LOS ANGELES (AP) — Tyler Warren caught 17 passes to tie the FBS single-game record for tight ends, Ryan Barker hit a 36-yard field goal in overtime and No. 4 Penn State rallied from a 14-point deficit in the second half for a 33-30 victory over USC Football on Saturday.
Drew Allar passed for a career-high 391 yards and two touchdowns despite three interceptions for Penn State (6-0, 3-0 Big Ten), which didn’t lead in the final 49 minutes of regulation. The Nittany Lions came back three times to tie it in the final 20 minutes, including Nicholas Singleton’s 14-yard TD reception with 2:53 left.
Quinten Joyner scored two early TDs for the Trojans (3-3, 1-3), who have lost three of four. USC hasn’t beaten a top-five team since the Trojans held off No. 5 Penn State in a 52-49 thriller of a Rose Bowl in January 2017.
Warren racked up 224 yards and a touchdown, although his only catch after the third quarter was a 3-yarder in overtime. The senior set a record for the most receptions by an opponent in USC’s 137-year football history.
The Nittany Lions started slowly on their long road trip, but finished impressively. After going up 3-0 on its first drive, Penn State didn’t lead again in regulation and trailed 20-6 at halftime before its offense got moving.
USC’s Kyron Hudson caught a go-ahead touchdown pass from Miller Moss with 5:56 left, but Allar converted two fourth downs with desperate passes for Penn State before Singleton was left all alone for his tying catch.
USC drove to midfield in the final seconds, but Lincoln Riley curiously used no timeouts extend the Trojans’ drive before Jaylen Reed picked off Moss with 5 seconds left.
USC went 3 yards backward on its first three plays of overtime before Michael Lantz missed a 45-yard field goal attempt. Penn State advanced to the 19, and Barker buried the winner.
Moss passed for 220 yards and two scores, while Joyner rushed for a 75-yard TD in the first quarter and caught a 9-yard TD pass in the second quarter for the Trojans. Woody Marks rushed for 111 yards for USC.
Penn State had a healthy contingent of fans at the Coliseum for its first lengthy road trip in the new Big Ten and its longest trip for any regular-season game since 1991.
But USC’s defense kept Penn State out of the end zone in the first half despite playing without injured linebacker Eric Gentry, its sacks leader and second-leading tackler, and starting cornerback Jacobe Covington.
Joyner put the Trojans ahead early when he faked a reverse and rumbled 75 yards through the heart of Penn State’s defense. He added his first career TD catch moments later.
Penn State responded to its 14-point halftime deficit with Allar’s TD throw to Warren on a double pass. The Nittany Lions made a 90-yard march to tie it moments later, with Kaytron Allen taking it in.
Easton Mascarenas-Arnold’s interception led to USC’s third field goal late in the third, but Penn State tied it again with 10:50 to play after its next drive stalled at the 3.
Takeaway
Penn State: The Nittany Lions celebrated vehemently after a victory that was thrilling, but not stunning. Their slow start and rough overall defensive performance don’t bode well for Ohio State or other opponents with less inconsistency than mercurial USC.
USC: The Trojans responded impressively from last week’s loss, but still can’t finish.
Panthers tie game at 24-24 with under two minutes left to force overtime
LYNCHBURG, Va. – Sophomore quarterback Keyone Jenkins ran for a one-yard touchdown with 1:42 left in regulation to help the FIU football team erase a 14-point deficit in the fourth quarter and force overtime before coming up just short by a 31-24 margin at Liberty in extra time on Tuesday night.
Â
Liberty escaped with the victory after scoring on a nine-yard run by Kaidon Salter on its first overtime possession and then forcing and recovering a fumble on the Panthers’ possession in the extra period.
Â
The Panthers drove 61 yards in 3:44 to deadlock the score after opening the critical drive with 5:36 left and trailing 24-17. The push was keyed by a pair of catches by junior wide receiver Eric Rivers – who snagged a 23-yard catch before hauling in a crucial 17-yard gain to convert a fourth and four and set the Panthers up at the Liberty four-yard line.
Â
Jenkins followed two plays later with the one-yard scoring run to force overtime and after the FIU defense held firm on Liberty’s final possession of regulation.
