Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ASU bogs down in North Carolina

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A poorly executed trick play, a missed short field goal and a miserable fake punt attempt.

Those three plays — all within a five-minute span in the second quarter — put Arkansas State University (3-3) in too big of a hole, in a 45-17 loss Thursday night to Appalachia­n State (3-1) in Boone, N.C.

The only bright spot for the Red Wolves was senior wide receiver Jonathan Adams Jr., who had his third-consecutiv­e 100-yard receiving game catching 6 passes for 134 yards. Other than that, ASU struggled on both sides of the ball.

“It’s depressing, us getting embarrasse­d like that on national TV,” Adams said. “I don’t think they’re 30 points, or whatever the score was, better than us. But they beat us. They made few mistakes and we made a lot of mistakes.”

Quarterbac­ks Logan Bonner and Layne Hatcher weren’t able to repeat their impressive seven- touchdown performanc­e from a week ago, going a combined 22-of-42 for 295 yards and an intercepti­on. But Arkansas State’s run game was almost completely absent, rushing

35 times for just 73 yards.

And in the defense’s first game following the firing of defensive coordinato­r David Duggan, the Red Wolves showed promise at times forcing two turnovers and three punts, but it wasn’t nearly enough as Appalachia­n State still totaled 515 yards. The Mountainee­rs also dominated on third downs, converting 10 of 15 and holding ASU to 4 of 16.

“We can’t have that kind of night offensivel­y and definitely not against a good team,” Coach Blake Anderson said. “Defensivel­y, I’m proud of how they created the turnovers, but we didn’t make them punt one time in the first half and that makes it tough.”

Arkansas State looked to keep pace early, responding to Appalachia­n State’s first touchdown with a score of its own on senior running back Jamal Jones’ 8-yard rush.

But those would be the only points the Red Wolves would score in the first half, while the Mountainee­rs scored touchdowns on their first three possession­s.

While Appalachia­n State led 21-7 early in the second quarter, ASU appeared to still be in the game. Then, things spiraled out of control over a 5:08 period midway through the second quarter.

Arkansas State tried to dial up a trick play when sophomore wide receiver Jeff Foreman attempted to connect with junior tight end Reed Tyler, but threw into triple coverage and was subsequent­ly intercepte­d. On Appalachia­n State’s next play, junior safety Antonio Fletcher gave ASU the ball right back with his own intercepti­on. The Red Wolves weren’t able to capitalize, failing to score as junior kicker Blake Grupe missed a 24-yard field goal.

On ASU’s next possession, still trailing 21-7 and following another forced turnover by ASU’s defense, the Red Wolves attempted a fake punt from their own 27 that had no chance and eventually led to an Appalachia­n State field goal. The Mountainee­rs added another touchdown right before the half, taking a commanding 31-7 lead into the locker room.

ASU added its second field goal of the game to cut it to a 21-point game to start the third quarter. After a couple of defensive stops, the Red Wolves finally capitalize­d on offense, as freshman running back Lincoln Pare broke off a 48-yard touchdown run to make it 31-17 with 2:08 left in the third quarter. Appalachia­n State quarterbac­k Zac Thomas — the preseason Sun Belt Player of the Year — then made the back-breaking play of game, scoring on a 60-yard run on third and 14 to take a 38-17 lead into the final quarter.

“They caught us in a coverage that makes us really shorthande­d in the box,” Anderson said of the play. “It’s one of those that we’d like to have back.”

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