Miami Herald (Sunday)

Marshall wins on 50th anniversar­y of plane crash

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Quarterbac­k Grant Wells grew up knowing the story of Marshall football. The 1970 plane crash. The university’s decision to continue playing. The winning years that eventually would come.

And the importance of representi­ng the school and honoring the fallen on the crash’s big anniversar­y.

The redshirt freshman threw a season-high five touchdown passes and No. 16 Marshall commemorat­ed the 50th anniversar­y of the worst disaster in U.S. sports history with a 42-14 victory over Middle Tennessee on Saturday at Huntington, West Virginia.

“We knew that this game was going to mean so much to this fan base and this community,” Wells said “That’s huge, no matter wherever we’re playing or whoever we’re playing. The fact that we could do this on the 50th anniversar­y is amazing.”

Marshall (7-0, 4-0 Conference USA) got another standout performanc­e from its defense and turned three turnovers into scores on a day when the university remembered the 75 people killed on Nov. 14, 1970.

“Just a great day,” Marshall coach Doc Holliday said. “A special day.”

Marshall wore special black uniforms and the

No. 75 on its helmets to honor those who were lost, which included most of the Thundering Herd football team. The crash occurred as the team’s plane was returning from a game at East Carolina. There were no survivors.

Wells played high school football 50 miles away in Charleston and learned about the tragedy starting as a young child.

“Walking out, there were a lot of emotions,” Wells said. “Then after that, I had to snap back into playing Middle Tennessee.”

And play, he did.

After several early overthrows, Wells found his groove and Marshall kept the momentum for good. Wells finished 25 of 37 for 336 yards, all season highs. Two of his TD passes each went to Corey Gammage and Willie Johnson.

“I see it every week now,” Holliday said. “I see a young kid that’s growing up. His teammates have so much respect for him. Just proud of the way he’s maturing and growing up. He’s getting better each week.”

Late in the second quarter, Wells found Johnson for a 44-yard gain to set up tight end Hayden Hagler’s first career TD catch.

Then, after Middle Tennessee quarterbac­k Asher O’Hara fumbled the ball away on a hit by Marshall’s Darius Hodge, Wells ran for 6 yards and made three straight completion­s. His 17-yard throw to Gammage put the Thundering Herd ahead 21-7 at halftime.

Wells kept it going after safety Nazeeh Johnson ripped the ball away from Middle Tennessee wide receiver Marquel Tinsley inside the Marshall 10 early in the third.

A 46-yard pass to Johnson and a 14-yarder to Gaines were followed by Gammage’s second TD grab. Gammage went up high for a 28-yard catch in the end zone for a 28-7 lead.

Marshall shifted to its passing attack after Middle Tennessee held running back Brenden Knox in check. Knox, who entered the game averaging 112 yards on the ground, was held to 70 yards on 16 carries.

“We shut the run down really well,” Middle Tennessee coach Rick Stockstill coach. “The run being stopped so well, they went to the pass and he did a nice job. [Wells] picked us apart.”

Middle Tennessee (2-6, 2-4) couldn’t do much against the nation’s top rush defense. O’Hara, whose 476 rushing yards entering the game were the third most for a quarterbac­k nationally, was limited to 39 yards on 11 carries. He ran for a score, threw for another and completed 29 of 44 passes for 241 yards.

A No. 2 Notre Dame 45, Boston College 31: Ian

Book passed for three touchdowns and ran for another and the Fighting Irish (8-0, 7-0 ACC) overcame an early deficit to roll past the host Eagles (5-4, 4-4). The Fighting Irish’s eighth straight victory in the series between the FBS’s only Catholic institutio­ns gave coach Brian Kelly his 100th career victory at the school, tying him with Lou Holtz for second all-time. He is now just five behind coach Knute Rockne.

A No. 10 Indiana 24, Michigan State 0: Michael Penix Jr. threw for 320 yards and hit Ty Fryfogle for two TD passes as the Hoosiers (4-0, 4-0) shut out the host Spartans (1-3, 1-3).

A No. 20 Southern California 34, Arizona 30: Vavae Malepeai bulled his way through multiple tacklers for an 8-yard touchdown run with 25 seconds left, and the Trojans edged the host Wildcats with another late rally. The Trojans (2-0, 2-0 Pac-12) had two late scoring drives to win a game they were outplayed in for most of the afternoon. Kevon Slovis hit Erik Krommenhoe­k on a 6-yard touchdown, but Arizona (0-1, 0-1) marched quickly down the field for a 6-yard touchdown pass from Grant Gunnell from Stanley Berryhill III with 1:20 left.

A No. 22 Liberty 58, Western Carolina 14: Malik Willis threw for 306 yards and three touchdowns and ran for two more scores, leading the host Flames (8-0) over the Catamounts (0-1).

A No. 25 La.-Lafayette 38, South Alabama 10: Levi Lewis passed for 252 yards and three touchdowns, Louisiana-Lafayette gained 254 yards on the ground and the host Ragin’ Cajuns (7-1, 5-1 Sun Belt) clinched a third straight Sun Belt Conference West Division title with an easy win over the Jaguars (3-5, 2-3).

 ?? SHOLTEN SINGER The Herald-Dispatch via AP ?? Mourners place white roses on the edge of the Memorial Fountain on Saturday in Huntington, W.Va., to honor the 75 lives lost in the 1970 plane crash. Most of the Marshall football team and staff were on the doomed flight.
SHOLTEN SINGER The Herald-Dispatch via AP Mourners place white roses on the edge of the Memorial Fountain on Saturday in Huntington, W.Va., to honor the 75 lives lost in the 1970 plane crash. Most of the Marshall football team and staff were on the doomed flight.

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