays later, on third and 12 from his 24, Mertz made his best throw of the night, arguably of the season.


Mertz was given good protection until Stanley Lambert executed a stunt and came free through the middle of the line. Mertz saw the 6-foot-4, 234-pound defensive end bearing down on him but didn’t flinch.


He knew Chimere Dike, who missed several series earlier after suffering a blow to his back on a reverse, was covered by single defender and trusted the sophomore would work open. Mertz delivered a strike just before being drilled in the midsection for a 30-yard gain to the Sun Devils’ 46 with 5:38 left.


“That play to Chim,” Torchio said, “once they hit that I (said): ‘Oh, my gosh. They might drive this thing all the way down.’”


Chenal picked up another first down two plays later with a 3-yard run on second and 1. Allen, whose 9-yard run set up the second and 1, then powered his way for 14 yards to the Sun Devils’ 20.


Allen gained 7 yards but appeared to be stopped. He stayed on his feet, though, and several UW players, led by wide receiver Jack Dunn, kept the pile moving.


“That was a lot of fun,” right tackle Tanor Bortolini said. “That might be one of my favorite plays of the game.”


Arizona State was penalized for being offside three plays later, with UW facing third and 4 from the Sun Devils’ 14.


With Arizona State out of timeouts, UW ran out the final 2:15.


“We came out with the mentality that we were going to own this drive, make it ours,” Bortolini said. “There was nothing they could do to stop us if we all clicked.


"It was just Wisconsin football.”


The drive conjured memories of the 2006 Capital One Bowl.


UW closed out that game, a 24-10 victory over Auburn, with a non-scoring drive that covered 98 yards in 15 plays and 8:58.


The drive Thursday was equally sweet to the current players.


"That drive is what I think of Wisconsin football," Ferguson said. "It is gritty. It’s hard. It’s going to be tough. You’re going to be hurting. …


"It is the mentality of the offense: We’re going to get this done. We’re going to finish this. It’s in our hands. It is in our control."

BoBA ISML 2021 Predictions: Diamond Match Day 3



ARENA 1 Yuzaki Tsukasa [[Shinomiya Kaguya]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 2 Hayasaka Ai [[Tokisaki Kurumi]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 3 [[Takanashi Rikka]] Kanna Kamui

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 4 [[Yuigahama Yui]] Fujiwara Chika

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 5 Shirai Kuroko [[Misaka Mikoto]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 6 [[Isshiki Iroha]] Schwi Dola

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 7 Tōru [[Tōsaka Rin]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 8 [[Saten Ruiko]] Aisaka Taiga

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 9 [[Sakurajima Mai]] Shokuhō Misaki

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 10 Shiina Mashiro [[Index L. Prohibitorum]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 11 [[Emilia]] Nishimiya Shōko

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 12 [[Tomori Nao]] Yūki Asuna

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 13 [[Elaina]] Tachibana Kanade

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 14 [[Shiro]] Shirogane Kei

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 15 [[Kasumigaoka Utaha]] Akiyama Mio

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 16 Makise Kurisu [[Megumin]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 3000
Over

ARENA 17 Emiya Shirō [[Kirigaya Kazuto]]

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 18 [[Kamijō Tōma]] Itsuka Shidō

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 19 [[Natsuki Subaru]] Otonashi Yuzuru

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 20 [[Saitama]] Levi

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 21 Totsuka Saika [[Azusagawa Sakuta]]

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 22 Fukube Satoshi [[Okabe Rintarō]]

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 23 [[Shiota Nagisa]] Ishida Shōya

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 24 [[Okazaki Tomoya]] Edward Elric

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 25 Kanda Sorata [[Ishigami Yū]]

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 26 [[Tachibana Taki]] Yuzaki Nasa

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 27 [[Riku Dola]] Takasu Ryūji

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 28 [[Satō Kazuma]] Ayanokōji Kiyotaka

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 29 Otosaka Yū [[Togashi Yūta]]

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 30 Akasaka Ryūnosuke [[Arima Kōsei]]

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 31 [[Archer]] Lelouch Lamperouge

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 32 [[Rengoku Kyōjurō]] Kūjō Jōtarō

by <=500
Over/Under: 3300
Under

ARENA 33 [[Mōri Ran]] Dia Viekone

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 34 Ruti [[Yotsuya Miko]]

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 35 [[Shirakami Fubuki]] Kūjō Jolyne

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 36 [[Igarashi Futaba]] Komi Shōko

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 37 Dōki-chan [[Eris Boreas Greyrat]]

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 38 Misakino Kukuru [[Suzuki Sonoko]]

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 39 [[Sakagami Tomoyo]] Arashi Chisato

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 40 Yūki Yūna [[Unmei]]

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 41 Tarte [[Sakurai Tōko]]

by <=300
Over/Under: 3100
Under

ARENA 42 [[Red]] Bojji

by >=200
Over/Under: 2300
Over

ARENA 43 Mōri Kogorō [[Asahina Takt]]

by >=200
Over/Under: 2300
Over

ARENA 44 [[Lugh Tuatha Dé]] Tadano Hitohito

by >=200
Over/Under: 2300
Over

ARENA 45 [[Hikigaya Hachiman]] Aisaka Taiga [[Yukinoshita Yukino]] Takasu Ryūji

by <=1000
Over/Under: 2800
Over

ARENA 46 Hirasawa Yui [[Kanda Sorata]] Nakano Azusa [[Shiina Mashiro]]

by <=1000
Over/Under: 2800
Over

ARENA 47 [[Azusagawa Sakuta]] Hori Kyōko [[Sakurajima Mai]] Miyamura Izumi

by <=1000
Over/Under: 2800
Over

ARENA 48 Takanashi Rikka [[Otonashi Yuzuru]] Togashi Yūta [[Tachibana Kanade]]

by <=1000
Over/Under: 2800
Over


Voter Id: 39e5541c-8991-55eb-8de7-179a718fdd3c

Michigan State: 2021 Peach Bowl Champions


 

ATLANTA -- — Michigan State capped its turnaround from from a two-win season with a fourth-quarter comeback in the Peach Bowl.


Payton Thorne's 22-yard touchdown pass to Jayden Reed gave No. 11 Michigan State the lead with less than three minutes remaining and the Spartans overcame an 11-point deficit to beat No. 13 Pittsburgh 31-21 on Thursday night in the Peach Bowl.


Led by Thorne, the Spartans outscored the Panthers 21-0 in the final quarter.


"The whole game, my teammates just kept telling me to stay up and keep chopping like we talk about," Thorne said.


Linebacker Cal Haladay's 78-yard interception return for a touchdown with 22 seconds remaining ended Pitt fill-in quarterback Davis Beville's bid for a last-minute comeback in the game the Panthers played without star QB Kenny Pickett.


Thorne threw two fourth-quarter touchdown passes as Michigan State (11-2) rallied after trailing 21-10.


"We got stronger and stronger as the game went," second-year coach Mel Tucker said. "We ... were able to find a way to get it done."


Michigan State finished 2-5 in its pandemic-shortened 2020 season.


Cam Bright returned a fumble recovery 26 yards for a touchdown only 20 seconds into the second half for Pittsburgh (11-3). The Panthers lost fill-in starting quarterback Nick Patti to a broken collarbone in the first quarter.


Defensive end John Morgan forced the fumble by Michigan State quarterback Payton Thorne that was returned by Bright for a 21-10 lead.


It was the second big play by Pitt's defense. Brandon Hill's interception late in the first half set up an 87-yard touchdown drive for a 14-10 lead.


Thorne's 15-yard scoring pass to tight end Connor Heyward cut the Panthers' lead to 21-16 with 8:06 remaining. The Spartans were stopped on their 2-point play, with Heyward kept out of the end zone on another reception.


Thorne completed 29 of 50 passes for 354 yards with three touchdowns and one interception. Thorne's scoring pass to Reed with 2:51 remaining gave the Spartans a 22-21 lead. A 2-point pass to Jalen Nailor pushed the lead to three points.


With Pickett, who opted out of the game after finishing third in the Heisman Trophy voting, watching from a coach's box, the Panthers' transition at quarterback quickly took on added drama.


