Georgia: 2022 Peach Bowl Champions



ATLANTA -- Just when it looked like the Georgia football team was in deep, deep trouble, the Bulldogs found a way to survive.


The No. 1 Georgia football team's quest for a second straight national championship seemed all but lost in the fourth quarter of the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl late Saturday night. Trailing No. 4 Ohio State by 14 points, the Bulldogs made the critical plays in all phases of the game to rally for a 42-41 win in the College Football Playoff semifinals at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.


With eight seconds left, and a crowd of 79,330 holding its breath, the Buckeye's kicker, Noah Ruggles, missed a 50-yard field-goal attempt that would have sent Ohio State (12-1) to the National Championship Game. He missed and the Bulldogs (14-0) were able to survive and advance.


Georgia will meet No. 3 TCU in the National Championship Game on Jan. 9, at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. The Horned Frogs upset No. 2 Michigan, 51-45, in the Vrbo Fiesta Bowl on Saturday.


Georgia outgained the Buckeyes 533-467, with quarterback Stetson Bennett completing 23 of 34 passes for 398 yards, with three touchdowns and an interception. OSU's C.J. Stroud finished 23 pot 34 for 348 yards and four touchdowns.


The Bulldogs' opening drive, after a quick stop of the Buckeyes that included a 10-yard sack by linebacker Smael Mondon, Jr., included some bright spots, including two receptions by Adonai Mitchell. But it ended in a 47-yard field-goal attempt by Jack Podlesny that was wide left, giving the Buckeyes the ball back at their 29.


Ohio State went right to work, with Stroud hitting Marvin Harrison, Jr., for a 24-yard gain on first down. Later, on second-and-7 at the UGA 31, Stroud rolled to his right to avoid pressure, waited a moment, and then hit Harrison on the right side of the end zone for the game's first score, putting the Buckeyes up 7-0 with 8:16 left in the opening quarter.


Georgia responded quickly with a drive that showed off a lot of weapons. Bennett hit Dominick Blaylock on the left side for a 20-yard gain on third-and-10 at the UGA 25. Two plays later, Daijun Edwards pinballed off of a Buckeye and scampered for an 18-yard gain to the OSU 47. On the next play, Bennett rolled right and hit Brock Bowers for a 17-yard gain.


Bennett was sacked for a 7-yard loss on the next play, but on second-and-17 at the 25, he threw a quick strike to Kenny McIntosh, lined up in the left slot, and the running back made one cut and then took off for the end zone. Podlesny's extra point tied the game 7-7 with 3:15 remaining in the first. Bennett completed 9 of 10 passes for 110 yards and the touchdown in the first quarter.


The Buckeyes regained the lead, 14-7, on their next drive, on Miyan Williams' 2-yard run. The Bulldogs' nearly got a takeaway earlier in the drive when cornerback Kelee Ringo punched the ball out of Harrison's arms on a 24-yard completion, but the ball rolled out of bounds before any men in red could dive on it.


Ohio State got the ball right back, deep in Georgia territory, after a Bennett pass was intercepted by Steele Chambers and returned 15 yards to the UGA 30. The Buckeyes pushed their lead to 21-7 with 10:56 left in the half on Stroud's 16-yard touchdown pass to Harrison in the back right corner of the end zone. The deficit was the largest the Bulldogs had faced all season.


In need of a response, Georgia delivered it quickly. Edwards broke free for a 21-yard gain on the first play of the ensuing drive. Later, Bennett hit wideout Arian Smith deep for a 47-yard gain to the 11. On the next play, running back Kendall Milton ran the ball in on the right side for a touchdown, cutting OSU's lead to 21-14 with 9:16 on the clock.


Georgia's defense got a big stop on OSU's next drive, with linebacker Mykel Williams sacking Stroud for a 9-yard loss to the Buckeye 19 on third down. The Bulldogs started their next drive at their 38, with 7:41 to play in the half. They ended it with a 3-yard Bennett touchdown run, and Podlesny's extra point tied the game 21-21 with 6:07 to play in the half.


The drive began emphatically, with McIntosh taking a handoff and bursting free up the left hash after a couple of cuts. But he tripped after looking behind him and fell at the OSU 10, after a 52-yard gain. Edwards then ran the ball for 7 yards, to the 3, and Bennett did the rest. After that drive, the Bulldogs were averaging 11.9 yards per play for the game.


Georgia's defense got a second straight quick stop, and after a punt the offense took over at the Georgia 32. On third-and-6, Bennett fired a strike to Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint for a 28-yard gain. Milton then ran for 15 yards to the 20 on the next play. On fourth-and-4 at the 14, with 1:49 left in the half, Georgia opted for a 32-yard Podlesny field goal that put the Bulldogs in front for the first time, 24-21, giving Georgia 17 unanswered points after falling behind 21-7.


Ohio State got the ball back with 1:44 to play in the half and very quickly found the end zone, regaining the lead, 28-24, on a 37-yard touchdown pass from Stroud to Xavier Johnson with 49 seconds remaining. The 28 points were the most Georgia's defense has allowed this season and the second-most it had allowed in a game.


Georgia was forced to punt on the opening possession of the second half, and Ohio State's offense went back to work against a Bulldog defense struggling to defend the pass. A couple of big completions helped the Buckeyes move into the red zone, and a 10-yard touchdown pass on third down, from Stroud to Emeka Egbuka, make it 35-24 with 10:37 left in the third.


With 31 seconds left in the third quarter, the Buckeyes added to their lead with a 25-yard Noah Ruggles field goal that made it 38-24. Podlesny cut into the lead with a 31-yard field goal with 10:14 left in the game, making it a 38-27 game.


After Georgia's defense forced a punt, Bennett on the first play of the ensuing drive hit Smith for a 76-yard touchdown to cut the margin 38-33 with 8:41 remaining. Georgia tried for a two-point conversion and Bennett hit Ladd McConkey on the right side, making the score 38-35. Smith somehow got way behind the Buckeye defense and had nothing between him and the end zone but about 30 yards of green turf.


Ohio State added a Ruggles 48-yard field goal with 2:43 to play to push its lead to 41-35, giving the Bulldogs at least a shot at pulling out the comeback win. And Georgia made the most of its shot, executing a 5-play, 72-yard drive in 102 seconds that culminated in a 10-yards touchdown pass from Bennett to Mitchell in the left corner of the end zone. Podlesny's extra point put the Bulldogs ahead 42-41 with 54 seconds left.


Stroud led the Buckeyes down the field on their final drive, running and throwing Ohio State into Georgia territory. His 27-yard scramble reached the 31-yard line with 24 seconds left, setting up Ruggles for a 50-yard attempt with eight seconds left. It never had a chance, missing well left.


Georgia got the ball back with three seconds on the clock and Bennett, his eyes clearly filled with tears on the TV broadcast, ran out to kneel down and send the Bulldogs to the National Championship Game.

TCU: 2022 Fiesta Bowl Champions



GLENDALE, Ariz. -- In the biggest upset since the advent of the College Football Playoff, third-seeded TCU rode its underdog status to a 51-45 win over undefeated and No. 2 Michigan in the Fiesta Bowl on Saturday. The win continued TCU's storybook season and made the Frogs the first Big 12 team to reach the title game in the CFP era.


Highlighted by a 44-point third quarter between the two teams, the semifinal matchup was a back-and-forth affair that saw TCU nearly lose an early 18-point lead, a pair of pick-sixes, two fumbles, a 76-yard touchdown pass, eight scores in just about eight minutes, a record-setting 59-yard field goal and the highest combined score in Fiesta Bowl history.


The signs of an explosive game were there early. Starting in place of injured star running back Blake Corum, Donovan Edwards ripped off a 54-yard run on the first play of the game, yet the Wolverines walked away with zero points after a fourth-down try near the red zone was stopped.


On the next Michigan offensive drive, quarterback J.J. McCarthy threw a telegraphed pass to the outside that was picked off by sophomore safety Bud Clark and returned for a touchdown. It was the Frogs' third pick-six of the season and put them up 7-0.


The Frogs' defense was the star of the first half, as Michigan entered the TCU red zone three times and came away with only nine points by way of three field goals thanks to two huge stops and a fumble at the 1-yard line by Edwards.


TCU's offense, meanwhile, used the advantage of the Air Raid's pace and speed to get out in front. A 12-play, 76-yard drive culminated with quarterback Max Duggan rushing into the end zone from the 1-yard line to put the Frogs up 14-0 in the first quarter. Under coach Jim Harbaugh, Michigan had allowed more than 14 points in the first quarter and gone on to win just once, in 2016 against Colorado, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.


While Michigan struggled to capitalize, on the other side of the ball, Duggan -- the Heisman runner-up -- was pulling out all the stops. Duggan wasn't particularly accurate through the air in the first half, but with his legs, he danced his way to first downs and kept pushing TCU downfield as the Wolverines struggled to mitigate his mobility.


No play was more indicative of that problem than when Duggan rolled out of the pocket with 4:56 left in the second quarter and avoided the Michigan blitz to find Taye Barber for 6 yards and six more points. The touchdown culminated a 10-play, 83-yard drive that gave the Frogs a commanding 21-6 halftime lead and put the Wolverines in their biggest deficit of the season.