Â
The Panthers trailed by a 17-10 margin entering the fourth quarter and had an opportunity to tie the game after driving deep into Liberty territory. Â FIU came away empty when the drive was halted on an unsuccessful fourth and four try from the Flames’ 18-yard line.
Â
Liberty increased its lead on the following possession on a nine-yard scoring run by Quinton Cooley that made the score 24-10 with 10:43 left in regulation.
Â
The Panthers kept coming to get within 24-17 with 6:23 left in regulation on a three-yard rushing touchdown by Kejon Owens. The drive was sparked by a 40-yard completion from Jenkins to Rivers.
Â
The Flames ground game proved to be an issue for the Panthers as Liberty totaled 281 rushing yards. Cooley paced the attack with 174 yards and two touchdowns.
Â
The FIU defense was led by junior linebacker Travion Barnes, who recorded a career-high 16 tackles, including two sacks and three TFLs. He also recovered a fumble in the loss. Barnes now has recorded double-figure stops in four of the last five games overall.
Jenkins finished 19-for-29 through the air for 245 yards. His top receiver was Rivers who hauled in five catches for 95 yards. Junior Dean Patterson snagged six receptions for a career-high 90 yards.  Liberty (5-0, 3-0 CUSA) jumped in front on a 28-yard field goal from Colin Karhu – to make the score 3-0 with 8:34 left in the first. The score was set up by a 44-yard completion from Salter to Reese Smith to get the Flames down to the FIU 18. The Panthers’ defense stiffened after that – forcing the Flames to settle for the three points.  FIU (2-4, 1-1 CUSA) answered with a 10-play, 48-yard drive on its next possession – resulting in a 31-yard field goal by Alejandro Prado which tied the score at 3-3 at 4:16 of the first. Jenkins completed three passes for 39 yards on the march, including a 24-yard completion to Patterson and a key 12-yard strike to Eric Rivers to convert a third and 10.  The Panthers scored the game’s first touchdown 10 seconds into the second quarter when Lexington Joseph burst through the middle for a gain of 17 yards before he was stripped and fumbled at the Liberty five-yard line. The miscue was recovered in the end zone for a FIU touchdown by junior wide receiver Dean Patterson to make the score 10-3.  The Flames evened the score at 10-10 with 8:15 left in the second on a 11-play, 59-yard push that saw all but four yards coming on the ground. Cooley capped the drive with a four-yard scoring run.  Liberty claimed its first lead of the contest on their final possession of the first half – once again leaning heavily on the ground game. The Flames posted 55 rushing yards on a 73-yard drive which culminated in a 20-yard TD run by Salters to make the score 17-10 with 20 ticks left before half.  The second half saw each team commit a turnover on their opening possessions. Jenkins hit Rivers with a pass that was dropped and intercepted by Liberty’s Amarian Williams.  FIU forced a critical turnover on the Flames’ ensuing drive as CJ Christian made a hit that forced a fumble deep inside FIU territory that was recovered by the Panthers’ Barnes inside the FIU one-yard line – thwarting  a Liberty scoring opportunity.  UP NEXT The Panthers conclude the two-game road swing with a clash at UTEP in El Paso’s Sun Bowl on Wednesday, Oct. 16 beginning at 9 p.m. ET.  The game will air to a national audience on CBS Sports Network.  POSTGAME NOTES
Tuesday’s game marked the first game outside of South Florida for the Panthers since the season opener on August 31 at Indiana.
Tuesday’s game was the first in a stretch of four consecutive national-televised weeknight contests for the Panthers in the month of October.
FIU made its second-ever visit to Liberty and its first since 2020.
FIU and Liberty each lost a turnover on their opening possession of the second half. Liberty fumbled inside the FIU one-yard line and it was recovered by the Panthers just shy of the goal line.
The Liberty fumble was forced by CJ Christian and recovered by Travion Barnes.
Junior linebacker Barnes finished with a career-high 16 tackles – including a career-high two sacks and three TFLs. He has recorded double-figure stops in four of the last five games overall and has led FIU in tackles in each of the last five games.
Junior wide receiver Dean Patterson caught six passes for a career-best 90 yards.