Making his first start since 2019, Patti was knocked out of the game in the first quarter.


On third down from the Michigan State 16 on the Panthers' second possession, Patti dropped back before taking off on a run and diving for the end zone, reaching out for the touchdown before landing hand on his left shoulder.


Patti grabbed his shoulder after rising to his feet and was escorted to the Pitt locker room. When he returned later in the first half, he was not wearing shoulder pads and his left arm was in a sling.


Beville took over for Patti and completed 14 of 18 passes for 149 yards with one touchdown and one interception.


"Davis did a great job, as good as you expect a third-team quarterback to do," said Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi. "Wasn't good enough to win the football game."


Brandon Hill's interception of Thorne's pass for Maliq Carr gave Pitt the ball at its 13, setting up the 87-yard touchdown drive.


Beville completed passes of 10 and 52 yards to Jordan Addison, the Biletnikoff Award winner as the nation's top wide receiver, against Michigan State's pass defense, which ranked last in the nation. Beville's 5-yard touchdown pass to Jared Wayne gave the Panthers a 14-10 halftime lead.


Addison had seven catches for 114 yards.


THE TAKEAWAY


Pitt: The game was expected to be a chance for Patti to make his case for the starting job next season. Former Southern Cal starter Kedon Slovis has announced he is transferring to Pitt and also will be part of the competition. Beville may have shown enough to be another contender.


Michigan State: Thorne showed poise in regrouping from a slow start. His two turnovers — one on an interception and one on a fumble — were costly, leading to two touchdowns. Thorne took advantage of his experience to take over the game in the final quarter.


NO WALKER


The Spartans were without running back Kenneth Walker, who opted out of the game after finishing sixth in the Heisman Trophy voting. Jordon Simmons led Michigan State with 16 carries for only 23 yards.


"Obviously, we're missing Ken but we felt we could get some stuff in the pass game," Thorne said. "In the fourth quarter we were able to string some stuff together and take advantage of the areas we thought we were going to be able to."


BLAME FOCUS, NOT FATIGUE


Pitt linebacker Phil Campbell said fatigue wasn't an issue in the final quarter.


"It was probably just lack of focus in certain areas," Campbell said. "We weren't more tired than they were."


RAINY DAY


Due to rain throughout the morning and most of the afternoon, the annual Peach Bowl parade in downtown Atlanta was canceled. The rain stopped in time for the retractable roof at Mercedes-Benz Stadium to be open for the game.


------


AP Sports Writer George Henry contributed to this report.


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Purdue: 2021 Music City Bowl Champions



NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- — Purdue came into the Music City Bowl short-handed and banged-up, particularly at wide receiver.


The Boilermakers are going home winners after a game that had people clicking over to catch an amazing finish.


Mitchell Fineran kicked a 39-yard field goal in overtime and Purdue finished off its best season since 2003 by overcoming a 14-point deficit and beating Tennessee 48-45 on Thursday in a record-setting Music City Bowl.


Purdue's Aidan O'Connell threw for 534 yards and five touchdowns with three interceptions. He couldn't explain the final five minutes of regulation as the teams combined to score four TDs — two apiece.


"It's why you love the game, it's why it keeps bringing you back," O'Connell said. "The fact it's unknown. No one knows what's going to happen. It's not a movie or TV show where the actors get retries. It seems like the world's watching and anything could happen."


Purdue (9-4) tied for the second-most wins in program history as only the 12th team in the Boilermakers' 134-year history to win nine games. They also won their fifth game away from home, something they hadn't done since 1943.


"We found a way to just barely win," Purdue coach Jeff Brohm said.


Tennessee (7-6) missed a chance to make Josh Heupel the first Vols coach to cap his debut season with a bowl win since Bill Battle won the 1971 Sugar Bowl. The Vols also snapped a four-game bowl victory streak with a loss that dropped the Southeastern Conference to 1-5 this bowl season.


The teams combined for 1,293 yards of total offense — second-most in overall bowl history, trailing only the 1,397 yards Baylor and Washington had in the 2011 Alamo Bowl. Tennessee became the 10th team in bowl game history to run 100 or more plays, and the combined 185 plays rank seventh.


This high-scoring game featured a flurry of big plays and points in the final five minutes only to see Purdue's defense make the deciding play.


On the first possession of overtime, Jamar Brown and Kieren Douglas stopped Vols running back Jaylen Wright short on fourth-and-goal. The stop was upheld on review for Wright's forward progress being stopped despite Wright reaching the ball over the goal line before the whistle without a knee touching the ground while laying on top of Douglas.


"I love these guys," Heupel said. "They fight, they scratch, they claw and they compete. We came up a play short."


Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker watched the replay on the large video board and was excited.


"I thought we scored, but you know it's a tough call," Hooker said. "Feels like me and my teammates gave it our all.


After Purdue ran three plays, Fineran sealed the victory with his fourth field goal of the game, sending the Boilermakers running down the field in celebration after what Brohm called a "a crazy game."


"It really picked up there at the end," Brohm said.


The Vols had a final chance to win in regulation, but Chase McGrath's 56 yard field goal fell well short.


Tennessee finished with 639 yards total offense and Purdue had 623 in regulation — both bowl records before overtime. O'Connell easily set the yards passing record, well above the 383 Mike Glennon had with N.C. State.


Purdue came in without a pair of All-Americans in defensive end George Karlaftis and wide receiver David Bell, both prepping for the NFL draft, with a receiving corps further thinned by injuries. Broc Thompson, who needs offseason surgery on both knees, filled in with seven catches for a game-high 217 yards and two TDs.


The Boilermakers had a chance to keep this finish from being quite so exciting. But they settled for three field goals in the second quarter and only led 23-21 at halftime. Tennessee led 31-30 after the third.


Hooker finished with 378 yards passing. Tillman had three touchdowns on seven receptions for 150 yards, and Jabari Small ran for 180 yards. Small wasn't available in overtime with Heupel saying he was fighting "some things" all through the game.


THE TAKEAWAYS


Tennessee: The Vols set a single-season record with 511 points, topping the 484 scored in 12 games in 1993. ... The Vols brought out a record crowd of 69,489 topping the previous mark of 69,143 set in 2010 when Tennessee also played in this bowl.


Purdue: Brohm said his Boilermakers had a lot of wide receivers, and they tapped that depth in this game. O'Connell spread the ball around connecting with nine receivers.


PENALTY ISSUES


The Vols were flagged 14 times for 128 yards.


"End of the day you can't control when they yellow hankies come out," Heupel said. "There's some things I don't agree with. Yeah, everyone knows that. But it's about what we can control."


UP NEXT


Tennessee is set up nicely for 2022. Tillman, who came into this season with eight career catches, finished with the Vols' first 1,000-yard season since 2012. He's already announced he's returning next season along with Hooker, tight ends Jacob Warren and Princeton Fant and a handful of other Vols.


Purdue has O'Connell coming back along for 2022, giving Brohm a chance to build on an offense that threw the ball more than any other team in school history.


------

South Carolina: 2021 Duke's Mayo Bowl Champions



South Carolina coach Shane Beamer had a big day on Thursday, and he concluded it by torching a reporter on social media.


CBS Sports college football writer Dennis Dodd sent a critical tweet Thursday in which he suggested that there were too many irrelevant bowl games, and the schedule needed to be scaled back. To back his assertion, Dodd cited Beamer getting a mayonnaise bath after his Gamecocks won the Duke’s Mayo Bowl.


Beamer took notice of Dodd’s take and responded by calling out the “miserable” reporter, complete with a reminder of how wrong Dodd had been about this year’s South Carolina team.


It is not common that you see a player or coach call out a media figure that brutally. Beamer has not gone as far as one athlete-media member rivalry has, but this is still pretty stinging.


Beamer has a point, by the way. The Gamecocks finished 7-6, and the bowl game victory seemed quite sweet to everyone involved.