Both teams came out of the tunnels after halftime like they were shot out of a cannon, combining for a 44-point third quarter that featured a flea-flicker touchdown from McCarthy, the second pick-six of the game from the Michigan quarterback, another pick from Duggan and three touchdown drives of under three minutes.


McCarthy and Michigan, who had two of those drives, were not going away. But just as the Wolverines were attempting to claw back, TCU kept responding. This time, it was running back Emari Demercado who broke loose for a 69-yard run that Duggan finished off with another 1-yard touchdown sneak. The Frogs finished with 41 points through three quarters. All season, the most points Michigan had given up in an entire game was 27, and going back to last season, the most the Wolverines had surrendered in a game was 37.


After Michigan cut the TCU lead to three points early in the fourth quarter, Duggan, as he has done all season, responded by making the throw of the game. While facing a blitzing defender in his face and a long third down, Duggan found a crossing Quentin Johnston in stride. Johnston sped his way to the sideline and took it 76 yards to the end zone to put the Frogs back up 10. A field goal extended that lead to 13 early in the fourth quarter.


Another methodical Michigan touchdown drive by McCarthy cut the lead once again, this time to six points with 3:18 left, setting the stage for TCU and Duggan. The Frogs needed two first downs to finish the game with the ball in their hands. They could get only one, and the Wolverines had 52 seconds to go 75 yards and make a miracle happen.


On fourth-and-10 with 35 seconds left at its own 25, Michigan fumbled the ball and recovered, but the ball did not make it past the first-down marker. As TCU assistant coaches in the upstairs box yelled and screamed, "We're going to the Natty!" all Duggan had to do was take a knee. The upset of the season -- and of the era -- was complete.

Alabama: 2022 Sugar Bowl Champions



NEW ORLEANS - The No. 5/5/5 Alabama football team secured a 45-20 win over No. 9/11/9 Kansas State in the Allstate Sugar Bowl. The Crimson Tide's victory at the Caesars Superdome helped UA finish 11-2 on the season.


Alabama fell behind early with Kansas State gaining a 10-0 lead in the first 12 minutes. The Tide countered with 35 unanswered points to make it a 35-10 game before the Wildcats narrowed the gap on a field goal late in the third. Alabama then put the game well out of reach thanks to a touchdown to close out the third quarter and a field goal from Will Reichard early in the fourth.


Quarterback Bryce Young was named the game's Most Valuable Player with an impressive five-touchdown effort. The junior finished an efficient 15-of-21 for 321 yards to go with the five scores. He connected with seven different receivers overall, five of which scored a touchdown. Tight end Cameron Latu led in receptions with five for 54 yards and a score while Jermaine Burton paced UA in yards at 87 on his three catches, adding a touchdown of his own.


Jahmyr Gibbs highlighted the Tide running backs with 15 carries for 76 yards followed by Jase McClellan who rushed seven times for 42 yards and a score. Gibbs also added two receptions for 66 yards and a pair of kickoff returns for 31 yards to total a game-high 173 all-purpose yards.


The Crimson Tide defense intercepted two passes while limiting the Wildcats to only 210 yards through the air. Jordan Battle picked off the first pass and finished with nine total tackles, including half a stop for loss (-2 yards). Brian Branch recorded UA's second pick and paired the turnover with 12 tackles, including a sack (-9 yards) and a game-high four tackles for loss (-22 yards). DeMarcco Hellams led all defenders with 13 stops.


Alabama Head Coach Nick Saban Said

"There was a team out there today that cared – cared about how they played; cared about the pride they had in their performance; cared about each other – and they prevailed because of that. I think that (mentality) started way back when we started practice. There are a lot of guys on this team, including these two guys that are sitting next to me (Will Anderson Jr. and Bryce Young) that have given a lot to this program. The way the team performed out there together as a group, they had something to prove."


Notes

Alabama's matchup with Kansas State marked the Crimson Tide's 17th in the Sugar Bowl – the most by UA in any bowl and eight better than the Cotton, which holds second place at nine. Alabama owns a 10-7 all-time mark in the Sugar Bowl.

Since head coach Nick Saban's arrival in 2007, Alabama has played in 26 games that kicked off at 11:30 a.m. CT or earlier. The Crimson Tide is a perfect 26-0 in those matchups, including a 3-0 mark this season. Alabama first secured a 20-19 win at then-No. 22 Texas on Sept. 10 before defeating Austin Peay, 34-0, on Nov. 19 in the Tide's final non-conference matchup of the regular season.

The win over K-State was Saban's 23rd career victory by 25-plus points against a team ranked in the Associated Press Top 25 and his 25th win by 20-plus points against a top-15 opponent in the AP Poll. He is the NCAA's all-time record holder in both categories.

With his five touchdown passes, Bryce Young now has 80 career passing touchdowns to move past AJ McCarron (77) into second on the school's all-time list. Young trails only Tua Tagovailoa's 87.

After starting the game 1-for-4, Young finished his day 14-of-17 for 315 yards and five touchdowns.

Young's five touchdown passes in the contest set an Alabama bowl record. It also matched Mac Jones' five touchdown throws against Ohio State in the 2021 College Football Playoff National Championship Game for the most by a Crimson Tide quarterback in a postseason game (bowl and College Football Playoff).

Young's five touchdown passes matched his career-high total for a single game. The junior has thrown for five scores on four previous occasions, including most recently against Utah State in the 2022 season opener.

With his first touchdown pass in the second quarter, Young has thrown for at least one touchdown across all 27 games that he has started for the Crimson Tide

With his two receptions, Jahmyr Gibbs finished second for catches by a Crimson Tide running back in a single season at 44. The program record is 48 by Kevin Turner with Gibbs moving past Najee Harris (43) in today's game.

How It Happened

First Quarter

06:17 – KS | Kansas State took its second drive of the game 38 yards on 11 plays for the first points of the contest, a 41-yard field goal off the foot of Ty Zentner

03:26 – KS | Deuce Vaughn ran it 88 yards on the first play of Kansas State's ensuing drive to stake his team to a 10-0 lead

00:32 – UA | Helped by a 60-yard pass play from Bryce Young to Jahmyr Gibbs, Alabama finished off a six-play, 69-yard drive that took 2:46 off the clock and was capped by a six-yard touchdown by Isaiah Bond

Second Quarter

11:33 – UA | Another big play – this time a 47-yard pass-and-catch from Young to Jermaine Burton – set up a one-yard touchdown reception for Cameron Latu to cap a six-play, 63-yard drive that lasted 3:09

00:10 – UA | The Tide finished the half with a 98-yard drive that took just seven plays and 58 seconds when it was capped by a 12-yard touchdown catch by Jermaine Burton to put Alabama ahead 21-10 at intermission

Third Quarter

13:54 – UA | After recovering an onside kick attempt, Alabama took advantage of the short field by moving 46 yards on six plays in 1:05 when Young found Ja'Corey Brooks for a 32-yard touchdown reception

13:00 – UA | A Brian Branch interception set up the Tide at Kansas State's 17-yard line when Jase McClellan scored the ensuing play which resulted in UA's fifth consecutive touchdown drive

06:33 – KS | The Wildcats went 54 yards in eight plays and 2:17, capped by a 28-yard field goal from Zentner

00:00 – UA | Alabama ended the quarter with Kobe Prentice scoring on a 47-yard catch-and-run to the house, finishing off a three-play, 51-yard drive that took only 1:33 off the clock

Fourth Quarter

11:10 – UA | Will Reichard converted a 49-yard field goal to finish off a six-play, 14-yard drive in 2:31

03:06 – KS | Jordan Schippers plunged into the end zone from one-yard out to cap a 10-play drive that lasted 4:27 and spanned 71 yards.

Iowa: 2022 Music City Bowl Champions



NASHVILLE, Tennessee – The University of Iowa football team defeated Kentucky, 21-0, at the TransPerfect Music City Bowl at Nissan Stadium on Saturday afternoon.


Redshirt freshman Joe Labas was 14-for-24 for 139 yards and a touchdown in his first career start for the Hawkeyes.


Senior tight end Sam LaPorta had 5 receptions for 56 yards, and sophomore Luke Lachey had 3 catches for 36 yards and a touchdown.


Defensively, senior linebacker Jack Campbell had 10 tackles (8 solo) and a sack. Freshman Xavier Nwankpa had 8 tackles (7 solo) and an interception returned for a touchdown. Sophomore Cooper DeJean also had an interception returned for a touchdown.


QUOTING COACH FERENTZ

“Just really happy for our guys. Especially our seniors. What a way to send them off. It’s been a great group, and I can’t thank them enough for all they’ve done.


Each and every one of these guys has really embodied what it means to be a Hawkeye. You talk about the guys that are seniors, the senior captains, or a kid like Tommy Hartlieb, Dallas Craddieth, you know, big tackle on special teams. Just a really special group.


Bowl games are a little bittersweet because of that. You have to say goodbye to those guys, but just couldn’t be more proud.


