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Navy rolls past Virginia in bowl win

- By David Ginsburg Associated Press Sports Writer

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Two quarterbac­ks put on one heck of a show for Navy in the Military Bowl.

Backup Zach Abey scored five touchdowns, starter Malcolm Perry ran for 114 yards and two scores and the Midshipmen rolled to a surprising­ly easy 49-7 victory over Virginia on Thursday.

After Virginia’s Joe Reed took the opening kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown, the Midshipmen (7-6) got two TDs apiece from Perry and Abey in taking a 28-7 halftime lead.

Perry left in the third quarter with a foot injury, leaving Abey to score on runs of 5 and 20 yards to make it 42-7 in a game Navy entered as a 1½-point favorite.

“Malcolm did a masterful job. The kid’s phenomenal, man,” Navy coach Ken Niumatalol­o said. “He brings another dimension to our offense. To Zach’s credit, he came in there and played really, really well.”

The Midshipmen rolled up a Military Bowl-record 452 yards rushing, including 101 by Chris High and 88 by Abey, who began the season as the starter before losing the job.

“That’s the best we’ve played all year,” Niumatalol­o said. “We put it together Navy players celebrate Thursday during the Military Bowl against Virginia in Annapolis, Md.

on both sides of the ball.”

Going back and forth with Perry and Abey might be the way to go in 2018.

“They’re both really good football players. I’ve got to find a way to use them both,” Niumatalol­o said. “Just what you saw today is probably what you’re going to see next year.” Gail Burton / AP

After scoring on a 1-yard run with 11:11 remaining, Abey sat down after becoming the fifth player in FBS history to rush for five TDs in a bowl game.

“We did what we were supposed to do,” Perry said. “It all starts up front. The guys were really physical. We played Navy football today.”

Navy 49, Virginia 7

Playing in their first bowl since 2011, the Cavaliers (6-7) could not contain Navy’s triple option and had no success moving the ball.

“I think coach Niumatalol­o had his team very well prepared,” Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall said. “Clearly, I didn’t have our team prepared to perform to their true potential, offensivel­y, defensivel­y or special teams.”

Seeking its first winning season in six years, Virginia instead absorbed its sixth loss in seven games.

“The team worked really hard to get to this point, and that’s an accomplish­ment,” Mendenhall said. “I don’t think it takes the edge off (the season), but it certainly takes some off because it’s never fun to not play well and to lose the game. But it’s also reflective of exactly where we are.”

They’re currently in the second tier of the Atlantic Coast Conference, and at least on this day not nearly as good as Navy.

“They just outplayed us,” Virginia free safety Quin Blanding said. “That’s the bottom line. They came ready to play and we didn’t.”

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