ISML 2021: The Diamond Period Wages On



ISML 2021: The Diamond Period Wages On


By Jo-Ryan Salazar

The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue

December 29, 2021


In less than 72 hours, Yukino Yukinoshita will cease to become Saimoe Prime Minister and Miyuki Shirogane will cease to become Deputy Saimoe Prime Minister, with Mikoto Misaka and Sakuta Azusagawa taking over in the interim for at least the month of January. However, the 2021 International Saimoe League is not complete, as the Diamond Period is still going on, and Match Day 2 has concluded. 


In the Female Division, Mai Sakurajima took down Shiro 1374-1080, Mashiro Shiina smashed Megumin 1417-981, Emilia flew past Utaha Kasumigaoka 1373-1069, Index Prohibitorum scored the Upset of the Round, a 1347-1324 scalp of Asuna Yuuki, Nao Tomori defeated Shouki Nishimiya 1249-1155, Kanade Tachibana slayed Misaki Shokuhou 1366-1171, Elaina routed Mio Akiyama 1589-967 and Kei Shirogane eased past Kurisu Makise 1206-1120.


Wrapping up Female Division actiom, Kaguya Shinomiya thumped Iroha Isshiki 1495-955, Kurumi Tokisaki shot down Ruiko Saten 1562-1001, Rikka Takanashi rocked Tooru 1584-847, Chika Fujiwara defeated Ai Hayasaka 1157-1065, Yui Yuigahama hammered Kamui Kanna 1256-1165, Tsukasa Yuzaki rolled past Kuroko Shirai 1319-1190, Mikoto Misaka drilled Rin Tohsaka 1677-918 and Schwi Dola roared past Taiga Aisaka 1125-1069.


In the Male Division, Yuu Ishigami crushed Ryuunosuke Akasaka 1267-797, Taki Tachibana trounced Kyoujurou Rengoku 1267-797, Riku Dola rocked Archer 1335-856, Kiyotaka Ayanokouji prevailed over Nasa Yuzaki 1065-1012, Kazuma Satou roared past Ryuuji Takasu 1228-828, Sorata Kanda won a 1017-996 thriller over Yuu Otosaka, Yuuta Togashi pounded Joutarou Kuujou 1104-879 and Kazuto Kirigaya slashed past Rintarou Okabe 1201-1072.


Wrapping up Female Division action, Touma Kamijou broke Tomoya Okazaki 1300-953, Subaru Natsuki drove past Shouya Ishiga 1242-825, Shidou Itsuka leveled Levi 1080-1022, Yuzuru Otonashi punched Saitama 1043-1016, Shirou Emiya prevailed over Saika Totsuka 1068-1021, Sakuta Azusagawa stormed past Nagisa Shiota 1387-776 and Satoshi Fukube won a 969-956 snoozer over Edward Elric.


In Winter Seasonal action, Ran Mouri mowed down Jolyne Kuujou 1366-812, Miko Yotsuya thumped Fubuki Shirakami 1187-794, Dia Viekone routed Ruti 1186-683, Shouko Komi crushed Sonoko Suzuki 1368-772, Eris Boreas Greyrat flexed past Kukuru Misakino 1263-741, Futaba Igarashi defeated Doki-chan 1054-804, Tomoyo Sakagami defeated Touko Sakurai 1062-955, Unmei eased past Tarte 1149-856 anf Yuuna Yuuki whipped past Chisato Arashi 955-868. On the Male Side, Hitohito Tadano cruised past Bojji 1046-803, Lugh Tuatha De pummeled Kogorou Mori 1197-953 and Takt Asahina outmaneuvered Red 946-774.


Finally, in Couples Tournament action, Touma Kamijou and Mikoto Misaka destroyed Emilia and Subaru Natsuki 1497-999, Gilbert Bougainvillea and Violet Evergarden dominated Kazuto Kirigaya and Asuna Yuuki 1268-1195, Eru Chitanda and Houtarou Oreki eased past Yuu Otosaka and Nao Tomori 1425-951 and Elaina and Saya bodied Mikoto Misaka and Kuruko Shirai in a 1290-1285 classic, the closest race of the round.


Match Day 3 of the 2021 International Saimoe League Diamond Period is scheduled for New Year's Eve, December 31, 2021. Vote for your favorite characters at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.

Oklahoma: 2021 Alamo Bowl Champions



SAN ANTONIO — About an hour before the Alamo Bowl kicked off, Bob Stoops came strolling out of the tunnel and the ovation rose.


The cheers quickly evolved into a long, drawn-out “Stoooooooops” chant, and OU’s legendary coach acknowledged the ovation with a wave to all sides of the stadium.


The cheering from the Sooners’ side kept right on going through much of the first half before things tightened up after the break, as OU beat a depleted Ducks squad 47-32 in the Alamodome on Wednesday night.


Here are five takeaways from the Sooners’ win.


Father-son moment

The “Stoooooooops” chant returned in the second quarter, but this time it was for Bob’s son, redshirt junior receiver Drake Stoops.


On third-and-goal from the 6, Caleb Williams found Drake Stoops on a fade route, and he went up and hauled in the touchdown pass over Oregon cornerback Trikweze Bridges.


As Drake came off the field, he was met by his father, who gave him a bear hug and several pats on the helmet.


The touchdown, the first of three by the Sooners in the second quarter, put OU ahead 16-3.


It was Stoops’ second touchdown catch of the season. He also had one against Texas Tech on Oct. 30.


Defense: The good and the bad

The Sooners struggled to contain Oregon’s 5-foot-10 running back Travis Dye much in the first quarter.


Dye’s speed helped him gain 66 yards in the first quarter alone.


In the second quarter, though, OU’s defense bowed up. In the second quarter. Oregon had 102 yards — just one fewer than it had in the first quarter — but only 17 of those came on the ground. The Ducks didn’t have a drive longer than 39 yards in the second.


But Oregon opened things up, especially through the air, in the second half, scoring touchdowns on each of its first four second-half drives. 


Those included touchdown passes of 66, 34 and 30 yards.


Oregon finished with 497 yards, 306 through the air.


Dye finished with 153 yards and a touchdown on the ground.


Brooks and done

It’s no surprise the Sooners leaned heavily on running back Kennedy Brooks in the Alamo Bowl.


Brooks has been the Sooners’ offensive workhorse and was again Wednesday, with 14 carries for 142 yards and three touchdowns.


At one point early in the game, Brooks touched the ball on six consecutive plays.


During that stretch, he picked up seven yards on a third-and-6 after Caleb Williams checked down to find his running back open. Then he had a 10-yard run on the next play, followed by a 16-yard touchdown run.


In the second quarter, Brooks had a 40-yard carry to set up Drake Stoops’ touchdown catch three plays later.


Brooks rushed for 127 yards in the first half, setting a first-half bowl record for the Sooners, breaking Rodney Anderson’s 125 yards in the first half against Georgia in the 2017 College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Rose Bowl.


Brooks moved into ninth place on OU’s career rushing list, passing Stanley Wilson.


Williams’ TD wiped out 

Mario Williams broke free and the crowd roared.


Just moments after Jeremiah Hall converted a third-and-1 on a direct snap on the first play of the second quarter, Caleb Williams hit Williams for an apparent 51-yard touchdown.


But Ducks’ cornerback Avante Dickerson, trying to bring Williams down, instead ripped Williams’ helmet off his head with a facemask, immediately drawing a flag.


But it also drew a whistle.


The rules call for a stoppage of play once the ball carrier’s helmet comes off, regardless of the other circumstances of the play.


Williams wound up with an 18-yard gain and the Sooners ultimately settled for a 40-yard field goal by Gabe Brkic.


Turk comes up just short

Michael Turk had the record sealed up, it appeared.


But when OU’s fourth-quarter drive stalled, Turk was forced into action once again and his record chances came up just short.


Before the fourth-quarter punt, Turk’s season average was 51.29 yards, which would’ve broken an NCAA record set just recently when San Diego State’s Matt Araiza finished his season with a 51.19-yard average.


Turk needed a 48-yard punt to stay ahead of Araiza for the record, but his final punt went 47, pinning the Ducks at their own 7 but coming up just one yard short — not just on that punt but any this season — of breaking the mark.

