The Capital

SPORTS: Navy football falls to Memphis, 10-7

Midshipmen lack firepower, QB Goslin gets pulled in third quarter of low-scoring loss

- By Bill Wagner

Navy football fans learned the answer to one lingering question when quarterbac­k Tyger Goslin trotted onto the field to lead the offense for the opening possession of Saturday night’s game against Memphis.

That ended three weeks of intrigue regarding whether Goslin or Dalen Morris would get the call when the Midshipmen played for the first time in nearly amonth.

Of course, the larger question was whether whoever played quarterbac­k could operate Navy’s triple-option offense as designed.

Goslin did not provide the spark the coaching staff was looking for, leading Navy to only one touch down before being replaced by freshman Xavier Arline late in the third quarter.

Navy’s inability to get anything done offensivel­y wasted an impressive defensive performanc­e as heavily favored Memphis escaped with a narrow10-7 victory in front of a smattering of midshipmen at an otherwise empty Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium.

Kicker Riley Patterson provided the winning margin for the Tigers by kicking a

26-yard field goal with10:53 remaining. Navy responded by driving into field-goal range on the subsequent possession but kicker Bijan Nichols missed wide right on a 45-yard attempt with 4:42 to go.

“Offensivel­y we played bad. We’re too sporadic. We’re hit and miss,” Navy coach Ken Niumatalol­o said afterward. “We’re just not operating right now. There’s not really much we can hang our hat on.”

Navy fell to 3-5 overall andwith two games remaining can finish the regular season no better than .500. The Midshipmen, at 3-3 in the American Athletic Conference, were eliminated from contention for the championsh­ip game.

There is a chance Navy could go to a bowl game regardless of record, which opens the possibilit­y of finishing with awinning record.

Defensive coordinato­r Brian Newberry had his unit ready to play andNavy delivered its best defensive performanc­e of the season,

repeatedly stopping record-setting quarterbac­k Brady White and the high-powered Memphis offense. The Tigers came in ranked 10th nationally in total offense with 517.9 yards per game and were averaging 36.4 points.

The Midshipmen forced five punts, a turnover on downs and a fumble in holding the Tigers to 280 total yards and just one touchdown. Memphis managed only the game-winning field goal over the final three quarters.

White had a subpar outing, completing 18 of 32 passes for 205 yards and a touchdown. Memphiswas limited to just 75 rushing yards by an aggressive Navy defense that was constantly changing fronts just before the snap.

“Really, really proud of the way our defense played. They were phenomenal and gave us a chance to win,” Niumatalol­o said. “Our defense was playing lights out and kept giving us opportunit­ies and we couldn’t capitalize.”

Senior fullback Nelson Smith was pretty much Navy’s only offensive weapon, rushing for 142 yards and a touchdown on 29 carries. As has been the case all season, the quarterbac­k and slotback elements of the triple-option offense were missing in action.

Despite almost single-handedly carrying the load, Smith felt he should have done more damage.

“The coaching staff put the ball in my hands a lot today, put thegameinm­y hands, and I didn’t execute well enough to get a win. I feel like I left a lot of yards on the field,” he said.

Goslin and Arline combined for 11 yards on eight carries, while the slotback corps produced 19 yards on 10 attempts. It spoke volumes that defensive lineman J’arius Warren was Navy’s second-leading rusher, having broken loose for a 24-yard gain off a fake punt on the Mids’ lone scoring drive.

Goslin did not fare well in the passing game as well, completing only 3 of 9 attempts for 73 yards while tossing an intercepti­on. That pickoff prevented a field goal attempt as the Midshipmen had moved to the visiting team’s 17-yard line.

Goslin threw to slotback Chance Warren’s inside shoulder on which free safety Quindell Johnson was draped. Johnson easily intercepte­d the ill-advised pass as it went right into his arms.

The Midshipmen­were unable to sustain drives, finishing 2-for-13 on third down conversion­s. Navy reached the red zone only twice in the entire game. Niumatalol­o responded “everything” when asked why theNavy offense continues to struggle eight games into the season.

“We have to do a better job as coaches, we have to do a better job of executing. Sometimesw­e blockedwel­l and therewere other times when we had some mistakes,” he said. “It’s disappoint­ing because we had all that time off. Iwashoping­wewould play better on.”

A bold call jump-started Navy’s first touchdown drive with Niumatalol­o dipping into his bag of tricks for a fake punt on fourth-and-1 from his own 26-yard line. J’ariusWarre­n— the up blocker in the punt formation— took a direct snap, found a hole and rumbled 24 yards to midfield.

Goslin connected with wide receiver MarkWalker for a 23-yard gain on the next play. Smith then burst through a big hole up the middle for a 22-yard score that gave Navy the early lead.

It did not take long for Memphis to respond with White directing a 79-yard touchdown march that lasted just six plays and took a little over two minutes.

Running back Asa Martin took a short swing pass and raced 43 yards to put the Tigers in the red zone. Two plays later, White found wide receiver Calvin Austin III open on a slant route for a 14-yard scoring strike that tied the score at 7 with 3:52 remaining in the first quarter.

Both teams threatened but turnovers deep in enemy territory scuttled scoring chances and it remained deadlocked going into halftime. Navy’s defense played particular­ly well in the first half, limiting Memphis to five first downs and 162 total yards despite being forced to consistent­ly protect a short field.

The defensive struggle continued in the second half with the teams trading punts and turnovers on downs. Navy finally got things going offensivel­y late in the third period after Arline entered the game.

Niumatalol­o turned into riverboat gambler again by going for it on fourth down from his own 33-yard line. Smith picked up 2 yards to move the sticks and two plays later he found a huge gap off-tackle and raced 20 yards intoMemphi­s territory.

Navy appeared poised to take the lead, but Arline fumbled the snap on first down and linebacker Cole Mashburn recovered to give Memphis the ball just shy of midfield.

Memphis held the ball for nine plays and more than four minutes, marching to the Navy 8-yard line before being stopped. A false start penalty set the Tigers backandan incomplete pass on third-and-goal forced a field-goal attempt.

Patterson, who missed wide right on a 52-yardattemp­t inthe first half, converted a chip shot for whatwould be the difference.

 ?? PAULW. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Navy slotback ChanceWarr­en runs with the ball in the first quarter against Memphis Saturday at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis.
PAULW. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE Navy slotback ChanceWarr­en runs with the ball in the first quarter against Memphis Saturday at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis.

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