Chicago Sun-Times

MEMORABLE EPISODE OF DEXTER

Huge night for Williams includes 97-yard TD run

- BY HANK KURZ JR. Associated Press

BLACKSBURG, Va. — Dexter Williams burst through the line, suddenly saw nothing but green in front of him and was gone.

In a span of seconds, fans of No. 24 Virginia Tech went from roaring with certainty that the Hokies were about to make the kind of defensive play that can change a game to watching it flip in the other direction as Williams sprinted 97 yards down their sideline.

And soon, a tight game was no more, the No. 6 Fighting Irish pulling away for a 45-23 victory on Saturday night.

“I was looking at the Jumbotron the whole time,” Williams said, “to make sure I didn’t get caught.”

The Fighting Irish (6-0) had minus-5 rushing yards and were facing second-and-12 from their 3 when Williams broke into the clear early in the third quarter, putting Notre Dame ahead 24-16. Williams had just been thrown for a two-yard loss, prompting the crowd’s excitement.

Instead, it was Williams who made the big play, which was the second-longest run in Notre Dame history.

“We had a couple of plays that we felt comfortabl­e we could run down there,” coach Brian Kelly said of Williams, who ran for 161 yards in his first action of the season last week in a victory against No. 15 Stanford. “He’s got great speed. He’s able to hit it.”

Virginia Tech responded by driving to the Notre Dame 30, but Brian Johnson missed a 47-yard field goal try.

“After that we kind of self-destructed a little bit,” Hokies defensive coordinato­r Bud Foster said.

Williams finished with 178 yards on 17 carries. He added touchdown runs of one and 31 yards.

The Irish’s defense was stout, too. Khalid Kareem stripped quarterbac­k Ryan Willis on a scramble and Julian Love was in perfect position to scoop up the bouncing fumble and take it 42 yards for a touchdown, giving Notre Dame a 17-9 lead late in the second quarter. Before breaking the game open, Notre Dame also sacked Willis for 11 yards after Virginia Tech (3-2) drove to the 19, and stopped the Hokies on three tries from the 1 yard-line. Both of those drives ended with the hosts settling for field goals by Johnson.

“It was a good battle there for a while,” Hokies coach Justin Fuente said.

Ian Book started fast and then struggled, but delivered the back-breaker for the Irish. Flushed left and surrounded by three closing defenders, he tossed a short pass just beyond them to Miles Boykin, whose 40-yard touchdown made it 31-16 late in the third quarter. The pair later connected for a fiveyard touchdown as the Irish scored the first 21 points of the second half.

Book finished 25-for-35 for 271 yards in his third consecutiv­e start. Willis was 31-for -52 for 309 yards with two touchdowns and one intercepti­on for the Hokies.

 ?? MATT GENTRY/AP ?? Notre Dame’s Dexter Williams (178 yards) pushes forward for a one-yard touchdown run.
MATT GENTRY/AP Notre Dame’s Dexter Williams (178 yards) pushes forward for a one-yard touchdown run.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States