Then the other aspect obviously a chance for some younger players to step up and do some things. You know, one of the fun things with keep coaching about a goal game, you watch younger guys develop and grow. Saw a lot of that during the course of this past four weeks.


You know, coincidentally Jaz Patterson took it there at the end and had a couple of good runs. He is a young guy who just quietly has been grabbing opportunities and doing a great job.


You talk about Cooper. Obviously, he had a great game. Joe Labas might be as valuable as Cooper just in the fact that he didn’t make any critical mistakes out there, and that’s easier said than done. You know, just proud of the way he handled things and got thrown into it pretty suddenly.


So, you know, just happy about the younger guys’ development. Obviously, we have a big leadership void. I think as much as anything I think this group of seniors, the contributions they’ve made leadership-wise just invaluable. Just happy about everything on that front.”


HOW IT HAPPENED

The Hawkeyes opened the scoring with 12:08 remaining in the second quarter. Back-to-back completions from Joe Labas to Sam LaPorta and Luke Lachey was all it took for Iowa to find the endzone. The Hawkeyes went 42 yards on the two completions with Lachey scoring on a 15-yard reception.

On the first play of Kentucky’s next drive freshman Xavier Nwankpa recorded his first career interception and took it 52-yards for the Hawkeye score.

With Kentucky backed up on the seven-yard line Cooper DeJean intercepted a pass and returned it 14 yards for Iowa’s second pick six of the game with 1:36 remaining in the first half.


INDIVIDUAL NOTES

DB Cooper DeJean was named the TransPerfect Music City Bowl MVP after tallying seven tackles, one TFL, one pass breakup and returning a 14-yard interception for a pick six. He also made numerous plays on special teams.

DeJean’s 14-yard pick six in the second quarter gave Iowa a 21-0 lead. It was his third pick six this season.

The three interception returns for touchdowns sets a single season program record.

The three pick 6s also tie a career school record along with Tom Knight, Desmond King and Riley Moss.

DB Xavier Nwankpa had a 52-yard interception return for a touchdown in the second quarter to give Iowa a 14-0 lead. It is his first career interception and first career touchdown.

Nwankpa also had a career-high eight tackles and one pass breakup.

They were Iowa’s third and fourth career pick six all-time in a bowl game along with Micah Hyde (72 yards vs. Missouri in 2010 Insight Bowl) and Nick Niemann (25 vs. USC in 2019 Holiday Bowl).

LB Jack Campbell finished with a game high 10 tackles, including one sack and two TFL. It is Campbell’s eighth game this season with 10 or more stops.

Campbell finished the season with 128 tackles, the 23rd-most in a single season in program history.

He closes out his career with 305 tackles to rank 19th all-time in the record books.

P Tory Taylor tied an Iowa bowl record with eight punts for 386 yards (48.3 avg.). Four of his punts pinned the Wildcats inside the 10 and two at the 15.

He tied Nick Gallery (1993 Alamo) and Jason Baker (1997 Sun).

Taylor finished the season with 82 punts for 3,766 yards – a school record yardage total. It is the second straight year Taylor has broken the school record.

QB Joe Labas made his first career start and saw his first collegiate action. He finished the game 14-of-24 for 139 yards and one touchdown – the first of his career.  He also rushed four times for 11 yards.

TE Luke Lachey had a 15-yard touchdown reception in the second quarter to give Iowa a 7-0 lead. It is his fourth touchdown reception of the season (and his career).

TE Sam LaPorta had a team-best five receptions for 56 yards. He finishes his career with 153 receptions for 1,786 yards, ranking first in school history in career receptions amongst tight ends and second in career receiving yards.

Nwankpa made his first career start at strong safety. He is the first true freshman to start on defense since Dane Belton and Jack Campbell in 2019.

MISCELLANEOUS 

Iowa posted the first shutout in TransPerfect Music City Bowl history in the 21-0 victory over Kentucky.

It is the team’s second shutout of the season (Nevada) – the most by the program since 2019.

It is the first shutout of the 2022 bowl season and the first by a Big Ten team in a bowl game since Penn State in 1999.

It is the program’s second shutout all-time in a bowl game (1996 Alamo Bowl vs. Texas Tech – 26-0).

Iowa allowed 10 or fewer points in nine games during the 2022 season, the most for the program since 1903.

The Hawkeye defense allowed 185 yards against Kentucky. It is the sixth game this season the defense has surrendered fewer than 200 yards.

Iowa’s defense forced its 22nd and 23rd turnovers in the game (8 fumbles, 15 interceptions). The defense turned them into 14 points in the game.  Iowa scored 66 defensive points this season.

Iowa won the toss and elected to defer; Kentucky will receive. The Hawkeyes have played 301 games under head coach Kirk Ferentz. Iowa has opened the game on offense 220 times (140-80). The Hawkeyes have opened the game on defense 81 times (46-35).


UP NEXT

The Hawkeyes open the 2023 season, hosting Utah State on Sept. 2 at Kinnick Stadium.

FFXIV: Heavensturn 2023 With Izumi Hashima

#FFXIV #Heavensturn #Saekano

Genshin Misadventures, 2023 Edition

Genshin Misadventures, 2023 Edition
#GenshinImpact

ISML 2022: Genshin Impact Final Four Set



ISML 2022: Genshin Impact Final Four Set


By Jo-Ryan Salazar

The Bedlam On Baltic Avenue

30 December 2022


Raiden Ei, the Raiden Shogun of Inazuma and Electro Archon, easily dispatched Keqing 3461-2665 to advance to the semifinals of the 2022 International Saimoe League Genshin Impact Tournament. "A straightforward assignment," Ei said. "It will be an honor to win this tournament because I know what I am capable of, as history has shown for centuries. I thank Keqing for the encounter and wish the Yuheng well on her ongoing projects in Liyue as she has done a magnificent job giving her all for her country."


Ei's next challenger is Ayaka Kamisato, the Shirasagi Himegimi and sister to Ayato Kamisato, the Yashiro Commissioner. A 3934-2124 win over Zhongli, the Geo Archon and de facto leader of Liyue as Rex Lapis, sent a strong message to the Shogun. "Her banner rerun may be occuring right now, but I know full well that nothing is given, all victories must be earned," Ayaka said. "I may come into the semifinals as a decisive underdog, but if I have faith and know that my brother believes in me no matter what...I will have the power to surprise. So I will do my best to the end."


In the Female Division, Violet Evergarden thumped Sagiri Izumi 4240-3201, Emilia defeated Marin Kitagawa 3652-3411, Index L. Prohibitorum roared past Taiga Aisaka 3714-3320, Rikka Takanashi rocked Kurumi Tokisaki 4122-3405, Kaguya Shinomiya throttled Takina Inoue 4134-2985, Shiro prevailed over Ai Haibara 3734-3476 and Elaina boomed past Mio Akiyama 3932-3620.


Yui Hirasawa soared past Shouko Nishimiya 3743-3419, Sora Kasugano overcame Kamui Kanna 3533-3256, Miku Nakano rammed Rem 4260-3200, Mashiro Shiina smashed Yui Yuigahama 4013-2837, Kanade Tachibana flew past Asuna Yuuki 3493-3171, Yukino Yukinoshita bounced past Nao Tomori 4040-3162 and Kuroko Shirai defeated Nino Nakano 4145-3552.


Wrapping up Female Division play, Utaha Kasumigaoka won the closest race of the round, a 3468-3440 thriller over Mitsuha Miyamizu, Mikoto Misaka defeated Eru Chitanda 3851-3505, Tamako Kitashirakawa pounded Chika Fujiwara 3579-3416, Azusa Nakano romped past Tsukasa Yuzaki 3793-3209, CHisato Nishikigi scored the Upset of the Round, a 4085-3750 scalp of Mai Sakurajima, Megumi Katou prevailed over Isla 3461-3358 and Ritsu Tainaka rumbled past Zero Two 3681-3335.


In Male Division play, Hachiman Hikigaya thumped Yuu Otosaka 4102-2731, Levi leveled Kaito Kuroba 3395-2656, Mochizou Ouji pounded Nasa Yuzaki 3168-2872, Houtarou Oreki routed Conan Edogawa 4325-2866, Loid Forger defeated Yuu Ishigami 3356-2172, Shidou Itsuka eased past Shirou Emiya 3124-2811 and Yuuta Togashi took down Subaru Natsuki 4313-2562.


Shinpei Ajiro drover past Itachi Uchiha 3248-2788, Saika Totsuka toasted Dio Brando 3585-2640, Accelerator accelerated past Taki Tachibana 4135-2824, Rimuru Tempest stormed past Tanjirou Kamado 3167-2843, Sorata Kanda dismissed Ken Kaneki 3189-2730, Kazuto Kirigaya slashed past Sora 3478-2841 and Miyuki Shirogane defeated Takashi Natsume 3399-2968.