Liberty entered the game with the longest current regular-season winning streak among all FBS teams nationally at 15 games.
FIU is now 8-7 all-time in overtime games and the loss snapped a three-game win streak in extra time. Â
TICKETS
For more information on FIU Football season and individual tickets, including student ticketing, call 305-FIU-GAME or visit the FIU Athletics Online Ticket Office.
 SOCIAL MEDIA
Get all the latest information on the team by following @FIU.Football on Instagram and @FIUFootball on Twitter and Facebook.
Â
General athletic news can also be found at @FIUSports on Facebook and @FIUAthletics on Twitter and Instagram.
 2024 FIU FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
 Aug. 31
 at Indiana (Saturday)
 Big Ten Network
 L, 7-31
 Sept. 7
 CENTRAL MICHIGAN (Saturday)
 ESPN+
 W, 52-16
 Sept. 14
 at Florida Atlantic (Saturday)
 ESPN+
 L, 20-38
 Sept. 21
 MONMOUTH (Saturday)
 ESPN+
 L, 42-45
 Sept. 28
 LOUISIANA TECH* (Saturday)
 ESPN+
 W, 17-10
 Oct. 8
 at Liberty* (Tuesday)
 CBSSN
 L, 24-31 (OT)
 Oct. 16
 at UTEP* (Wednesday)
 CBSSN
 9 p.m.
 Oct. 22
 SAM HOUSTON* (Tuesday)
 ESPNU
 7:30 p.m.
 Oct. 29
 NEW MEXICO STATE* (Tuesday)
 CBSSN
 7 p.m.
 Nov. 16
 at Jacksonville State* (Saturday)
 ESPN Platforms
 2 p.m.
 Nov. 23
 at Kennesaw State* (Saturday)
 ESPN Platforms
 3 p.m.
 Nov. 30
 MIDDLE TENNESSEE* (Saturday)
 ESPN Platforms
 2 p.m.
 HOME GAMES IN BOLD CAPS                                          ALL TIMES LISTED ARE EASTERN (ET) * CONFERENCE USA GAME
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
When Colorado lined up for the final play of regulation Saturday night against Baylor, the plan called for Travis Hunter, the Buffaloes’ do-it-all star, to serve as … a decoy?
Colorado needed a Hail Mary touchdown to tie the score and figured Hunter, who had six receptions for 126 yards, would attract the most attention. Hunter would run toward the middle of the end zone, ideally creating a more favorable matchup for LaJohntay Wester, a 5-foot-11, 167-pound wideout.
“We put Travis backside, he’s going to get all the attention, and then LaJohntay’s just going to be there, outside, one-on-one,” Buffaloes quarterback Shedeur Sanders said. “They’re not going to think we’re going to throw him the ball because he’s a shorter guy, probably in that situation. So then I roll left, everybody went in the middle of the end zone and I just trusted God. I threw it up to God, and God answered the prayer, for sure.”
Sanders’ heave from the Baylor 49-yard line fell to Wester, who wedged between two Bears defenders and dove in the end zone for a touchdown. Colorado went on to win 38-31 in overtime, setting off a storming at Folsom Field and the most dramatic finish under second-year coach Deion Sanders.
The Buffaloes erased three deficits and overcame a 100-yard Baylor kick return touchdown to win their first Big 12 game since returning to the league.
“Great, great, great, great, great, great win,” Deion Sanders said. “The young men were resilient. They never gave up.”
Shedeur Sanders finished with 341 passing yards and touchdown strikes of 58 yards to Omarion Miller just before halftime and 43 yards to Wester as the fourth quarter expired. He led an overtime touchdown drive that culminated with Micah Welch’s second rushing score.
“That’s why I use the word legendary, and I post it so many times,” Shedeur Sanders said. “That’s the word that I stand by and I live by. Through all the moments, throughout everything, I know, at the end of the day, legendary, that’s what ingrained in me.”
Hunter continued to strengthen his case as a top Heisman Trophy candidate with 130 receiving yards on seven catches and the game-sealing play on defense in overtime. Baylor’s Dominic Richardson seemed headed for a sure touchdown before Hunter knocked the ball free and it scooted out of the end zone.