Clemson: 2021 Cheez-It Bowl Champions



D.J. Uiagalelei threw for 187 yards, Mario Goodrich scored on an 18-yard interception return and No. 19 Clemson beat Iowa State 20-13 on Wednesday night in Orlando, Florida, in the Cheez-It Bowl for coach Dabo Swinney’s 150th victory.


Will Shipley had a 12-yard touchdown run and finished with 61 yards rushing and 53 yards receiving for Clemson (10-3). Dacari Collins caught six passes for 53 yards, and B.T. Potter made two field goals.


Clemson won its sixth straight game to reach 10 victories for an 11th consecutive season. Florida State (14 from 1987-00) and Alabama (14 from 2008-21) are the only programs with longer streaks.


The Tigers, who came in with the nation's second-ranked scoring defense, held the Cyclones (7-6) to three field goals over the first three quarters. Iowa State finished with 270 yards and 14 first downs.


Goodrich sealed Clemson’s victory with 33 seconds to play when he stripped the ball away from Iowa State quarterback Brock Purdy on fourth-and-2.


Iowa State dropped four of its final six games of the season and lost in a bowl game for a fourth consecutive year.


Maryland 54, Virginia Tech 10: Tarheeb Still returned a punt 92 yards for a touchdown, Taulia Tagovailoa threw touchdown passes of 70 and 32 yards to Darryl Jones and Maryland routed Virginia Tech at Yankee Stadium in New York in the Pinstripe Bowl.


The game belonged to Tagovailoa, an Alabama transfer and younger brother of Miami Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa. He threw for 265 yards and the two TD passes brought his season total to 26, which tied Maryland’s single-season record.


Coach Mike Locksley led the Terrapins (7-6) to his first bowl victory and winning record in three seasons at Maryland.


Jones, a senior wide receiver, had never caught a touchdown pass over his first 40 games. He had two and finished with 111 yards receiving against the Hokies (6-7).


Antwain Littleton II added a 4-yard rushing TD for Maryland and Joseph Petrino answered the Hokies’ lone touchdown with a 44-yard field goal with 59 seconds left in the first half for a 24-10 lead. Roman Hemby scored on a 2-yard run in the third quarter.

Maryland: 2021 Pinstripe Bowl Champions



NEW YORK — Maryland head football coach Mike Locksley did not mince words when asked what redshirt sophomore quarterback Taulia Tagovailoa's MVP performance in Wednesday's New Era Pinstripe Bowl means entering 2022. Before 29,653 people at Yankee Stadium, Tagovailoa completed 20 of 24 passes (83.3%) for 265 yards and two touchdowns, while adding 42 yards on four rushes (10.5 average), as the Terrapins (7-6, 3-6 Big Ten) throttled Virginia Tech (6-7, 4-4 ACC) to put an exclamation point on 2021.


"I hope it quiets some of the critics and maybe he gets a little bit of the respect that I think he deserves as a quarterback," Locksley — who capped Year 3 in College Park, Maryland, by engineering UMD's first winning season since 2014 — said. "I feel like we've got one of the best quarterbacks in the league, if not the country. As I've said before, we wouldn't be in this situation that we're in with the winning season if it wasn't for Taulia.


"Obviously, he's not the finished product and I think you'll continue to see him get better as with all aspects of our program. But really proud of him and the way he's responded, the way he has a positive impact on others, his teammates. Very unselfish. ... Hopefully, this is the start of the '22 season and maybe we can get him a little bit of respect in terms of being one of the top quarterbacks in the country — which I really feel and believe he is."


Senior wide receiver Darryl Jones echoed his coach's sentiments. After he caught four passes for 111 yards (27.8 average) and two touchdowns — including a pivotal 70-yard score at the second quarter's 9:13 mark to put Maryland up 14-3 — Jones shared a strong perspective.


"I would definitely agree," said Jones, who later added a 32-yard touchdown that widened the Terps' advantage to 34-10 with 6:48 left in the third quarter. "You could see, from the start of the season till now, how 'Lia has progressed. People sometimes forget, with his name, that he's still a young kid learning and you can see that he can learn and he has progressed. And I think 'Lia's done a fantastic job from coming in, taking over, being a leader and showing people how he works and how to work. And he's just pushing and pulling guys along every day. So I definitely do think 'Lia's proved some critics wrong."


As Jones alluded to, Taulia Tagovailoa — Alabama legend and second-year Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa's brother — brings the aura of being a former college football star's younger sibling. Still, following a second-year campaign as Maryland's starter in which he tied the program's single-season record for passing touchdowns at 26, Taulia Tagovailoa is making a name for himself with the Terps.


"I think, obviously, it gives us a lot of confidence going into the offseason and going into next season," said Tagovailoa — a four-star recruit in 2019 out of Alabaster (Ala.) Thompson and one-year Crimson Tide quarterback before transferring to UMD — who closes the season after going 328 for 474 (69.2%) with 3,860 yards and 26 touchdowns against 11 interceptions through all 13 games. "And for me, myself, I think it was good playing against an ACC team. And I don't know — I think I'm just ready, going into spring ball and offseason training with confidence. And I think it's more so just our team kind of building off of this going into our next season."

Minnesota: 2021 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Champions



PHOENIX -- — While watching "Breaking Bad" for the first time last year, a particular scene caught P.J. Fleck's attention.


The Minnesota coach had used television shows and movies — "Elf," "Full House" and "Family Matters" among them — as motivation in the past and this one seemed a perfect fit for his defense.


In it, Walter White rises in anger during a discussion with his wife, Skyler, explaining no one was going to come knocking on their door and shoot them.


"I'm the one who knocks!" he shouts.


So does Minnesota's defense.


Ky Thomas ran for 144 yards and a touchdown, Mar'Kiese Irving added 129 yards rushing and Minnesota shut down West Virginia to win the Guaranteed Rate Bowl 18-6 on Tuesday night.


"We wanted to be the defense that knocks and I thought we did that," Fleck said. "It was just kind of a theme our guys rallied around."


Thomas and Irving became the Gophers' 1-2 punch after Mohamed Ibrahim and Trey Potts sustained season-ending injuries. The two running backs carried most of the load offensively against West Virginia (6-7), accounting for 273 of Minnesota's 358 total yards.


They were good, but Minnesota's defense was flat-out dominating.


Controlling the line of scrimmage, the Gophers (9-4) overwhelmed the Mountaineers, holding them to 206 total yards to win their fifth straight bowl game, third under Fleck.


"They kind of grinded out a win and a credit to them — that's how they did it all year," West Virginia coach Neal Brown said. "We just weren't good enough today."


It wasn't much of a surprise. Minnesota finished fourth nationally in total defense, allowing 284.8 yards per game, and was ninth against the pass and run.


West Virginia played without leading rusher Leddie Brown, who opted to skip the bowl game to prepare for the NFL, and struggled to find much of an offensive rhythm early against the swarming Gophers.


The Mountaineers finally clicked a little in the second quarter, moving 75 yards in 12 plays. Jarret Doege capped the drive by diving for the pylon on 4th-and-goal from the 1. They were moving the ball again later in the second quarter before Doege threw an interception at Minnesota's 14-yard line.


West Virginia couldn't get anything going against Minnesota's defense in the second half, crossing midfield only once while being held to 79 yards.


"Everything that we've been doing all year, we wanted to up the emphasis," Gophers defensive back Tyler Nubin said. "We've been playing great defense and we wanted to do that one more time."


Minnesota's offense did a little pounding of its own.


The Gophers got in their own way after getting good field position on their first two drives, missing a 33-yard field goal and losing a fumble by Thomas at West Virginia's 6-yard line.


Then they turned to someone who could move everyone out of his way: Daniel Faalele.


The 6-foot-9, 380-pound offensive lineman lined up at fullback, took the handoff and bulled his way into the end zone for a 2-yard touchdown. Minnesota threw in a fake extra point for good measure, going up 8-0 after converting the 2-point conversion.


"He's 400 pounds," Fleck said. "Once that thing gets moving forward, it's hard to stop that thing."


Thomas put the Gophers up 15-6 at halftime, scoring on a 5-yard run two plays after bursting up the middle for a 50-yard gain.