Wrapping up Male Division play, Fuutarou Uesugi won a 3036-3005 nailbiter over Masamune Izumi, Sakuta Azusagawa broke Touma Kamijou 3809-3036, Tomoya Okazaki jojo'd Joutarou Kuujou 3200-2775, Haruka Kasugano eased past Kyoujurou Rengoku 3148-2907, Kiyotaka Ayanokouji flattened Izumi Miyamura 3505-2704, Riku Dola rocked Satoru Gojou 3033-2985 and Kousei Arima overwhelmed Ainz Ooal Gown 3154-2643.


A special exhibition saw Kate Mirror win a 2625-1155 snoozer over Tooru Hagakure. In Seasonal action, Nezuko Kamado powered past Sakura Matou 3357-2454, Silence Suzuka raced past Kotoko Iwanaga 2759-2581, Illyasviel von Einzbern burned Tooru Amuro 3297-2463, Takagi trounced Toge Inumaki 3928-1698, Special Week sped past Renge Miyauchi 2815-2574, Ninym Ralei rallied past Momo Chiyosa 2712-2276, Kobayashi scorched Yuuko Yoshida 3123-2388 and Sajuna Inui rolled past Eris Boreas Greyrat 2960-2540.


Kyaru dismantled Wakana Gojou 3080-2328, Ai Hayasaka routed Eiko Tsukimi 4318-1768, Touka Yatogami defeated Miko Iino 3286-2837, Zhuge Kongming won a 2583-2485 pillow fight over Zhong Lanzhu, Yoshino upended Kogorou Mouri 4113-2158, Shikimori defeated Tomoyo Sakaghami 3068-2678, Shouko Koumi drilled Mio Kofune 3834-1152 and Ushio Okazaki whipped past Fuuko Ibuki 2904-1948.


Wrapping up Exhibition play, Reina Aharen slayed Serena 3374-1633, Kurumi sat on Shalltear Bloodfallen 3862-2269, Ruka Sarashina defeated Sumi Sakurasawa 2577-2139, Hinata Hyuuga blew Son Goku apart 3122-1841, Kei Karuizawa mowed down Ayano Yugiri 3380-2045, Yume Irido overcame Albedo 2940-2519, Hizuru Minakata jojo'd Jolyne Kuujou 3051-2248, Suzune Horikita slammed Rin Shima 3630-2014, Kisara defeated Lucy 3096-2472 and Nazuna Nanakura routed David Martinez 3071-2050.


Match Day 6 of the 2022 International Saimoe League Amethyst Period is the first voting day of 2023 and is on 3 January 2023. Vote for your favorite characters at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate. Happy New Year!

Tennessee: 2022 Orange Bowl Champions



MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — The sixth-ranked Tennessee Volunteers emphatically punctuated a memorable 2022 campaign on Friday night with a New Year's Six bowl victory, taking down No. 7 Clemson 31-14 in the Capital One Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium.

 

In his second year at the helm of Tennessee football, head coach Josh Heupel guided the Vols (11-2) to their first 11-win season since 2001. Friday's result marked Tennessee's first victory in a "New Year's Six" bowl game (2014-pres.) and first win in the Orange Bowl since defeating Oklahoma in 1939.

 

Playing 80 miles from his hometown of Pahokee, Florida, quarterback Joe Milton III shined under the bright lights in his fourth start for the Vols. The redshirt senior completed 19-of-28 passes for 251 yards and a career-high tying three touchdowns with no interceptions, and he was named the 2022 Capital One Orange Bowl Most Valuable Player.

 

Sophomore running back Jaylen Wright led the Vols in the ground game with a game-high 89 yards on 11 carries, while junior Jabari Small toted 13 rushes for 38 yards and his 13th touchdown of the season. The Volunteer receiving corps was paced by freshman slot receiver Squirrel White who cracked the century mark for the second time this season, finishing with a season-high nine catches for 108 yards and a touchdown.

 

Tennessee's defense reigned supreme in the battle between top-10 squads, and the Vols were led by senior linebacker Aaron Beasley. The Franklin, Georgia, native feasted with a game-high 12 tackles, career-high four tackles for loss and two sacks along with one pass breakup. Redshirt senior linebacker Solon Page III ended his career with a career-best effort, logging 10 tackles to rank second on the team.

 

The UT secondary got the job done on the back end, with junior defensive backs Tamarion McDonald and Wesley Walker posting one interception each and Doneiko Slaughter logging a career-high three pass breakups.

 

Tennessee grabbed momentum early after forcing a turnover on downs in the first quarter, halting Clemson's nine-play, 53-yard drive when redshirt junior cornerback Kamal Hadden and Page combined for a stop on a fake field goal rush. The duo stuffed holder Drew Swinney for a two-yard gain on fourth-and-4 to set up a scoring drive for the Big Orange.

 

Milton orchestrated an 11-play, 75-yard touchdown series off the turnover, culminating with a 16-yard scoring strike to redshirt junior wideout Bru McCoy who made a strong, two-handed grab on contact in the back of the end zone. Redshirt senior Chase McGrath knocked through his 67th PAT of the year, breaking his own school record from last season to give the Vols a 7-0 edge with 5:17 left in the opening stanza.

 

The Tigers (11-3) had three chances at points early in the first half but were unable to capitalize after three consecutive missed field goals by senior placekicker B.T. Potter. His 55-yard attempt with 3:05 remaining in the first quarter fell harmlessly wide right and short of the goal post before a 49-yard try with 14:08 left in the second quarter was also pushed wide right. His third kick came from 42 yards and sailed just left of the goal posts, keeping Tennessee's seven-point lead intact with 10:15 to go in the half.

 

Tennessee quickly doubled its lead after the third kicking miscue, using 1:12 of game clock for a five-play, 75-yard touchdown drive to go ahead by 14 with 9:03 left in the second period. Milton completed four-straight passes on the drive, including a 50-yard deep ball to White that set up junior running back Jabari Small's two-yard scoring plunge.

 

Small improved his season total to 13 rushing touchdowns, moving into a tie for sixth in UT single-season history. His 13 scores on the ground are the most by a Vol since Montario Hardesty also had a baker's dozen in 2009.

 

Potter got Clemson on the board with 5:11 left in the first half, hooking his fourth field goal try of the night from 31 yards just inside the left post. Neither side scored for the rest of the period, and the Vols headed to the halftime locker room with a 14-3 lead over the Tigers.

 

After receiving the kickoff out of halftime, the Tigers doubled their point total when Potter's 40-yard field goal sailed between the uprights with 10:57 remaining in the third quarter. The kick capped a methodical, 10-play, 45-yard drive for Clemson to cut its deficit to eight points, 14-6.

 

Tennessee's offense stalled on the next two drives before Clemson marched into Volunteer territory. The Big Orange defense held up once again when linebackers Beasley and Juwan Mitchell stopped Tiger running back Will Shipley on fourth-and-2 to force the game's second turnover on downs with 1:27 left in the third.

 

The UT offense responded with another quick touchdown series, going 70 yards in four plays in 1:22 of game time. Wright broke off runs of nine, 42 and five yards before Milton's second touchdown toss found White in the middle of the checkerboard-painted endzone. The 14-yard throw vaulted Tennessee's lead to 21-6 with five seconds remaining in the third.

 

Clemson quickly narrowed the deficit with its first touchdown of the night when quarterback Cade Klubnik ran four yards into the endzone on a read option—capping a 12-play, 71-yard drive for the Tigers. Shipley broke through the middle on the two-point conversion to make it a 21-14 Tennessee lead with 10:01 left in regulation.

 

Milton put the game on ice midway through the fourth quarter on the ensuing drive, connecting with Keyton on a wide open deep ball down the right sideline for a 46-yard touchdown that put Tennessee ahead by two touchdowns. McGrath's program record 70th made PAT doubled up the Vols over the Tigers, 28-14, with 8:34 left in the contest.

 

Tennessee's attacking, staggering defense posted the game's first takeaway on Clemson's next drive to all but seal the win as junior defensive back Tamarion McDonald leaped in the air and nabbed his third career interception. McGrath put the finishing touches on the victory, knocking his final career field goal attempt from 32 yards between the uprights for the final score, 31-14.

 

Clemson threatened a late touchdown when Klubnik heaved his 54th pass attempt into the endzone, but redshirt junior Wesley Walker grabbed his first career interception to leave no doubt. Three Milton kneel downs ended the game and the Vols hoisted the Orange Bowl trophy for the first time in 83 years.

 

The Vols finished the 2022 campaign breaking several single season records, including total points (599), points per game (46.1), total offense (6,832), yards per game (525.5) and passing touchdowns (38) while tying the record for rushing touchdowns (40).

Ohio: 2022 Arizona Bowl Champions



Perfect football weather. Imperfect football. No complaints.


The Arizona Bowl always has been a bit quirky. The play on the field is seldom pristine. But Tucson’s bowl game has charm, a good heart and a fighting spirit.


Bowl organizers were determined to put on a good show after the pandemic impacted the past two Arizona Bowls. The 2020 version was played without fans in the stands; the ’21 game, the first with new title sponsor Barstool Sports, was canceled.


Typical of most Arizona Bowls since the game’s inception in 2015, this one came down to the wire. CJ Harris’ 10-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Foster in overtime gave Ohio a 30-27 victory over Wyoming on a picturesque Friday afternoon at Arizona Stadium.