Colorado fans stormed the field as officials reviewed the ball, determining the ball was out before Richardson crossed the goal line.
“Shedeur told me to go out there and get the ball once [Colorado] scored, so I told him, ‘I got you,’ and I kept my word,” Hunter said. “I knew I had to tackle. You could see me putting in my mouthpiece late on the play, so I was already ready. I knew they were coming at me. They don’t think I can tackle, so I had to show them.”
On the final snap of regulation, Hunter knew he had to pull Baylor’s defenders in his direction, saying that most Hail Mary plays are 50-50 chances but that Colorado’s talented receiving corps increased the odds to 80-20.
“I saw [Sanders] rolling out, and then I saw the ball coming my way,” said Wester, who transferred to Colorado this season after a productive career at Florida Atlantic. “As a receiver, your job is to make the quarterback right, whether it’s a good ball or a bad ball. I just made a play on the ball.”
Baylor coach Dave Aranda said the defensive play call on the Hail Mary is “victory cigar,” which includes an up-and-under rush to flush the quarterback toward a contain rusher.
“We went to opposite sides,” Aranda said. “The guy that was up-and-under went away, and the guy that was contain went to the other side, so when you watch that play, you’ll watch someone come from the right and go up and under, well, that’s a shame, because he’s contain.
“I’ve never seen that, and I take full responsibility for that. I have to find a way to coach that better.”
Wester called the postgame atmosphere “a party,” as the celebration went from the field to the Buffaloes’ locker room. Deion Sanders said he regretted the field storm because it prevented him from shaking hands with Aranda, but he praised Colorado fans for their support.
“We have a fan base that’s phenomenal,” Deion Sanders said. “We have some young kids on this campus that love and breathe CU football, and I’m thankful.”
Sanders also recognized Colorado’s offensive line, which “always gets ridiculed” but helped the team record three rushing touchdowns. Baylor still recorded eight sacks, 12 tackles for loss and three quarterback hurries.
“I just want everybody to know we can run the ball, and shut up all the haters about it,” Welch said.
The Bears badly missed a field goal attempt with 2:16 left that would have given them a 10-point lead, and Shedeur Sanders and Colorado ultimately capitalized.
“It kind of threw us back to last year a little bit, didn’t it? Like that nostalgia, that’s the way stuff was starting last year,” said Deion Sanders, referring to Colorado’s 3-0 start to his tenure. “I’m like, ‘Man, I’m going gray, what you trying to do to me, fellas?’ It was a tough one. This press conference could be totally different right now, but I’m excited that we won.”
LINCOLN, Neb. –No. 24 Illinois marched into a sold-out, hostile road environment at No. 22 Nebraska and left with a win, securing a 31-24 overtime victory over the ranked Cornhuskers on Friday night.
Outscoring Nebraska 21-7 after halftime, the Orange and Blue became the first team in the nation with two AP Top 25 wins and improved to 4-0 for the first time since 2011. Illinois moved to 3-0 in overtime games under head coach Bret Bielema.
Luke Altmyer went 21-for-27 with 215 yards and four passing touchdowns, including the game-winning score to Pat Bryant in overtime. Altmyer recorded his second four-TD game of the season while completing passes to nine different receivers.
Pat Bryant tallied his third multi-touchdown performance through the first four games of the season while registering five catches for a team-most 74 yards.
Kaden Feagin amassed 12 carries for 69 yards, both of which were team-best tallies.
Defensively, Illinois totaled a season-high five sacks, including three in the overtime period to keep Nebraska out of the end zone.Â
The Illini defense forced the Cornhuskers to punt on their first possession for the first time this season, and the Orange and Blue offense quickly worked their way down the field on their first drive of the night. A 29-yard strike to Pat Bryant on third-and-short moved the chains and brought Illinois into Nebraska territory for the first time.Â
Three plays later, Altmyer found Bryant again, this time for a 27-yard touchdown to open the scoring. Needing only two minutes and six plays to march 78 yards down the field, the Illini held a 7-0 edge just over four minutes into the contest.
The home side accounted for the next 10 points as the Cornhuskers went in front for the first time late in the first quarter.
The Illini answered on their third possession of the night. An eight-play, 62-yard drive saw the visitors tie the game at 10-10 via a 26-yard field goal from David Olano.
