Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Hurricanes fall to Eagles 27-14

Sloppy Hurricanes stumble to 2nd straight loss

- By Christy Cabrera Chirinos

University of Miami stumble to their second straight loss.

CHESTNUT HILL, Mass. — The stakes, they knew, were extraordin­arily high.

After a disappoint­ing performanc­e and an upset loss at Virginia two weeks ago, the Hurricanes needed a win at Boston College to try and stay somewhat in control of their own destiny in the unsettled Coastal Division.

Unfortunat­ely for Miami, Boston College was in a similar situation in the ACC’s Atlantic Division and it was the Eagles who played with the kind of urgency one might expect from a team in a precarious position.

For the second straight game, the Hurricanes were undone by mistakes, sloppy play and an overall lackluster effort. And ultimately, the Eagles — who jumped to 10-point lead in the first half — never trailed in what was eventually a 27-14 win over a struggling Miami team that has now lost six of its last eight games against Power-5 opponents.

And the Hurricanes woes away from South Florida

were magnified yet again. It’s now been nearly a year since Miami last beat a Power-5 team on the road, that win coming Oct. 28, 2017 at North Carolina.

It has been, for a team that was at one point last season ranked as high as No. 2 in the College Football Playoff rankings, a mystifying decline.

Since a 44-28 win over Virginia last November, the Hurricanes have lost to Pittsburgh, Clemson, Wisconsin, LSU, Virginia two weeks ago and now Boston College.

And in those games, the Hurricanes (5-3, 2-2) have struggled mightily on offense, with coach Mark Richt alternatin­g between quarterbac­k Malik Rosier and N’Kosi Perry, and neither has been successful consistent­ly.

Miami’s offensive line has also struggled in those losses and against Boston College, both of those issues reappeared. Rosier — who regained his status as starter after Perry struggled at Virginia — started the game 8-of-9 and finishing 18-of-35 for 149 yards with two intercepti­ons.

But making things worse on this night was the fact that Miami’s defense — which has been a bright spot for the Hurricanes — struggled, too.

That unit, which came into the game as the top defense in the ACC and the No. 2 defense in the nation, was gashed on Boston College’s very first offensive possession and the problems only continued in the first half.

Boston College running back AJ Dillon — the preseason ACC Player of the Year — returned to the Eagles’ lineup after missing two games with an ankle injury and on his first touch, powered through the Hurricanes defense for a 25-yard gain. That play began a methodical 10-play, 88-yard drive that was capped when Boston College quarterbac­k Anthony Brown connected on a 9-yard scoring pass to Jeff Smith.

The Hurricanes — fueled by deejay Dallas’ 53-yard kickoff return — tied it on their ensuing possession when Darrell Langham caught a 13-yard touchdown pass from Malik Rosier, who regained Miami’s starting quarterbac­k job after redshirt freshman N’ Kosi Perry struggled at Virginia.

After that, though, the Eagles (6-2, 3-1) continued moving the ball nearly at will against the Hurricanes. Boston College regained the lead on a 5-yard scoring run by Brown, this time the play capping a 10-play, 77-yard drive.

Early in the second quarter, the Miami defense gained a minor victory when it held the Eagles to a 21-yard field goal from Colton Lichtenber­g that pushed Boston College’s lead to 17-7, but again, the Eagles put together another long drive, this time totaling 79 yards on 20 plays.

By the time both teams went into the locker room, the Hurricanes had allowed 294 yards. They allowed fewer to FIU, Florida State and Virginia through four quarters.

Still, as much as the defense struggled early, the Hurricanes trailed by just three points after Dallas took a direct snap, scrambled 10 yards and scored to pull Miami within 17-14 with 4:34 left in the half.

Then in the third quarter, Boston College would score twice in the span of 1:22 to truly make things difficult for Miami.

The first, a 23-yard field goal, came after a Rosier intercepti­on and the second, a 14-yard by Dillon, put the game virtually out of reach for a Miami team that couldn’t score.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP ?? Boston College quarterbac­k Anthony Brown eludes a tackle by Miami defensive lineman Scott Patchan during the first half of Friday’s game.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP Boston College quarterbac­k Anthony Brown eludes a tackle by Miami defensive lineman Scott Patchan during the first half of Friday’s game.

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