The Arizona Bowl has been contested seven times. Friday’s game marked the third time it was decided in overtime — and the third time it ended with a walk-off score.


The lead changed hands four times in the second half and OT. The Bobcats rallied from a 17-11 halftime deficit behind the running of tailback Sieh Bangura, who had a game-high 138 yards, and the clutch play of Harris, who took over as Ohio’s starter late in the season after MAC Offensive Player of the Year Kurtis Rourke hurt his knee.


Harris was named the Arizona Bowl MVP after passing for 184 yards and two touchdowns and rushing for 52 yards.


“The boys supported me,” Harris said. “They had my back, and I had theirs.


“It means a lot. I just wanted to give it my all for the team.”


The Bobcats finished 10-3, reaching double figures in wins for the first time since 2011 and the third time in modern program history. Wyoming, a two-time participant in the Arizona Bowl, ended the season with a three-game losing streak and finished 7-6.


The Cowboys took a 27-24 lead in overtime on John Hoyland’s 29-yard field goal. The Bobcats won it on Harris’ pass to Foster, a 6-5, 247-pound tight end, in the back left corner of the end zone.


“One on one, I just saw my man versus their man,” Harris said. “I’m going to give my man a shot every time.”


The Bobcats raced down the west sideline to mob Foster. Soon after, second-year coach Tim Albin and his team accepted the Arizona Bowl trophy.


“Unbelievable football game for four quarters," Albin said, his voice breaking. "And a little extra."


Bangura gave Ohio an 18-17 advantage with a 3-yard touchdown run with 5:14 remaining in the third quarter.


Wyoming’s offense had been completely stymied in the second half before the Cowboys pieced together a six-play, 75-yard touchdown drive to reclaim the lead late in the fourth quarter. Wyoming had four previous possessions in the half. The Cowboys gained just 17 yards.


A 31-yard pass from quarterback Andrew Peasley to tight end Treyton Welch moved Wyoming to the Ohio 11-yard line. On third-and-4 from the 5, Jordon Vaughn — the Cowboys’ fifth-string running back — plowed into the end zone to give Wyoming a 24-21 lead with 2:08 remaining.


Ohio had ample time to get into field-goal range and did. Nathanial Vakos’ 46-yard field goal — his third from 40-plus yards in the game — tied the score with four seconds left in regulation.


While Ohio lost its star quarterback – but was able to overcome it – Wyoming was hit hard by late-season injuries and pre-bowl transfer-portal departures.


"We have what we had, and we put them out there,” Cowboys coach Craig Bohl said. “I’m proud of them."


The first quarter was characterized by big plays and big mistakes.


Wyoming opened the scoring with a 17-yard touchdown run by Vaughn, who was making his college debut.


Since the bowl matchup was set, Bohl had dodged questions about the Cowboys’ running back situation. He knew Titus Swen, a 1,000-yard rusher, had been dismissed from the team. Bohl also knew one of Swen’s backups, Joey Braasch, had entered the transfer portal.


With second- and third-stringers Dawaiia McNeely and D.Q. James unavailable because of injuries, Wyoming listed its running backs as “TBA” on the official pregame depth chart. Vaughn — a redshirt freshman from Manvel, Texas — got the start and the bulk of the work. He carried 16 times for 67 yards and two scores.


Vaughn’s backup was Sam Scott — a redshirt-freshman linebacker. Scott normally wears No. 32; he donned a No. 22 jersey for this special assignment.


The Cowboys’ early lead was short-lived, in large part because of a poor decision by cornerback Kolbey Taylor. Wyoming was set to get the ball back after an overthrown Ohio pass on third-and-11. But Taylor lowered his head and made helmet-to-helmet contact with receiver Sam Wiglusz, drawing a targeting foul and a disqualification.


"I'm going to be real guarded on the targeting,” Bohl said. “As coaches, we have pushed to have that rule adjusted to have ‘targeting 1’ and ‘targeting 2.’ … We have taken the play that is the big headhunting play out of the game. We’ve coached that out of the game.


“When you have a young man who loses basically a whole game on a play that is viewed as targeting, that is nowhere connected to a malicious hit, this is why as coaches we say that there needs to be some balance."


On the next play, Harris connected with Jacoby Jones for a 34-yard touchdown. The Bobcats pulled off a fake PAT for a 2-point conversion that gave them an 8-7 lead.


Wiglusz — a transfer from Ohio State who led Ohio in receiving this season — was involved in the next scoring sequence as well. He muffed Clayton Stewart’s punt, which Cole DeMarzo recovered at the Bobcats’ 17-yard line. On the next play, Peasley threw a strike to Welch for a touchdown to give Wyoming a 14-8 lead.


The second quarter was a slog. The teams combined to complete only 3 of 13 passes for 31 yards. An exchange of field goals — including a 53-yarder by Hoyland — left the Cowboys with a 17-11 advantage at halftime.


The third quarter featured much of the same — until Bangura burst through a hole for a 40-yard gain to the Wyoming 3. He scored on the next play to put Ohio up 18-17.


Vakos’ 45-yard field goal made it 21-17 with 4:17 remaining.

Notre Dame: 2022 Gator Bowl Champions


 

Tyler Buchner fit a season’s worth of highlights and drama into his only start since week 2. Seven times the sophomore quarterback made a decision that directly led to a touchdown, though two of those were interception returns to the end zone for No. 19 South Carolina (8-5).


Yet he led No. 21 Notre Dame (9-4) to a comeback win in the Gator Bowl, bouncing back from each of his mistakes with better decisions. Buchner finished the day with five total touchdowns, not counting those pick-sixes, to carry the Irish to a 45-38 win in a chaotic showing.


His third touchdown pass of the day came on the drive immediately after a red-zone interception allowed the Gamecocks to tie the game at 38 late in the fourth quarter. Notre Dame had run the ball into the red zone with ease when Buchner never identified a defender on the goal line, gifting O’Donnell Fortune a 100-yard interception return touchdown.


The Irish did it all over again on the next drive and offensive coordinator Tommy Rees once again called a passing play in the red zone despite the efficient rushing. Buchner connected with sophomore tight end Mitchell Evans for the game-winning score.


He missed Notre Dame’s last 10 regular-season games after suffering a shoulder sprain in week two, but Buchner never looked worried about contact on Friday. He converted an early third-and-short on a quarterback sneak, leading with his injured shoulder, and then on the same drive took a quarterback draw 15 yards to put the Irish on the scoreboard.


His shoulder never bothered him, but his accuracy still somewhat lacked, as it did early in the season, as well. Worse yet, Buchner made three woefully poor decisions resulting in those Gamecocks’ defensive touchdowns. An impromptu shovel pass became an interception; a short, deflected pass resulted in a pick-six; and missing Fortune cost Notre Dame a ripe scoring chance in the red zone.


Buchner finished with 274 yards on 18-of-33 passing, throwing three touchdowns along with those three interceptions. He added 82 yards and two more scores on 10 rushes, sacks adjusted.


SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter

11:48 — South Carolina touchdown. Xavier Legette 13-yard pass from Spencer Rattler. Mitch Jeter PAT good. South Carolina 7, Notre Dame 0. (10 plays, 75 yards, 3:12)

5:54 — Notre Dame touchdown. Tyler Buchner 15-yard rush. Blake Grupe PAT good. South Carolina 7, Notre Dame 7. (10 plays, 50 yards, 3:37)

2:27 — South Carolina touchdown. Hunter Rogers 23-yard pass from Kai Kroeger. Jeter PAT good. South Carolina 14, Notre Dame 7. (10 plays, 75 yards, 3:27)

0:44 — South Carolina touchdown. DQ Smith 47-yard interception return. Jeter PAT good. South Carolina 21, Notre Dame 7.


Second Quarter

8:36 — Notre Dame field goal. Grupe 37 yards. South Carolina 21, Notre Dame 10. (12 plays, 56 yards, 7:08)

5:18 — South Carolina field goal. Jeter 45 yards. South Carolina 24, Notre Dame 10. (10 plays, 48 yards, 3:18)

5:06 — Notre Dame touchdown. Logan Diggs 75-yard pass from Buchner. Grupe PAT good. South Carolina 24, Notre Dame 17.  (1 play, 75 yards, 0:12)


Third Quarter

10:28 — Notre Dame touchdown. Buchner 11-yard rush. Grupe PAT good. South Carolina 24, Notre Dame 24. (5 plays, 68 yards, 2:21)

8:31 — South Carolina touchdown. Legette 42-yard pass from Rattler. Jeter PAT good. South Carolina 31, Notre Dame 24. (5 plays, 67 yards, 1:48)

0:31 — Notre Dame touchdown. Braden Lenzy 44-yard pass from Buchner. Grupe PAT good. South Carolina 31, Notre Dame 31. (1 play, 44 yards, 0:08)


Fourth Quarter

12:41 — Notre Dame touchdown. Logan Diggs 39-yard rush. Grupe PAT good. Notre Dame 38, South Carolina 31. (7 plays, 73 yards, 2:13)

7:42 — South Carolina touchdown. O’Donnell Fortune 100-yard interception return. Jeter PAT good. Notre Dame 38, South Carolina 38.