With the Cornhuskers in Illinois territory, Torrie Cox Jr. ripped away a would-be Cornhusker touchdown with eight minutes left in the first half for his second interception of the season.Â
Nebraska went into the break with a narrow 17-10 lead after the home side scored a touchdown late in the second quarter. Six Illini receivers registered a catch in the first half, with Zakhari Franklin (three catches for 37 yards) and Pat Bryant (two catches for 56 yards) leading the way.
After both teams were forced to punt on their opening possessions of the third quarter, the Illini found more success on their second drive of the second half. Illinois took advantage of a short field following a 37-yard punt return from Hank Beatty, converting a third-and-short near midfield and a fourth-and-1 inside the Cornhusker 40-yard line. Once in the red zone, the away side used back-to-back completions to Tanner Arkin to find the end zone and tie the game at 17-17 with under two minutes remaining in the third quarter.Â
Nebraska retook the lead on the first play of the final frame, but Illinois responded right away. The Illini leaned on Feagin early, with the sophomore running back recording two runs of at least 10 yards to move the Orange and Blue into Cornhusker territory. With Illinois facing a fourth-and-2 inside the Nebraska 7-yard line, Altmyer tallied his third passing touchdown of the game, finding lineman-turned-tight end Brandon Henderson for a 6-yard score with 10:36 to play.Â
Neither team could break the tie in regulation, sending the game to overtime with the score knotted at 24-24. Â
The Illini, on offense to begin the extra period, needed only two plays to find the end zone. Feagin began the possession with a 21-yard rush that moved Illinois inside the 5-yard line before Altmyer found Pat Bryant to give the visitors a 31-24 advantage.
The Orange and Blue defense registered sacks on the first two plays of the overtime period, pushing Nebraska back to a third-and-42 situation while needing to score a touchown to extend the game. With the Illini applying pressure on the quarterback on all four plays of the Cornhuskers’ possession, Illinois closed out the ranked road overtime win to move to 4-0 on the season.Â
No. 24 Illinois (4-0, 1-0 B1G) remains on the road next week, traveling to take on No. 10 Penn State on Sept. 28 under the lights at either 6 p.m. or 6:30 p.m. CT. Broadcast information has yet to be announced.
HIGHLIGHTS
PRESS CONFERENCE
POSTGAME NOTES
Team Notes
Illinois has started a season 4-0 for the first time since 2011.
Is just the second 4-0 start since 1951.
Illinois is the only team in the nation with two AP Top 25 wins this season.
Illinois has two AP Top 25 wins during September for the first time in program history.
Illinois has two AP Top 25 wins in a single season for the first time since 2007, when the Illini beat three AP ranked teams.
Illinois picked up its first ranked win as a ranked team since #12 Illinois defeated #25 Ohio State on Nov. 17, 2001.
Bret Bielema is 8-6 in Big Ten road games as head coach at Illinois.Â
Bielema’s eight Big Ten road wins are the fourth-most ever by an Illinois head coach in his first four seasons, behind only Mike White (11, 1980-83), Lou Tepper (10, 1992-95), and John Mackovic (10, 1988-91).
Bielema is 4-5 (.444) against ranked teams (AP/Coaches/CFP) as Illinois’ head coach. His .444 winning percentage against ranked teams is the second-best in Illinois history, behind only John Mackovic (8-8, .500, 1988-91).Â
Bielema’s four ranked wins (AP/Coaches/CFP) during his first four seasons are tied for the third-most in program history, behind only John Mackovic (8, 1988-91) and Mike White (5, 1980-83).
Bielema tied the program record for road ranked wins (AP/Coaches/CFP) during his first four seasons. He is the second coach in Illinois history to win three ranked games on the road during his first three seasons, joining Lou Tepper (1992-96).
Bret Bielema is now 3-0 in overtime games as Illinois head coach.
Is 2-0 vs. ranked opponents on the road in overtime.
Bret Bielema has improved to 22-19 in his Illinois career with tonight’s win.
He is the first head coach in program history to start .500 or better through their first 41 games since Lou Tepper started 21-19-1 from 1992-95.
