Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

QB McGough’s first-quarter injury dooms FIU in Tampa

- By Clark Spencer Miami Herald

ST. PETERSBURG — It ended for Florida Internatio­nal not long after it started. A shot at a Gasparilla Bowl victory against Temple died, for all intents and purposes, when quarterbac­k Alex McGough was driven into the turf at Tropicana Field on the Panthers’ third play from scrimmage, smashing his left shoulder and rendering it useless.

As McGough watched from the sideline with what was diagnosed as a broken collarbone, his arm in a white sling, FIU never recovered, losing 28-3 late Thursday night.

An offense that had scored 104 points in its final two regular-season games managed a field goal and nothing else. The nation’s top-ranked red zone scoring offense reached that destinatio­n just once. A quarterbac­k on the verge of breaking school records threw only one pass.

And Butch Davis’ first season at FIU ended on a hollow note.

The Panthers finished 8-5, matching the best record in school history. But any hope of a second-ever bowl win all-but-vanished when McGough was brought down barely two minutes into the game and his backup, Maurice Alexander out of Miami’s Booker T. Washington, couldn’t make up for the loss.

“It’s very difficult when you lose Alex McGough, your starting quarterbac­k. It was tough,” Davis said. “It was an awful lot of a load for Maurice Alexander to come in and for him to kind of get a little bit of rhythm, have a little bit of success, but it wasn’t enough.”

Alexander had thrown just six passes all season, completing two. Two of his first five passes on Thursday were caught — for intercepti­ons.

Only a determined effort by the FIU defense kept it close.

“A lot more of the weight was on us,” said Panthers linebacker Anthony Wint. “I just couldn’t be more proud of my defense, stepping up on every play, fighting to the end.”

A Jose Borregales field goal late in the third quarter cut the Temple lead to 7-3 and improved FIU’s red zone scoring proficienc­y to 40 for 41 on the season. It was as close as the Panthers would ever get.

The Owls answered with a touchdown on their next drive and Temple, which has been playing football since 1894, pulled away for the school’s third-ever bowl win.

 ?? AL DIAZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FIU QB Alex McGough broke his collarbone on the third play of the game.
AL DIAZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS FIU QB Alex McGough broke his collarbone on the third play of the game.

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