Minnesota reached West Virginia's 3-yard line in the final minutes, but opted to kneel out the clock instead of trying to score.


"Their offense is mainly run," said West Virginia's Charles Woods, who had an interception in the third quarter. "They depend on the run."


And their defense.


NO SCREENS HERE


West Virginia had a successful screen game most of the season. Minnesota took that away, particularly early, changing the way the Mountaineers ran their offense the rest of the night.


"They played a lot of cover 2 and really took away your easy-access throws," Brown said. "They mixed it up well, kept us off balance."


THE TAKEAWAY


West Virginia could have used Brown to perhaps spark its offense. Then again, the way Minnesota swarmed to the ball, it may not have mattered.


Minnesota's defense dominated most of the year and capped it with a smothering performance to finally win the Guaranteed Rate — previously Insight — Bowl for the first time in four tries.


UP NEXT


West Virginia will get Doege back and its two-deep offense is filled with underclassmen, though Brown will not be back. The defense also has plenty of players coming back, but will lose LB Josh Chandler-Semedo, S Sean Mahones and DT Dante Stills.


Minnesota has several key players returning for a sixth season, including Morgan, Ibrahim, WR Chris Autman-Bell and C John Michael Schmitz.


------

Texas Tech: 2021 Liberty Bowl Champions



MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- — Donovan Smith threw for 252 yards and a touchdown and ran for another score, and Texas Tech beat Mississippi State 34-7 in the Liberty Bowl on Tuesday night.


Tahj Brooks rushed for 107 yards and a touchdown and SaRodorick Thompson ran for 80 yards and a score for the Red Raiders (7-6), who finished with a winning record for the first time since 2015. They were appearing in their first bowl game since 2017.


Mississippi State (7-6) fell short in coach Mike Leach's first game against a former program of his. Leach, who went 84-43 at Texas Tech from 2000-09, failed to become the first Bulldogs coach to end each of his first two seasons with a bowl victory. Mississippi State was playing in its 12th straight bowl game.


Red Raiders interim coach Sonny Cumbie, a former player at Texas Tech under Leach, ended his five-game run with a 2/3 record. Cumbie, who is departing to become Louisiana Tech's coach, took over for Matt Wells in October.


"It's a sense of relief and accomplishment," Cumbie said. "In these bowl games, the most excited team that shows up is the one that comes out on top. That's what this team did."


Texas Tech rushed for 260 yards against a Bulldogs defense that came in allowing 101 yards per game on the ground.


"Their defensive front is very good," Cumbie said. "We felt with some of our run schemes and some of our motions, we would be able to hit some creases. And our running backs broke some tackles. They were a good opponent, but I did feel we'd have the ability to run the football."


Leach's prolific offense never could get rolling against the Red Raiders and the resulting lopsided loss dropped the Southeastern Conference to 0-4 in the postseason. The Bulldogs were held scoreless in the second half and finished with 344 yards, 105 below their average. Mississippi State was without three offensive linemen, including All-SEC left tackle Charles Cross, a projected top 10 pick in the NFL draft.


"I didn't think we were consistent," Leach said. "We didn't out of the blocks or get into any kind of rhythm. They deserve credit for preparing the way they did and playing the way they did."


Texas Tech put the game out of reach with two third-quarter touchdowns. Smith scored on a 1-yard run to cap a 95-yard drive, the Red Raiders' second-longest of the season. Smith, who was named the game's MVP, completed passes of 39 and 52 yards during the drive. He added a 14-yard touchdown pass to J.J. Sparkman with 2 seconds remaining in the quarter.


Thompson scored his touchdown on a 1-yard run midway through the final quarter for a 34-7 lead.


Texas Tech established the run at the outset, gaining 145 yards in the first quarter and using its physical play to take a 10-0 lead. The Red Raiders moved 75 yards — all on the ground — on the game's opening possession, scoring on a 19-yard run by Brooks.


"I felt that ignited us," Smith said. "We knew we had to come out and score."


Texas Tech added a 31-yard field goal by Jonathan Garibay later in the quarter.


Mississippi State answered on its next series with Will Rogers converting on third-and-11 on the Red Raiders 38 to extend the drive. Rogers evaded a strong rush before finding Jo'quavious Marks for 18 yards to the 20. Two plays later, Rogers fired a 17-yard scoring pass to Rara Thomas.


The Red Raiders took advantage of a Bulldogs miscue in the closing seconds of the half to go up 13-7. Mississippi State punt returner Austin Williams muffed a Texas Tech punt inside the Bulldogs 20-yard line and Jake Bishop recovered at the 14 with 31 seconds remaining. Garibay added a 26-yard field goal with 13 seconds left.


Mississippi State was held to 126 yards in the first half. Rogers, averaging 372 yards passing per game, managed 103 yards on 10-of-17 passing in the half and finished with 290.


DOWN BUT NOT (OPTING) OUT


Leach said his team was struck with COVID-19 issues shortly after arriving in Memphis last weekend, but he never considered pulling the Bulldogs out of the game. After his postgame news conference, Leach estimated as many as 10 or 11 players were affected. He said once the team got to Memphis, he committed to playing the game as long as there were enough players available.


IN THE SPOTLIGHT


Texas Tech defensive lineman Tyree Wilson earned the game's most outstanding defensive player award on the strength of back-to-back tackles for loss. With the Red Raiders leading 20-7 midway through the third quarter, Wilson sacked Rogers on successive plays — an 11-yard loss on third down from the Tech 20 and a 9-yard loss on fourth down from the 31. Tech took over on downs and scored to go ahead 27-7.


UP NEXT


Mississippi State will enter 2022 with significant contributors returning. The Bulldogs had freshmen and sophomores score 35 of their 47 regular-season touchdowns. Rogers, a sophomore this year, will be back after setting the school's single-season passing record.


Texas Tech starts 2022 under new management. Former Baylor associate head coach Joey McGuire takes over after five seasons with the Bears and 14 as a high school coach at Cedar Hill in Texas, where he won three state titles.


------

Air Force: 2021 First Responder Bowl Champions



BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- — Clayton Tune and the Houston Cougars punctuated an impressive season with a win in Southeastern Conference country.


Jake Herslow caught a 26-yard, go-ahead touchdown pass from Tune with 3:27 left to help lift No. 21 Houston to a 17-13 victory over Auburn on Tuesday in the Birmingham Bowl in front of a mostly orange-and-blue crowd at Protective Stadium.


The Cougars (12-2) marched 80 yards in eight plays to cap the third season in program history with at least 12 wins. They snapped a four-game bowl losing streak and won 12 of their final 13 games, the only loss after the opener coming to No. 4 Cincinnati in the American Athletic Conference championship game.


Houston coach Dana Holgorsen said this win was similar to "some other ones that we've had this year."


"Just a bunch of guys that fight hard and win," Holgorsen said. "Basically, winning this game solidified this 2021 football team at the University of Houston as a great football team."


The Tigers (6-7) went in the opposite direction at the end of coach Bryan Harsin's first season. They ended with five straight losses for the first time in 71 years and dropped their third bowl game in a row.


Harsin was already looking ahead to, he hopes, better things.


"Nobody's going to go in there and just hang their head and say, ‘Well, this is just how it is,' " Harsin said. "We're going to change it. We're going to fix it, and we're going to get better.


"I mean, there is no Plan B. There's Plan A, and we're here to make this work."


Game MVP Tune completed 26 of 40 passes for 283 yards and two touchdowns with an interception while also rushing for 43 yards. Nathaniel Dell caught 10 passes for 150 yards, while Alton McCaskill ran for 66 yards and caught a touchdown pass.


"That's kind of been our offense this whole season, is when we've needed to make plays we do," Tune said. "There was no panic."


And Herslow, who walked on after playing for Old Dominion from 2017-19, delivered the biggest catch. He's a player Horgorsen called "one of the best stories in college football."


Auburn, which fired offensive coordinator Mike Bobo after the regular season, had one more chance but couldn't get a first down. Tank Bigsby ran for 8 yards on first down and then T.J. Finley threw three straight incompletions on short passes.


