Imperial Valley Press

No. 25 Boise State beats Oregon 38-28 in Las Vegas Bowl

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Bryan Harsin didn’t have to say anything.

Boise State had committed two turnovers that were returned for touchdowns in the final minute of the first half, turning a 24-0 rout in the making into a competitiv­e 24-14 contest and allowing Oregon back into the game.

Without any special speech from their head coach, the Broncos regrouped and responded.

Cedrick Wilson caught 10 passes for 221 yards and a touchdown, Kekaula Kaniho returned an intercepti­on 53 yards for a score and No. 25 Boise State beat Oregon 38-28 in the Las Vegas Bowl on Saturday.

“New slate. It’s a whole different half. As far as we were concerned, it was 0-0,” Broncos linebacker Leighton Vander Esch said.

Brett Rypien threw for 362 yards and two touchdown passes — with two intercepti­ons — to help the Broncos (11-3) break a three-game losing streak against Power 5 opposition. Ryan Wolpin rushed for two touchdowns.

Troy Dye and Tyree Robinson each scored a defensive touchdown, and Justin Herbert was 26 of 36 passing for 233 yards with two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons for the Ducks (7-6) in new head coach Mario Cristobal’s debut.

Boise State forced four turnovers in the first half, taking a 14-0 lead in the first quarter on Wolpin’s 1-yard touchdown run and Rypien’s 26-yard scoring pass to Wilson. Haden Hoggarth added a 39-yard field goal before an off-balance Herbert heaved a pass toward the sideline that was easily picked off and run back by Kaniho, who also had a strip-sack.

Oregon clawed back after Dye recovered a fumble on a botched Statue of Liberty handoff and returned it 86 yards for a touchdown with 37 seconds remaining.

A 65-yard reception by Wilson to set the Boise State single-season record for yards receiving got the Broncos right back in the red zone, but Robinson picked off Rypien’s pass in the end zone and took it back 100 yards on the longest intercepti­on return in school history with 7 seconds remaining to make it 24-14.

If not for those defensive scores, the full extent of Boise State’s dominance would have been evident.

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