1:38 — Notre Dame touchdown. Mitchell Evans 16-yard pass from Buchner. Grupe PAT good. Notre Dame 45, South Carolina 38. (12 plays, 80 yards, 6:01)

Pittsburgh: 2022 Sun Bowl Champions



EL PASO, Texas (KTSM) – Rodney Hammond Jr. rushed for 96 yards and two touchdowns, Pitt’s defense forced four turnovers, while Ben Sauls kicked a 47-yard game-winning field goal, as the Panthers (9-4) overcame a 14-point deficit in the second half to beat UCLA (9-4) 37-35 on Friday in the 89th Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl at Sun Bowl Stadium.

Pitt was short-handed with several starters opting out of the Sun Bowl to prepare for the 2023 NFL Draft. Nick Patti, playing for Kedon Slovis who transferred to BYU, saw the majority of the snaps at quarterback for Pitt, throwing for 224 yards and a touchdown.


Bub Means hauled in four receptions for 84 yards and a touchdown, while the Panther’s defense came away with four takeaways, including interceptions by Bangally Kamara, Javon McIntyre, and Tylar Wiltz.


Playing in his final collegiate game at UCLA, Dorian Thompson-Robinson completed 15 of his 23 passes for 270 yards and three total touchdowns (2 pass, 1 rush), but threw three costly interceptions before being pulled from the game by head coach Chip Kelly in the fourth quarter.


TJ Harden paced the Bruins with 111 yards and a go-ahead touchdown on the ground late in the fourth quarter, while Kam Brown hauled in four receptions for 115 yards.


Early in the third quarter, Patti threw an interception that was returned 52 yards for a touchdown by Jaylin Davies that put UCLA up 28-14. It was all Panthers from there. Pitt responded on their next possession with a blue collar, 11-play, 75-yard touchdown drive, capped off by a 1-yard touchdown run by Hammond Jr. to make it a 7-point game heading into the fourth quarter.


Following Thompson-Robinson’s third interception of the game, Hammond Jr. punched in a 7-yard touchdown run to tie the game at 28-28 in the fourth quarter.


The Bruins would then cough up the football for their fourth turnover of the game on the ensuing kickoff, leading to a 31-yard field goal by Sauls to put the Panthers up 31-28 with 10:38 to play. Sauls would add another chip shot field goal late in the fourth quarter to put Pitt up 34-28 with 4:24 to play.


Ethan Garbers, in relief of Thompson-Robinson, would then engineer a 8-play, 70-yard touchdown drive, which was capped off by an 8-yard touchdown run from Harden with just 0:30 seconds to play. With their backs against the wall, Patti got the Panthers into field goal range in six plays, leading to the game-winning field goal from Sauls.


Under head coach Pat Narduzzi, Pitt ends their 2022 campaign at 9-4, while UCLA also finishes the season 9-4 under Kelly.

Maryland: 2022 Duke's Mayo Bowl Champions



CHARLOTTE, NC -- Maryland came out on top in a defensive battle in Bank of America Stadium on Friday afternoon, besting No. 23 NC State 16-12 to win the Duke's Mayo Bowl. The Terps won bowl games in back-to-back seasons for the first time since winning the Peach Bowl after the 2002 season and Gator Bowl following the 2003 season. 


Neither team had much luck finding the end zone as both defenses shined and the teams combined for seven field goal makes. The Terps notched the lone touchdown of the day as Octavian Smith Jr. made a terrific leaping catch in the corner of the end zone — a 19-yard score that proved to be the difference in the game. 


The Wolfpack got the ball down 16-12 with 2:34 remaining, but, as they did all game, the Maryland defense came up big when needed as Jakorian Bennett, playing in his final game as a Terp, ripped the ball away from a NC State receiver to secure an interception and the victory. Bennett was named the game's MVP. 


Kicker Chad Ryland connected on three field goals, coming from 45, 42 and 33 yards. It was the seventh time in his career he made three or more field goals in a game. 


After his 221-yard day on 19-of-37, quarterback Taulia Tagovailoa now holds every major passing record in Maryland football history as he set the school record for total touchdowns (59) and passing completions (665) in a career. 


Tai Felton posted career-highs in receptions (four) and receiving yards (69). Jeshaun Jones had four catches for 79 yards while Smith Jr. snagged three balls and totaled 34 yards. Corey Dyches capped off his impressive season with a four-catch, 45-receiving yard day. 


The Terps' defense was stout, limiting NC State to 296 overall yards, and just 27 rushing yards. The Wolfpack had just 93 yards in the second half. Maryland held the Wolfpack to just 5-of-18 on third-down conversions. Beau Brade led the Terps with seven tackles. 


NC State was only able to muster four field goals. The last time the Terps held an opponent without a touchdown in a bowl game was the 2002 Peach Bowl, when Maryland beat Tennessee, 30-3. 


The win brought the Terps to an 8-5 final record, marking the first time Maryland won eight games in a season since 2010. The Wolfpack also finished 8-5. 


Breaking Down The Action

Billy Edwards Jr. led the Terps down the field on the game's opening drive, but the Wolfpack came up with a goal-line stand on fourth down. The Maryland defense came up with a strong response as Fa'Najae Gotay came up with his first-career interception on a deflected ball to give the Terps the ball back at the NC State 23-yard line. 

NC State got on the board first with a 38-yard field goal after a Tagovailoa interception in the end zone. 

The Terps tied it up on the ensuing drive as Chad Ryland, playing in his final game as a Terp, connected on a 42-yarder. The drive was keyed by a 41-yard kickoff return from Octavian Smith Jr., followed by a Tagovailoa scramble for 25 yards. 

Maryland took a 10-3 lead with 8:07 remaining in the half as Octavian Smith Jr. came up with a beautiful grab on a fade route in the back corner of the end zone. 

On the ensuing drive, the Wolfpack drove down the field, but the Terps forced three consecutive incompletions from the two yard line to hold them to a field goal. NC State added a second field goal just before halftime as the Terps went into the locker room up 10-9. 

A 33-yard field goal from Ryland was the only scoring in the third quarter and Maryland led 13-9 entering the final 15 minutes of play. 

The Wolfpack added a field goal to cut the deficit to one, but Maryland responded with a long drive resulting in another kick through the uprights for Ryland, pushing it back to a 16-12 lead that would hold for the rest of the game. 

Taulia The Record Setter

Coming into today's game, Tagovailoa needed just five completions and one touchdown to officially hold every major passing record in Maryland history. 

With a 26-yard completion to Tai Felton in the second quarter, he broke the school record for completions (surpassing Scott Milanovich's former mark of 650 completions). 

He set the total touchdown record midway through the second quarter when he connected with Octavian Smith Jr. for a 19-yard touchdown, giving him 59 overall.

Now, Tagovailoa stands as the Terps all-time leader in passing yards (7,879), passing touchdowns (51), total touchdowns (59), completion percentage (68%), , total offense (8,067) and completions (670).

Single-season wise, Tagovailoa went over 3,000 passing yards in the season on a 30-yard completion to Corey Dyches. He's the first Terp to have two seasons of 3,000 or more yards with 3,860 last season. 

You Can't Spell Maryland without Ryland

Kicker Chad Ryland, the top NFL Draft kicking prospect, connected on three field goals for the second time in as many games and seventh time in his career. The first five came during his time at Eastern Michigan. 

He finished his lone season as a Terrapin making 19-of-23.

He made his last 10 field goals in a row. 

Terps' Bowl History

The Duke's Mayo Bowl is Maryland's 29th bowl appearance all-time as the Terps are now 13-14-2 in bowl games.

This was the Terps' second consecutive bowl win, with the previous one coming last season when Maryland defeated Virginia Tech 54-10 in the New Era Pinstripe Bowl behind 481 yards of total offense. It marked the first time the Terps won back-to-back bowl games since 2002-03. Maryland won the 2002 Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl 30-3 over Tennessee on Dec. 31, 2002 and the 2004 Toyota Gator Bowl, 41-7 over West Virginia on Jan. 1, 2004. 

The Duke's Mayo Bowl marked the third-straight bowl game against an ACC team (2016, Boston College).

Series History

Coming into the game, the series between the Terps and the Wolfpack was deadlocked at 33 wins apiece with four ties. 

Now, the Terps hold a 34-33-4 advantage through 71 total meetings. The 71 matchups are the most previous meetings in any bowl matchup since the 2016 Poinsettia Bowl between Wyoming and BYU (77).

Beating Ranked Teams

In beating No. 23 NC State, the Terps won their first game over a ranked team since beating No. 21 Syracuse, 63-20, on Sept. 7, 2019. 

Non-Conference Coasting

The Terps are now 10-1 in non-conference games under Locksley and have won seven straight non-conference games. 

Streaks Extended

Spencer Anderson started on the offensive line in his final game as a Terp, bringing his consecutive number of starts to 31. 

The safety duo of Beau Brade and Dante Trader Jr. started all 13 games this season. 

