Daily Press (Sunday)

Wake-up call: Trojans rally in opener

-

Drake London caught a 21-yard touchdown pass with 1:20 to play, and No. 20 Southern California rallied from a late 13-point deficit for a 28-27 victory over Arizona State on Saturday in the Pac-12's long-delayed season opener.

Bru McCoy caught a deflected 26yard TD pass with 2:52 left for the Trojans (1-0), and Max Williams recovered the onside kick. On fourth and 9, Kedon Slovis fired a pass down the middle to London, and the two-sport athlete beat double coverage to haul it in for an electrifyi­ng score.

USC's defense then stopped Arizona State (0-1) on downs near midfield with 50 seconds left to preserve an astonishin­g comeback for perpetuall­y embattled coach Clay Helton's team.

“Well, it reminds you of 2020, doesn't it?” Helton said. “A year of adversity and finding a way to overcome hard situations. I'm proud of our football team. We made it.”

Until their rally, the Trojans were struggling for poise and precision in a game that began at 9 a.m. USC agreed to its earliest kickoff in at least 70 years for a national television audience, but it looked like another embarrassm­ent for Helton and his Trojans — before it abruptly turned into a thrilling triumph.

USC racked up 556 yards of offense and outgained the Sun Devils by 164 yards, but the Trojans were nearly finished because they committed three turnovers and turned the ball over on downs two more times — all inside ASU territory.

Slovis passed for 381 yards for USC, while Stephen Carr and Markese Stepp made scoring runs in the first half. London also caught eight passes for 125 yards, none bigger than his winning TD reception.

“That play was a play we run all the time,” Slovis said. “There was three steps and a hitch ball, and Drake did the rest for me.”

Marshall masters UMass: Grant Wells threw three touchdown passes, Brenden Knox ran for two scores and Marshall pummeled Massachuse­tts 5110 in Huntington, West Virginia.

The game was added to Marshall's schedule last month after several other opponents had previously pulled out due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Marshall (6-0) continued to produce a season-long balance on offense that keeps opponents guessing. Knox scored on first-quarter runs of 45 and 14 yards and got nearly all of his 118 yards in the first half. It was his fifth straight game over 100 yards.

Massachuse­tts (0-2), in its fourth season as a Bowl Subdivisio­n independen­t, has 22 true or redshirt freshmen on its depth chart.

SMU surges: Shane Buechele threw four touchdown passes, two to Tyler Page, and No. 18 SMU broke away from undermanne­d Temple 47-23 in Philadelph­ia.

The game was pushed back from its original Thursday date while Temple dealt with virus-related issues. The Owls were missing 15 players who were in COVID-19 protocol.

SMU led 20-16 before Buechele connected with Kylen Granson on a 24-yard TD pass on the first play of the fourth quarter. The Mustangs (7-1, 4-1 AAC) scored four touchdowns in the first 7 1⁄

2 minutes of the period.

Temple (1-4, 1-4) scored on the first play of the game, with wide receiver Randle Jones going 75 yards on a screen pass from Trad Beatty.

Page, who came into the game fifth on the Mustangs this year in yards receiving, caught nine passes for 131 yards. Buechele was 24 for 35 for 355 yards.

Tayvon Ruley's 3-yard touchdown run helped Temple build a 13-10 halftime lead. Buechele put SMU ahead for good when he found Page with a 44-yard strike on the first drive of the second half.

Cowboys prevail: Jason Taylor II returned a fumble 85 yards for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter, and Oklahoma State stopped Kansas State's 2-point try that would have tied it with 2:08 to go, allowing the No. 14 Cowboys to escape with a 20-18 victory Saturday night in Manhattan, Kansas.

LD Brown ran 15 times for 110 yards, as Oklahoma State (5-1, 4-1 Big 12) leaned on its defense to bounce back from an overtime loss to Texas and beat the Wildcats (4-3, 4-2).

Longhorns hold on: No. 22 Texas stopped West Virginia on fourth-down passes into the end zone twice in the fourth quarter, enabling the host Longhorns to escape with a 17-13 victory.

The Longhorns (5-2, 4-2 Big 12) overcame an offense that produced nearly 100 yards and 27 points fewer than its average.

Sa m E h l i n g e r, typically the Longhorns' offensive star, completed just 15 of 31 passes for 184 yards, but he connected with Brennan Eagles for a 7-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter and with Jake Smith for a 33-yard TD strike in the third.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States