Since 1942, Illinois has compiled an 82-50-2 (.619) record when ranked in the AP Top 25.
The Illini have won three-straight games at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, extending their program-long streak.
Illinois became the first team to hold the Nebraska offense without a touchdown on its opening drive this season.
The Illini offense was the first team this season to score a touchdown on the Husker defense on their opening drive this season.
Was also the longest scoring drive Nebraska has allowed this campaign.
The Illinois defense has recorded at least one interception in each game this season and in five-straight overall dating back to 2023.
Player Notes
Luke Altmyer completed 21 of his 27 passes for 215 yards and four touchdowns.
Matches his career high with four touchdown passes.
Also did so on Aug. 29, 2024, vs. Eastern Illinois.
First Illini QB with multiple games with four touchdown passes in a single season since Nathan Scheelhaase in 2013.
Pat Bryant caught five passes for 74 yards and two touchdowns.
Caught his fifth touchdown of the season in the first quarter on the Illini’s first drive of the game.
Caught his sixth touchdown of the campaign in overtime.
Now has 15 touchdowns in his career, tied for fourth-most all-time in program history.
Third game this season with at least two touchdowns and second-straight such performance.
Zakhari Franklin caught five passes for 50 yards.
Has at least five receptions in three-straight games.
Tanner Arkin caught four passes for 28 yards and a touchdown.
Set a new career high in receptions (4) and yards (28).
Recorded the third touchdown reception of his Illini career in the third quarter.
Kaden Feagin rushed 12 times for 69 yards.
Josh McCray carried the ball nine times for 38 yards.
Aidan Laughery rushed four times for 30 yards.
Brandon Henderson became the first Illinois offensive lineman to score a touchdown since Corey Lewis on Nov. 9, 2013, at Indiana, with his touchdown reception in the fourth quarter.
Torrie Cox Jr. recorded his second interception of the season in the second quarter.
QUOTES
Opening statement:
“I’m very excited for our players, our coaches, and our fan base. To take part in something like tonight, you have two ranked teams playing on a Friday night on national TV, and it played out like that. I give a lot of credit to Nebraska. Matt (Rhule) has obviously done a really good job to build this environment. You don’t come to 400 straight sellouts by chance, so there’s a lot of people that made tonight happen before this.Â
“I can’t say enough about these guys. The attitude they work with, the perseverance, the humility, the gratitude, and all they’ve done has made this even bigger. We’ll take ourselves back to Champaign and get a chance to have a recovery day tomorrow. We can’t touch our players. As coaches, we’ll put this one to bed. I think Penn State plays at 2:30, and it’s obviously a great opportunity for us to go out to State College, another great venue, another great opportunity.
“I think we came out of it pretty healthy. Zakhari (Franklin) came out, but he was cleared to go back in there at the end; we just felt good about Malik (Elzy). There are a couple other guys who got banged up and went back in. Tanner Arkin is OK; he tweaked his back a little bit. There was tremendous perseverance by our guys: offensively, defensively, and with some really good special teams plays. I’m excited for these guys to go forward.”
On only having three penalties:
“I wouldn’t have the three penalties, but I thought we preached on it all week. My ears were blaring. We blasted those guys pretty hard on our two biggest work days in the stadium. We knew it was going to be loud today. This is a very intelligent crowd. I first played these guys when I was a young assistant at Iowa. I came over here when I was at Kansas State and knew this environment. We obviously came here two years ago. They are very intelligent fans. They know when to be loud: third downs, red area, backed up. I knew that that was going to play out, and it did today, but our guys really took in everything during the course of the week, and obviously took advantage of it today.”
On Illinois’ defensive pressure in the backfield after halftime:
“First off, they’re very good. I think their quarterback is a good player. Their wide receivers are good players. They’re opportunistic. There were some zone things that they were settling in behind our linebackers. We kind of dumped them right over the top. You can literally see this quarterback get better every play. If you’re a Nebraska fan, obviously, the bad news is you lost tonight, but the good news is you’ve got a quarterback who probably gets better every practice. From everything I’ve been told about him, his demeanor, his work ethic – just listening to Matt (Rhule) talk about him. Usually, the head coach doesn’t go over the top the way he does. If he’s saying that, that makes me think he believes in him. They’re putting their whole program behind him.”