Corey Dyches extended his number of consecutive games with a catch to 14.

The Terps have won the past 19 games where they've led after the third quarter. 

Notes and Nuggets

The Terps used two quarterbacks in the game with Billy Edwards Jr., drawing the start, his third of the season. Edwards also started against Northwestern (Oct. 22) and Wisconsin (Nov. 5) this season, his first with the Terps. 

Edwards' 45-yard pass to Jones, on the first reception of the game, was the 16th Maryland offensive play of more than 40 yards this season. 

Jakorian Bennett had his second interception of the season and fifth of his career. He now 28 pass break-ups over the last two seasons, the most in FBS. 

Smith Jr.'s touchdown in the second quarter was the second of his career - with both coming in Charlotte as he also scored for the first time in the Terps' game at Charlotte on Sept. 10. 

Gotay had the first interception of his career, playing in his 29th career game. 

Colton Spangler tied his career-long with a 63-yard punt and had his 13th punt of 50 yards or longer with a boomer in the third quarter. 

Joseph Bearns and Smith Jr. both made their first career starts.

The seven combined field goals from both sides set the Duke's Mayo Bowl record for most in a game. 

Several players donned new numbers for the game, Corey Coley Jr., wore No. 3; Shaleak Knotts wore No. 5 and Tai Felton in No. 7. 

Washington: 2022 Alamo Bowl Champions



No. 12 Washington knocked off No. 20 Texas 27-20 in the Alamo Bowl to get its first 11-win season since 2016.


The Huskies weren’t troubled by the Longhorns for much of the game. UW took a 17-point lead early in the fourth quarter thanks to a TD pass from Michael Penix Jr. to Jalen McMillan. Texas cut the lead to seven with 1:40 to go, and got the ball back with a chance for a potential game-winning TD and two-point conversion with 31 seconds left. But the last-ditch drive with no timeouts remaining didn't get a first down.


The win means Washington finishes the season at 11-2 in Kalen DeBoer’s first season as head coach. Washington fired Jimmy Lake nine games into a tumultuous 2021 season and finished the season at 4-8. It hired DeBoer from Fresno State and the former Indiana offensive coordinator quickly landed the former Indiana QB Penix as a transfer.


That move paid off as Penix was one of the nation’s most productive passers in 2022 and the Huskies won seven more games than they did a season ago. Washington made one of the biggest improvements of any team at the top level of college football in 2022 and is well-positioned to be a contender in the Pac-12 again next season.


Penix will be back in 2023 as the Pac-12 will boast one of the strongest quarterback groups in college football. Heisman winner Caleb Williams is returning for USC while Oregon’s Bo Nix is coming back along with Washington State’s Cam Ward. Oregon State landed Clemson QB D.J. Uiagalelei, former Notre Dame QB Drew Pyne is transferring to Arizona State and Kent State QB Collin Schlee is transferring to UCLA.


Texas, meanwhile, finishes the season 8-5. The Longhorns entered the game without running backs Bijan Robinson and Roschon Johnson among other transfers and NFL draft opt outs. That allowed players like freshman Jonathan Brooks to get playing time and Brooks scored two TDs.


The Alamo Bowl might have also been the last game of the pre-Arch Manning era at Texas. QB Quinn Ewers didn’t have a terrible game by any means — his stats would look a lot better if it wasn’t for drops on back-to-back plays in the third quarter by star receiver Xavier Worthy — but the Longhorns will have the highest-profile QB competition in college football over the spring and summer thanks to Manning’s presence.


Manning signed with Texas earlier in December and plans to be an early enrollee. That will allow him to practice this spring and potentially get the chance to start as a true freshman. Or if Ewers plays well like he has flashed at times in 2022, it’s very possible that he could keep the starting job for his second season with the Longhorns.

Florida State: 2022 Cheez-It Bowl Champions



Ryan Fitzpatrick hit a 33-yard field goal with just 55 seconds left to give 13th-ranked Florida State a 35-32 win over Oklahoma in the 2022 Cheez-It Bowl in Orlando, Fla. Thursday night.


In a game full of big plays on both sides of the ball, the Seminoles churned out 587 yards of total offense and recorded six quarterback sacks and 11 tackles for loss in the win that secured a 10-win season and continues the national narrative of FSU as one of the hottest programs in the country.


Game Most Valuable Player Jordan Travis was 27-of-38 passing for 418 yards and a pair of touchdowns.  He completed two or more passes to six different receivers with Johnny Wilson having a great night with eight receptions for 202 yards.  Treshaun Ward led all FSU rushers with 81 yards on 10 carries, and Travis had 50 on the ground.


Oklahoma had a pair of running backs go for over 100 yards each and quarterback Dillon Gabriel was 14-of-24 through the air with one touchdown.


Florida State opened the game with an impressive75 yard, 13-play drive and took a 3-0 lead when Fitzgerald’s 22-yard field goal split the uprights with 11:26 left in the first quarter.


Oklahoma scored on the ensuing drive when Dillon Gabriel’s pass found Jalil Farooq in the end zone from 22 yards out to give the Sooners a 7-3 lead at the 7:01 mark of the initial stanza.


The Seminole defense came up big later in the first quarter when the offense failed to convert on fourth down and Oklahoma took over at the Seminoles’ 43-yard line.  But Oklahoma’s three plays lost yards back to their 48-yard line and they were forced to punt.


The Sooners’ offense had a short field once again late in the first quarter setting up at FSU’s 49-yard line.  Eight plays later, Gabriel scored from eight yards out on a quarterback keeper around the right end to make it 14-3 OU with 14:31 left before the half.


A second fourth down conversion attempt by Florida State failed setting Oklahoma up at their own 43-yard line with 11:39 left.  After a 28-yard pass got the Sooners down to the 16, FSU’s defense stuffed the Sooner attack and forced a 28-yard field goal attempt that sailed wide left.


The defensive stand ignited the FSU sideline and the offense ripped off big chunks of yardage on its next drive with Travis hitting Ontaria Wilson with a perfectly placed 16-yard touchdown pass in the corner of the end zone.  The Seminoles went for two with Jordan hitting reserve tight end Brian Courtney for the conversion and a 14-11 score with 7:18 left in the half.  The drive covered 56 yards on six plays with the biggest plays being a pair of passes to Johnny Wilson of 14 and 23 yards.


Oklahoma drove 65 yards on 7 plays on their final possession of the half extending their lead to 17-11 on a 41-yard field goal with 15 seconds left, which held up when Fitzgerald tried a 54-yard field on the last play that fell short.


Travis completed 10-of-14 passes for 170 yards and one TD in the first half.  He also led the Seminoles in rushing with 34 yards on five carries.  Johnny Wilson had 110 receiving yards on seven catches for his third 100-yard game of the season.


Oklahoma’s Dillon Gabriel was 7-of-13 through the air for 110 yards and one TD.  Jovantee Barnes had 70 yards on 15 carries to lead the Sooners in rushing over the first half.


Florida State had a great start to the second half taking its first lead since its first possession in the game on a masterful 94-yard drive on its initial drive of the second half.  The Seminoles used 15 plays and nearly five minutes to take the 18-17 lead when Ward took the snap in the wildcat formation and plunged in from the one.


The Sooners, who were shutout during the third quarter, went up 25-18 with 13:22 left in the game on a Gavin Sawchuck touchdown run up the middle and a successful two-point conversion.


FSU bounced right back on its next drive capping a 75-yard scoring drive with a 38-yard touchdown run by Ward that tied the score at 25-25 with 11:05 left.


The Seminole defense came up with a huge play on Oklahoma’s next possession when Omarion Cooper’s hit on Sawchuck knocked the ball out and Jammie Robinson recovered it at the FSU 36.  Six plays later, Travis hit tight end Markeston Douglas with a 17-yard touchdown pass to put FSU up 32-25 with 7:22 left.


Oklahoma tied the score at 32-32 with 3:37 left on a 12-yard Jovantae Brown run that capped a nine-play, 75 yard drive, before FSU used up most of the clock to kick the game winner.

Minnesota: 2022 Pinstripe Bowl Champions



Tanner Morgan came off the bench to throw a pair of touchdowns in his final game.


NEW YORK (AP) — Mohamed Ibrahim rushed for 71 yards on 16 carries with a touchdown and became Minnesota's all-time rushing leader in the Golden Gophers' 28-20 win over Syracuse in the Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium on Thursday.


Ibrahim, who missed virtually all of last year with a ruptured Achilles, closed out a solid career in dramatic fashion. After getting injured in the 2021 season opener against Penn State, Ibrahim returned for a sixth season and finished his career with 4,668 yards and 53 rushing touchdowns in 40 games since joining the Golden Gophers as a two-star recruit from Baltimore.


Ibrahim broke the school record held by Darrell Thompson (4,654 yards from 1986-89) on a 10-yard gain with about 2 1/2 minutes left in the first half. Before breaking the record, Ibrahim scored a gritty 4-yard run with 13:39 remaining in the half before sitting out the final periods. The TD gave him 20 and moved him past Gary Russell (19 in 2005) for the most single-season TDs in school history.