Houston ran out the clock.


Finley completed 19 of 34 passes for 227 yards and a touchdown in his third start since replacing injured Bo Nix. Bigsby had 88 rushing yards and 68 receiving yards.


The Cougars had moved across midfield for the go-ahead score after Auburn's second targeting ejection, this time against Jaylin Simpson.


Tune set it up with a 20-yard pass to tight end Christian Trahan.


The Tigers rallied from a 10-0 deficit to take the lead late in the third quarter on Kobe Hudson's 12-yard touchdown catch from Finley on third and goal.


Auburn had several promising drives stall.


"It was pretty frustrating," tight end John Samuel Shenker said. "We moved the ball pretty well, then we'd get down there and we'd have little mental errors. That's just little things that you can't afford to happen this late in the season."


THE TAKEAWAY


Houston lost its opener to Texas Tech but was awfully hard to beat after that. The Cougars got their first bowl since since beating then-No. 9 Florida State in the Peach Bowl on Dec. 31, 2015


Auburn had another game that slipped away late, including a quadruple-overtime loss to No. 1 Alabama. The Tigers were without some key players who were hurt, transferred or opted out.


TARGETED


Auburn safety Smoke Monday was the first player ejected for targeting after an earlier flag against him was overturned. This call came during Nehemiah Pritchett's interception return. The penalty knocked the Tigers back 47 yards and cost them one of their top defenders.


NEXT?


Holgorsen noted that Cincinnati has been on a roll since a win in Birmingham. Now, the Bearcats are set to play No. 1 Alabama Friday in the College Football Playoff semifinals in Arlington, Texas.


"Maybe they can beat the SEC, too," the Cougars coach said.

DALLAS -- — Air Force changed its strategy Tuesday for the First Responder Bowl, taking inspiration from its name and trying out its passing game. It worked.


Haaziq Daniels threw for two touchdowns and ran for two more to give Air Force a 31-28 win over Louisville.


Daniels completed 9 of 10 passes for a season-high 252 yards, leading a triple-option offense that came into the game averaging an FBS-best 340.8 rushing yards and the second-fewest passing yards at 82.5 per game.


The Falcons (10-3) didn't throw a pass in their final game of the regular season, a 48-14 win over UNLV, and took a streak of 94 straight rushes from scrimmage into their second possession Tuesday.


"I figured we'd (pass) more then we did in the last game," Air Force coach Troy Calhoun joked. "I just think sometimes you get in games, you make adjustments."


Louisville coach Scott Satterfield lamented his shorthanded secondary getting beat on man-to-man coverage. The Cardinals (6-7) were missing defensive back Kenderick Duncan (injured) and Greedy Vance, who is transferring to Florida State.


"Anytime you play a team like this, they're going to take a shot," Satterfield said. "They connect — they're going to come back to it again."


Senior Brandon Lewis had touchdown catches of 64 and 61 yards for the Falcons, finishing with five receptions for a career-high 172 yards. That's the most receiving yardage for an Air Force player this season and the most ever in the Falcons' 28 bowl games.


"I feel like I could have been doing this all season," Lewis said. "I'm just happy that I did do it in my final game."


Matthew Dapore kicked a 26-yard field goal with 5:28 left to give the Falcons a two-score lead.


Louisville's Malik Cunningham threw a 34-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Harrell and ran for a 22-yard touchdown with 2:57 to play. Jawhar Jordan returned a kickoff 100 yards and Trevion Cooley had a 1-yard run for the Cardinals' other touchdowns.


Cooley, a freshman, had 92 yards rushing for Louisville. Redshirt freshman Jalen Mitchell, who led the Cardinals during the season with 722 rushing yards, was out with an illness.


Louisville's James Turner had a 44-yard field-goal attempt sail left in the first quarter, and the Cardinals were stopped on fourth-and-goal at the Falcons' 2-yard line early in the third quarter when Cooley was tackled by Camby Goff and Trey Taylor.


"We ran the play probably three of four times, which, it worked every single time up until that point," Cooley said. "It was my job to really punch it in."


Daniels ran for a 5-yard touchdown in the first quarter to give Air Force a 7-0 lead and a 1-yard score in the final minute of the second quarter to put the Falcons ahead 28-14.


THE TAKEAWAY


Air Force: The No. 6 overtime loss to Army prevented the Falcons from winning the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy for the first time since 2016 instead of settling for a three-way tie. They recorded double-digit wins for the fourth time in Calhoun's 15 seasons.


Louisville: The Cardinals had their second straight losing record. Tuesday's loss was the fourth by one score. "If that one play is made (in those games), it's a totally different season," senior linebacker C.J. Avery said.


POWER SHORTAGE


With Air Force beating Louisville and Houston defeating Auburn earlier Tuesday in the Birmingham Bowl, Power Five programs are 0-5 in bowls against teams from the Group of Five or independents.


MILESTONES


Cunningham (13 of 21 passing for 207 yards, 12 carries for 63 yards) became the second Louisville quarterback to rush for 1,000 yards in a season (1,031), and the 100 touchdowns he's responsible for are second to Lamar Jackson's 119. Cunningham will return for his fifth season in 2022. … Air Force senior fullback Brad Roberts had 20 carries, giving him a school-record 314 career rushes.


UP NEXT


Air Force: The Falcons will begin the 2022 season on Sept. 3 against Northern Iowa at home and then host Colorado to Colorado Springs the following week.


Louisville: The Cardinals will open at UCF on Sept. 10 and face South Florida before jumping into ACC play.


------

UP NEXT


Houston will try to close the gap on Cincinnati with an offense that is expected to return Tune and tailback Alton McCaskill. The Cougars open against UTSA.


Auburn has an important offseason that includes replacing Nix, who was injured and subsequently transferred to Oregon. The Tigers open against Mercer.

Houston: 2021 Birmingham Bowl Champions



BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- — Clayton Tune and the Houston Cougars punctuated an impressive season with a win in Southeastern Conference country.


Jake Herslow caught a 26-yard, go-ahead touchdown pass from Tune with 3:27 left to help lift No. 21 Houston to a 17-13 victory over Auburn on Tuesday in the Birmingham Bowl in front of a mostly orange-and-blue crowd at Protective Stadium.


The Cougars (12-2) marched 80 yards in eight plays to cap the third season in program history with at least 12 wins. They snapped a four-game bowl losing streak and won 12 of their final 13 games, the only loss after the opener coming to No. 4 Cincinnati in the American Athletic Conference championship game.


Houston coach Dana Holgorsen said this win was similar to "some other ones that we've had this year."


"Just a bunch of guys that fight hard and win," Holgorsen said. "Basically, winning this game solidified this 2021 football team at the University of Houston as a great football team."


The Tigers (6-7) went in the opposite direction at the end of coach Bryan Harsin's first season. They ended with five straight losses for the first time in 71 years and dropped their third bowl game in a row.


Harsin was already looking ahead to, he hopes, better things.


"Nobody's going to go in there and just hang their head and say, ‘Well, this is just how it is,' " Harsin said. "We're going to change it. We're going to fix it, and we're going to get better.


"I mean, there is no Plan B. There's Plan A, and we're here to make this work."


Game MVP Tune completed 26 of 40 passes for 283 yards and two touchdowns with an interception while also rushing for 43 yards. Nathaniel Dell caught 10 passes for 150 yards, while Alton McCaskill ran for 66 yards and caught a touchdown pass.


"That's kind of been our offense this whole season, is when we've needed to make plays we do," Tune said. "There was no panic."


And Herslow, who walked on after playing for Old Dominion from 2017-19, delivered the biggest catch. He's a player Horgorsen called "one of the best stories in college football."


Auburn, which fired offensive coordinator Mike Bobo after the regular season, had one more chance but couldn't get a first down. Tank Bigsby ran for 8 yards on first down and then T.J. Finley threw three straight incompletions on short passes.


Houston ran out the clock.


Finley completed 19 of 34 passes for 227 yards and a touchdown in his third start since replacing injured Bo Nix. Bigsby had 88 rushing yards and 68 receiving yards.