“These are stages you play football for. We made next week even bigger with this (Nebraska) win.”
“Feel good about ourselves for 20 minutes, then on to Penn State.”
“You want to play against good teams, great competition. That makes the game fun. A huge crowd like (Friday), we’re going to go to Penn State and they’re going to have an even better crowd. Nothing’s better than coming into somebody else’s home and getting a victory.”
“It’s the first game of Big Ten play. Just going out there and making a statement that we’re a hard-fighting team. We’re going to fight to the end no matter what the circumstances are.”
“I’ve got a lot of faith in this team.”
“Practicing hard each week has been our main goal. Last week was the best practice we’ve had since I’ve been here. Coach B gave us a day off just so we could get our bodies back.”
“I feel like this has a huge chip on our shoulder.”
“This has been a culmination of my college experience. Failures and defeats and not getting to where I want to go. But trust in the Lord’s timing. He’s always good (to) me in great positions.”
“Melvin stood up in front of us and told us, ‘This is going to be that week,’. Melvin’s a very huge leader, whether it’s with his physical or vocally. He really set the tone for the week. He told ’em, ‘Guys it ain’t nobody really stopping us but us.’ So they went out there, had a real hard fighting practice, and then I feel like they just translated to the game and made the game even easier.”
“I actually made (Brandon Henderson) stay after practice one time so he could catch a couple extra balls so he could just be ready for his moment. But B-Hen, he’s a great guy. He’s played every position on the o-line. So I feel like what he did today was very earned.”
“That’s why you come out here (and play) in these big games. It’s going to be an exciting atmosphere.”
“It’s special. We found a way.”
“I’m passionate about the game. I dreamed about being in this position. It’s hard to contain those feelings.”
On the Henderson TD…
“We certainly didn’t go out there and that was the first time we did it. We practiced it a good amount of time, and Coach Lunney with an amazing call there and amazing calls throughout the night. It’s always cool to see a big-man TD. I’m so happy for Brandon too. He’s been so unselfish throughout really his career here that I’ve seen; playing center, guard, tackle, tight end, catching touchdowns. He’s a guy who is going to make a lot of plays, maybe catching the ball but certainly in that interior.”
“I asked (Brandon Henderson) after, ‘Were you nervous?’ He said, ‘Not one bit. I told him I was. A really good call, and really great execution all around. I really tried to give him a good ball.”
“I’m not sure what worked so well late but, on the field, you felt like the key was to just keep pressing the run. I think Nebraska actually showed a lot of pressure looks and as the game wore on, they actually blitzed themselves out of the run gaps because they were gambling on big stops. We just stuck with it because the one thing about this team is we have to lean on our offensive line and our run game. That’s who we are.”
“I knew I had to execute it. Coach Lunney was scared. He didn’t think I was going to catch it. He had me catching passes for two days straight. He told me when I catch it make sure I’m securing it. I’m like, ‘I got you coach.’ Coach Miller was telling me I better not eff it up. I’m like, ‘I got us coach. I’m going to do what y’all want me to do. I’m going to get the job done.’ It ended up in a critical play in the game.”
“I was wide open. I did what I was supposed to do. I was wide open. I turned around, the ball was coming to me, I just know I had to catch and secure it. It was a critical play in the game.”
“I wasn’t nervous. I live for moments like this.”
“Melvin stood up at the front of the room and told us we aren’t playing good enough offensively, the o-line. We weren’t playing good enough. We weren’t running the ball how we wanted to run the ball. He was telling us we need to pick it up. He said he’d set the tone no matter what way he had to do it. He just wants to be dominant in the run game. I feel like this week we took a big step.”
“I had a celebration planned, but I didn’t get to do it because everybody attacked me and I had to get back on field goal.”
“The offensive line was blocking and we were kind of tiring the defensive line out a little bit. The runs were starting to hit towards the end of the third quarter so we knew we were going to bust a few of them.”
“You could see as the game was going on we were starting to tire out the defensive line so it was just a matter of time when we would just start to bust a few of them. I feel like as tailbacks we’ve been trying to do too much with our runs. If we rely on our principles, the yards will be there.”