Trey Potts replaced Ibrahim in the backfield and had 27 yards on 10 carries. Daniel Jackson hauled in a pair of TD passes — a 20-yard reception in the second and a 25-yard grab in the final minute of the third.


Athan Kaliakmanis started at QB for Minnesota (9-4) and completed 7 of 9 passes for 80 yards before being helped off the field with an injury. Tanner Morgan made his first appearance since Nov. 5 and completed 4 of 7 passes for 58 yards.


Syracuse (7-6) ended what was a promising season on a down note, playing without star running back Sean Tucker, who declared for the NFL draft on Dec. 17. Syracuse's offense totaled 477 yards, but struggled at times as the Orange lost six of their final seven games after a 6-0 start elevated them to No. 14 in The Associated Press Top 25 Poll.


LeQuint Allen replaced Tucker and finished with 103 yards on 16 carries.


Garret Shrader faced constant pressure and completed 32 of 51 passes for 329 yards. He ran for both of Syracuse's TDs, and also overthrew receivers at times.


Ibrahim opened the scoring and nearly took a tackler with him up the middle with 13:39 left in the second quarter for a 7-0 lead. After Kaliakmanis was injured, Jackson made a leaping catch in the right corner of the end zone seven minutes later.


Shrader's run moved Syracuse within 14-7 by halftime, and a 40-yard field goal by Andre Szmyt made it 14-10 early in the third. The Golden Gophers took a 21-10 lead when Coleman Bryson stepped in front of a pass intended for Oronde Gadsden II and returned the interception 70 yards.


Jackson's second TD put Minnesota up 28-13 with 38 seconds left in the third. Syracuse caught a break when Allen lost a fumble, but it was negated due to Minnesota having 12 men on the field. Shrader scrambled from eight yards out with 2 1/2 minutes remaining.


UP NEXT


Syracuse: The replacement for Tucker will become a major storyline ahead of the season opener against Colgate on Sept. 2.


Minnesota: Whoever Ibrahim's successor is in the backfield will open the season Aug. 31 against Nebraska. The Gophers also will face powerhouses Michigan and Ohio State in the same season for the first time since 2015.

BoBA ISML 2022 Predictions: Amethyst Match Day 5

 

ARENA 1 Violet Evergarden [[Izumi Sagiri]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 2 [[Emilia]] Kitagawa Marin

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 3 [[Aisaka Taiga]] Index L. Prohibitorum

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 4 [[Takanashi Rikka]] Tokisaki Kurumi

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 5 Shinomiya Kaguya [[Inoue Takina]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 6 [[Shiro]] Haibara Ai

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 7 Akiyama Mio [[Elaina]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 8 Nishimiya Shōko [[Hirasawa Yui]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 9 [[Kasugano Sora]] Kanna Kamui

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 10 [[Nakano Miku]] Rem

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 11 [[Shiina Mashiro]] Yuigahama Yui

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 12 [[Yūki Asuna]] Tachibana Kanade

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 13 [[Yukinoshita Yukino]] Tomori Nao

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 14 [[Nakano Nino]] Shirai Kuroko

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 15 Kasumigaoka Utaha [[Miyamizu Mitsuha]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 16 [[Misaka Mikoto]] Chitanda Eru

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 17 [[Fujiwara Chika]] Kitashirakawa Tamako

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 18 [[Yuzaki Tsukasa]] Nakano Azusa

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 19 [[Sakurajima Mai]] Nishikigi Chisato

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 20 Isla [[Katō Megumi]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 21 Tainaka Ritsu [[Zero Two]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 5000
Over

ARENA 22 [[Hikigaya Hachiman]] Otosaka Yū

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 23 Kuroba Kaito [[Levi]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 24 [[Ōji Mochizō]] Yuzaki Nasa

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 25 [[Oreki Hōtarō]] Edogawa Conan

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 26 Loid Forger [[Ishigami Yū]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 27 Emiya Shirō [[Itsuka Shidō]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 28 Togashi Yūta [[Natsuki Subaru]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 29 [[Uchiha Itachi]] Ajiro Shinpei

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 30 [[Totsuka Saika]] Dio Brando

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 31 Tachibana Taki [[Accelerator]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 32 [[Rimuru Tempest]] Kamado Tanjirō

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 33 Kaneki Ken [[Kanda Sorata]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 34 Sora [[Kirigaya Kazuto]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 35 Natsume Takashi [[Shirogane Miyuki]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 36 Izumi Masamune [[Uesugi Fūtarō]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 37 Azusagawa Sakuta [[Kamijō Tōma]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 38 Kūjō Jōtarō [[Okazaki Tomoya]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 39 [[Rengoku Kyōjurō]] Kasugano Haruka

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 40 [[Ayanokōji Kiyotaka]] Miyamura Izumi

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 41 Gojō Satoru [[Riku Dola]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 42 Ainz Ooal Gown [[Arima Kōsei]]

by >=700
Over/Under: 6000
Under

ARENA 43 [[Kamado Nezuko]] Matō Sakura

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 44 [[Silence Suzuka]] Iwanaga Kotoko

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 45 Amuro Tōru [[Illyasviel von Einzbern]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 46 [[Takagi]] Inumaki Toge

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 47 [[Special Week]] Miyauchi Renge

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 48 Chiyoda Momo [[Ninym Ralei]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 49 [[Kobayashi]] Yoshida Yūko

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 50 [[Eris Boreas Greyrat]] Inui Sajuna

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 51 Gojō Wakana [[Kyaru]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 52 Tsukimi Eiko [[Hayasaka Ai]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 53 [[Iino Miko]] Yatogami Tōka

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 54 Zhuge Kongming [[Zhong Lanzhu]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 55 [[Yoshino]] Mōri Kogorō

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 56 Shikimori [[Sakagami Tomoyo]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 57 [[Filo]] Komi Shōko

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 58 Kofune Mio [[Kofune Ushio]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 59 [[Okazaki Ushio]] Ibuki Fūko

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 60 [[Aharen Reina]] Serena

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 61 [[Kurumi]] Shalltear Bloodfallen

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 62 [[Sakurasawa Sumi]] Sarashina Ruka

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 63 Son Goku [[Hyūga Hinata]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 64 [[Karuizawa Kei]] Yugiri Ayano

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 65 Albedo [[Irido Yume]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 66 Minakata Hizuru [[Kūjō Jolyne]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 67 Shima Rin [[Horikita Suzune]]

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 68 [[Kisara]] Lucy

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

ARENA 69 [[Nanakusa Nazuna]] David Martinez

by <=2000
Over/Under: 4900
Over

===

GENSHIN IMPACT TOURNAMENT QUARTERFINALS 2

ARENA 70 [[Raiden Shogun]] Keqing

by >=1500
Over/Under: 4269
Over

ARENA 71 Zhongli [[Kamisato Ayaka]]

by <=1500
Over/Under: 6942
Under

===

ARENA 72 Kate Mirror [[Hagakure Tōru]]

by >=300
Over/Under: 6996
Under

Voter Id: 727fd4e0-a2c0-57de-8088-92e10dcb86a0

Texas Tech: 2022 Texas Bowl Champions



The Texas Tech Red Raiders beat the Ole Miss Rebels in Wednesday night's TaxAct Texas Bowl in Houston 42-25 to improve to 2-1 all-time in Texas Bowl play.


It's Tech's third visit to the Texas Bowl, after having appeared in 2012 and 2015. The Red Raiders are 1-1 in previous Texas Bowl games played.


Tech poured on both defense and offense in the first half, holding a 26-7 lead behind two rushing touchdowns and a passing touchdown from quarterback Tyler Shough. Kicker Trey Wolf added two field goals.


The defense was part of the story in the first half too, with three total turnovers in the first half, forcing two interceptions from Ole Miss quarterback Jaxson Dart.


The Rebels got back on the board early in the second half with a touchdown pass from Dart to Jordan Watkins that narrowed the Tech lead to 26-13 after a failed two-point conversion by Ole Miss.


Tech tried to answer on the next possession but Wolff missed from 41 yards on his third field goal attempt. Then after holding Ole Miss immediately afterward, Shough was strip-sacked as the Rebels turned up the heat defensively. Ole Miss got the ball at mid-field with a chance to make it a close game.


But the Tech defense held again as Ole Miss failed to convert on another fourth-down attempt. Ole Miss finished the night 1-for-6 on fourth-down attempts and just 2-of-9 on third down.


The Rebels made a game of it late with a 19-yard touchdown from Dart to Heath that made it a 10-point game at 35-25 and attempted an onside kick. The kick was fielded cleanly by Loic Fouonji and returned for a touchdown and a 42-25 Tech lead.


Credit Ole Miss for not giving up and playing hard through the final whistle. The Rebels moved the ball downfield with under a minute left but Dart was intercepted in the end zone by Tyler Owens with 39 seconds left and coach Joey McGuire and the Red Raiders began to celebrate.


Shough was named the Player of the Game. He completed 24-of-29 passes for 242 yards, a touchdown and an interception, and also carried the ball 25 times for 111 yards and two touchdowns.