The Cougars had moved across midfield for the go-ahead score after Auburn's second targeting ejection, this time against Jaylin Simpson.


Tune set it up with a 20-yard pass to tight end Christian Trahan.


The Tigers rallied from a 10-0 deficit to take the lead late in the third quarter on Kobe Hudson's 12-yard touchdown catch from Finley on third and goal.


Auburn had several promising drives stall.


"It was pretty frustrating," tight end John Samuel Shenker said. "We moved the ball pretty well, then we'd get down there and we'd have little mental errors. That's just little things that you can't afford to happen this late in the season."


THE TAKEAWAY


Houston lost its opener to Texas Tech but was awfully hard to beat after that. The Cougars got their first bowl since since beating then-No. 9 Florida State in the Peach Bowl on Dec. 31, 2015


Auburn had another game that slipped away late, including a quadruple-overtime loss to No. 1 Alabama. The Tigers were without some key players who were hurt, transferred or opted out.


TARGETED


Auburn safety Smoke Monday was the first player ejected for targeting after an earlier flag against him was overturned. This call came during Nehemiah Pritchett's interception return. The penalty knocked the Tigers back 47 yards and cost them one of their top defenders.


NEXT?


Holgorsen noted that Cincinnati has been on a roll since a win in Birmingham. Now, the Bearcats are set to play No. 1 Alabama Friday in the College Football Playoff semifinals in Arlington, Texas.


"Maybe they can beat the SEC, too," the Cougars coach said.


UP NEXT


Houston will try to close the gap on Cincinnati with an offense that is expected to return Tune and tailback Alton McCaskill. The Cougars open against UTSA.


Auburn has an important offseason that includes replacing Nix, who was injured and subsequently transferred to Oregon. The Tigers open against Mercer.

Western Michigan: 2021 Quick Lane Bowl Champions



DETROIT (AP) — Kaleb Eleby threw two touchdowns and ran for another and Western Michigan recorded its second bowl victory in program history, rolling past Nevada 52-24 in the Quick Lane Bowl on Monday.


Sean Tyler rushed for 146 yards on 14 carries and returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown for Western Michigan (8-5). Jaxson Kincaide, a Nevada transfer, rushed for 105 yards on 17 carries and scored two touchdowns.


The Broncos’ only other bowl victory came in the 2015 Bahamas Bowl against Middle Tennessee. Compared with that one, the Quick Lane Bowl was practically a home game for them.


“Doing it in Detroit is really special,” coach Tim Lester said. “To have fans here, so many alumni here. … tons of people from Kalamazoo made the trip. It was awesome to see the hotel alive last night. And to play the way we did, in front of them with their support, it all came together. It’s a big deal.”


Nate Cox passed for 121 yards and a touchdown and Devonte Lee rushed for 85 yards and a touchdown for Nevada (8-5).


Cox got the start after Carson Strong, who threw a school-record 36 touchdown passes, chose not to play in order to prepare for the NFL draft. The Wolf Pack was coached by assistant Vai Taua after Jay Norvell accepted the Colorado State coaching job.


Western Michigan, which had 352 rushing yards, led 31-10 at halftime.


“That’s a really good football team,” Taua said. “They ran the ball well all season and they continued to do that.”


Tyler’s 100-yard return followed Brandon Talton’s 32-yard field goal. Western Michigan’s staff noticed the Wolf Pack coverage tended to slant toward the ball, leaving the sideline open.


“Once (Braden) Fiske made the block I needed, I took it all the way to the house,” said Tyler, who was named the game’s MVP. “I was actually quite surprised once I broke through and ‘Oh, there’s nobody left.’”


Taua said: “You never want your first kickoff to go like that. I wouldn’t call it a backbreaker. It was definitely another challenge the team would have to overcome right out of the gate.”


Midway through the first quarter, Eleby connected with Corey Crooms on a 74-yard scoring pass.


The Broncos’ other first-half touchdowns came on Eleby’s 20-yard pass to Brett Borske and Kincaide’s 7-yard run.


PERFECT SENDOFF


Kincaide, a Western Michigan sixth-year senior running back, had his biggest game of the season against his former team.


“It felt surreal,” he said. “It was a great feeling to leave with some of the guys I came in with in 2016 and to see a lot of familiar faces. It was great to go out this way.”


Kincaide played four seasons with the Wolf Pack before transferring before last season. He was the Broncos’ third-string running back most of the season, but his role expanded when La’Darius Jefferson tested positive for COVID over the weekend.


THE TAKEAWAY


A majority of Nevada’s offensive starters during the regular season opted out of the bowl game to prepare for the NFL draft or transfer. The retooled unit had no chance to keep pace with the Broncos, who scored on two big plays in the opening quarter and then established a steady rushing attack.


UP NEXT


Western Michigan: The Broncos will open the 2022 season on the road against Big Ten powerhouse Michigan State on Sept. 3. They will face the Spartans’ bowl opponent, Atlantic Coast Conference champion Pitt, on Sept. 17.


Nevada: Under new head coach Ken Wilson, Oregon’s former co-defensive coordinator, the Wolf Pack will travel to New Mexico State for their 2022 opener on Aug. 27.

BoBA ISML 2021 Predictions: Diamond Match Day 2



ARENA 1 [[Sakurajima Mai]] Shiro

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 2 Megumin [[Shiina Mashiro]]

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 3 [[Emilia]] Kasumigaoka Utaha

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 4 [[Yūki Asuna]] Index L. Prohibitorum

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 5 Tomori Nao [[Nishimiya Shōko]]

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 6 Shokuhō Misaki [[Tachibana Kanade]]

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 7 [[Elaina]] Akiyama Mio

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 8 [[Shirogane Kei]] Makise Kurisu

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 9 [[Shinomiya Kaguya]] Isshiki Iroha

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 10 Saten Ruiko [[Tokisaki Kurumi]]

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 11 [[Takanashi Rikka]] Tōru

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 12 [[Hayasaka Ai]] Fujiwara Chika

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 13 Kanna Kamui [[Yuigahama Yui]]

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 14 Yuzaki Tsukasa [[Shirai Kuroko]]

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 15 [[Misaka Mikoto]] Tōsaka Rin

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 16 [[Schwi Dola]] Aisaka Taiga

by >=200
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 17 Akasaka Ryūnosuke [[Ishigami Yū]]

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 18 [[Tachibana Taki]] Rengoku Kyōjurō

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 19 [[Riku Dola]] Archer

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 20 [[Ayanokōji Kiyotaka]] Yuzaki Nasa

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 21 [[Satō Kazuma]] Takasu Ryūji

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 22 Kanda Sorata [[Otosaka Yū]]

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 23 Lelouch Lamperouge [[Togashi Yūta]]

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 24 Kūjō Jōtarō [[Arima Kōsei]]

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 25 [[Kirigaya Kazuto]] Okabe Rintarō

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 26 Okazaki Tomoya [[Kamijō Tōma]]

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 27 Ishida Shōya [[Natsuki Subaru]]

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 28 [[Itsuka Shidō]] Levi

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 29 [[Otonashi Yuzuru]] Saitama

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 30 [[Totsuka Saika]] Emiya Shirō

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 31 [[Azusagawa Sakuta]] Shiota Nagisa

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 32 [[Edward Elric]] Fukube Satoshi

by <=600
Over/Under: 5300
Under

ARENA 33 Kūjō Jolyne [[Mōri Ran]]

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 34 Shirakami Fubuki [[Yotsuya Miko]]

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 35 Ruti [[Dia Viekone]]

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 36 [[Komi Shōko]] Suzuki Sonoko

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 37 [[Eris Boreas Greyrat]] Misakino Kukuru

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 38 [[Igarashi Futaba]] Dōki-chan

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 39 [[Sakagami Tomoyo]] Sakurai Tōko

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 40 Unmei [[Tarte]]

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 41 [[Yūki Yūna]] Arashi Chisato

by <=800
Over/Under: 3500
Under

ARENA 42 [[Tadano Hitohito]] Bojji

by >=100
Over/Under: 3200
Under

ARENA 43 [[Lugh Tuatha Dé]] Mōri Kogorō

by >=100
Over/Under: 3200
Under

ARENA 44 Red [[Asahina Takt]]

by >=100
Over/Under: 3200
Under

ARENA 45 [[Kamijō Tōma]] Emilia [[Misaka Mikoto]] Natsuki Subaru

by >=400
Over/Under: 4000
Over

ARENA 46 [[Gilbert Bougainvillea]] Kirigaya Kazuto [[Violet Evergarden]] Yūki Asuna

by >=400
Over/Under: 4000
Over

ARENA 47 [[Chitanda Eru]] Otosaka Yū [[Oreki Hōtarō]] Tomori Nao

by >=400
Over/Under: 4000
Over

ARENA 48 [[Elaina]] Misaka Mikoto [[Saya]] Shirai Kuroko

by >=400
Over/Under: 4000
Over


Voter Id: 119a6904-44c3-5804-9b9c-18d39f8dcc63

ISML 2021: Shine Bright Like A Diamond



ISML 2021: Shine Bright Like A Diamond


By Jo-Ryan Salazar

The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue

December 28, 2021


Match Day 1 of the 2021 International Saimoe League Diamond Period is history. In the Female Division, Kaguya Shinomiya defeated Taiga Aisaka 1393-969, Kurumi Tokisaki got past Schwi Dola 1335-914, Rikka Takanashi eased past Rin Tohsaka 1333-1084, Chika Fujiwara dominated Ruiko Saten 1313-1013, Yui Yuigahama hammered Tooru 1283-993, Iroha Isshiki defeated Kuroko Shirai 1186-1058, Ai Hayasaka whipped past Kamui Kanna 1191-1059 and Mikoto Misaka routed Tsukasa Yuzaki 1518-932.


Wrapping up Female Division play, Mai Sakurajima romped past Kurisu Makise 1402-858, Mashiro Shiina smashed Kei Shirogane 1401-889, Emilia flew past Mio Akiyama 1330-964, Asuna Yuuki slashed past Megumin 1252-1082, Nao Tomori defeated Utaha Kasumigaoka 1149-1094, Kanade Tachibana thumped Shiro 1334-921, Shouko Nishimiya drove past Index Prohibitorum 1289-1140 and Elaina powered past Misaki Shokuhou 1393-957.


In Male Division play, Kazuto Kirigaya crushed Edward Elric 1357-708, Touma Kamijou broke Satoshi Fukube 1288-813, Subaru Natsuki annihilated Nagisa Shiota 1226-754, Tomoya Okazaki leveled Levi 1031-916, Saitama punched Shouya Ishida 1022-967, Saika Totsuka toasted Rintarou Okabe 1048-964, Yuzuru Otonashi shot down Shidou Itsuka 1101-837 and Sakuta Azusagawa burned Shirou Emiya 1240-899.


Wrapping up Male Division play, Yuu Ishigami routed Joutarou Kuujou 1283-751, Taki Tachibana rook down Kousei Arima 1188-768, Riku Dola rocked Lelouch Lamperouge 1165-822, Kiyotaka Ayanokouji overpowered Kyoujurou Rengoku 1119-844, Kazuma Satou dominated Archer 1183-869, Yuu Otosaka pounded Ryuunosuke Akasaka 1025-855, Ryuuji Takasu roared past Nasa Yuzaki 1038-902 and Yuuta Togashi rolled past Sorata Kanda 1247-754.


In Fall Seasonal action, Ran Mouri rolled past Ruti 1057-965, Miko Yotsuya suplexed Jolyne Kuujou 1295-569, Shouko Komi pounded Doki-chan 1074-706, Eris Boreas Greyrat drubbed Sonoko Suzuki 1346-631, Futaba Igarashi deferated Kukuru Misakino 922-840, Tomoyo Sakagami eased past Yuuna Yuuki 1021-787, Unmei flattened Touko Sakurai 966-824 and Tarte defeated Chisato Arashi 893-837. In the Male Division, Takt Asahina crushed Bojji 991-746, Kogorou Mouri prevailed over Hitohito Tadano 987-925 and Lugh Tuatha De impaled Red 990-605.


Finally in Female Division action, Sakuta Azusagawa and Mai Sakurajima drilled Kousei Arima and Kaori Miyazono 1412-977, Kyouko Hori and Izumi Miyamura delivered the Upset of the Round, a 1142-1065 win over Riku and Schwi Dola, Rikka Takanashi and Yuuta Togashi took down Shiro and Sora 1315-929 and Yuzuru Otonashi and Kanade Tachibana flew past Miko Iino and Yuu Ishigami 1283-936.


Match Day 2 of the 2021 International Saimoe League Diamond Period is scheduled foer December 28, 2021. Vote for your favorite characters at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.

Georgia State: 2021 Camellia Bowl Champions



MONTGOMERY, Ala. -- — Darren Grainger and Georgia State saved their best for the last game of the season — and especially for a thoroughly dominating third quarter.


Grainger passed for 203 yards and three touchdowns and ran for 122 yards and a fourth TD to lead Georgia State to a 51-20 victory over Ball State in the Camellia Bowl on Saturday.


The Panthers (8-5) finished with their seventh win in eight games, dominated the lone bowl played on Christmas Day and set a season record for wins.


Coach Shawn Elliott called it "the best performance Georgia State football has had this year."


"I think we finished Christmas Day with one of the best presents we could have ever asked for and that's a commanding, dominating win," Elliott said. It was the first time the program had won back-to-back bowl games.


His team was up 20-13 at halftime but scored the next 31 points.


Grainger completed 15 of 19 passes and carried 11 times, including a play fake midway through the third quarter when he scampered 34 yards untouched into the end zone. It was the first 100-yard rushing game of his career, and he was named the game MVP.


Ball State (6-7) couldn't summon up many big plays after Drew Plitt's 56-yard touchdown bomb to Jayshon Jackson for an early lead.


The Cardinals finished with a losing record a year after coach Mike Neu led his alma mater to its first Mid-American Conference championship since 1996.


"This group of young men has changed our program, and I mean that," Neu said. "A few years ago, we were struggling, we were down and out. These guys stuck together."


Tight end Aubrey Payne had two touchdown catches for Georgia State, along with career-highs of eight catches and 109 yards.


The Panthers defense also supplied two touchdowns: a 37-yard fumble recovery by defensive end Javon Denis and a 55-yard interception return by Antavious Lane that ended the team's 28-point third quarter.


"I really just wanted to win," Grainger said. "It didn't really matter how it came. We were talking so much about getting the eighth win this week."


Plitt completed 27 of 46 passes for 293 yards with a touchdown and an interception for Ball State, which was without injured leading receiver Justin Hall. Jackson caught 12 passes for 146 yards.


It was Plitt's last game of his career at Ball State, but afterward, he was looking ahead to how his returning teammates can bounce back.


"I feel like this team is going to surprise a lot of people," Plitt said.


THE TAKEAWAY


Georgia State: Completed a dramatic turnaround after a 1-4 start that included losses to Army, North Carolina, Auburn and Appalachian State. The nation's No. 8 ground game dominated Saturday, churning out 259 yards.


Ball State: Had a disappointing ending after gaining bowl eligibility with a 20-3 win over Buffalo in the regular-season finale. A failed fourth-and-1 try from its own 34 in the first half led to a field goal. The Cardinals fell to 1-9-1 in bowl games.


MISSING PLAYERS


Ball State was without two offensive line starters —left guard Anthony Todd (injury) and right tackle Damon Kaylor (COVID-19 protocol) — along with Hall.


"We had some moving parts on the offensive line," Neu said. "We had a few adjustments we had to make throughout the week. That's part of it. There's some guys who stepped in and played their first snaps this week."


Georgia State starting noseguard Dontae Wilson also didn't play for undisclosed reasons, and tight end Roger Carter was out with an injury.


UP NEXT


Ball State: Opens next season at Tennessee, and must replace Plitt and had 32 seniors/grad students.


Georgia State: Will have Grainger back next season and also starts on the road against an SEC team — South Carolina. "This team is growing, and I think it's going to continuously grow under Coach Elliott," Payne said.


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