The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Marks lifts Buffalo to 17- 10 Camellia Bowl win over Marshall

- By John Zenor AP Sports Writer

Kevin Marks looked like a super sub early, stalled against a stingy defense and then delivered the decisive blow.

Marks scored on a 1- yard touchdown run with 1: 09 left after a clock- eating drive and Buffalo made a final defensive stop to beat Marshall 17- 10 in the Camellia Bowl on Friday.

Subbing for the national leader in rushing yards per game, Jaret Patterson, Marks carried 35 time for 138 yards for the Bulls ( 6- 1) against one of the nation’s top run defenses.

Buffalo milked more than six minutes off the clock on the final 13- play, 88- yard drive. Quarterbac­k Kyle Vantrease took a knee on first down and coach Lance Leipold even considered calling for a second one for a team that had only made its first field goal of the season in the first half.

“Obviously. we needed every second we could get there toward the end,” Leipold said.

Grant wells then took marshall ( 7- 3), which had rallied from a 10- 0 deficit, to the Buf-

falo 20 with no timeouts. Kadofiwrig­ht’s sack helped force a fourth- and- 11 and Eric Black added his second sack to end the threat.

Both teams lost their conference championsh­ip games.

Buffalo improved to 2- 3 in bowls, also beating Charlotte in the 2019 Bahamas Bowl. The Thundering herd dropped their final three games after a 7- 0 start and No. 15 ranking.

“We just didn’t make enough plays offensivel­y the last three weeks,” Marshall coach Doc Holliday said.

The matchup between the nation’s top rushing team and the No. 2 run defense lost some of its luster even before kickoff.

Patterson, who had 1,072 yards and 19 touchdowns in six games, didn’t dress out after sustaining a right knee injury in the Mid- American Conference Championsh­ip Game. He served as a cheerleade­r on the sideline.

“We thought it would be best for his future,” James Patterson, Buffalo’s linebacker and Jaret’s brother, said of the prolific runner’s decision not to play. “That’s all that went into it. Nothing else.”

Marks had 23 carries for 117 yards by halftime, though he was mostly shut down in the second half by a defense giving up just 88.9 rushing yards a game coming in. Marks said he found out he would be starting“at the end of the week .” He wasn’t surprised yards were hard to come by.

“It was all about patience,” he said. “With a good defense like that you have to take what they give you.

The Thundering Herd still held Buffalo to 155 rushing yards, half of its own average.

Marshall tied it on Shane Ciucci’s 21- yard field goal with 8: 48 left in the third quarter, and that’s where the score stood until marks’ touchdown.

Like Buffalo, Marshall wasn’t at full strength. Leading rusher Brenden Knox, C- USA defensive player of the year Tavante Beckett and starting right tackle Joshball optedout of the game. Beckett was one of three defensive starters missing.

 ?? JAKE CRANDALL - ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buffalo running back Kevin Marks, Jr. ( 5) is lifted in celebratio­n by teammate Mike Novitsky after scoring the game- winning touchdown against Marshall during the Camellia Bowl NCAA college football game Friday in Montgomery, Ala.
JAKE CRANDALL - ASSOCIATED PRESS Buffalo running back Kevin Marks, Jr. ( 5) is lifted in celebratio­n by teammate Mike Novitsky after scoring the game- winning touchdown against Marshall during the Camellia Bowl NCAA college football game Friday in Montgomery, Ala.
 ?? JAKE CRANDALL - ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buffalo running back Kevin Marks ( 5) holds his trophy after being name MVP of the Camellia Bowl NCAA college football game in which Buffalo defeated Marshall 17- 10in Montgomery, Ala., on Friday.
JAKE CRANDALL - ASSOCIATED PRESS Buffalo running back Kevin Marks ( 5) holds his trophy after being name MVP of the Camellia Bowl NCAA college football game in which Buffalo defeated Marshall 17- 10in Montgomery, Ala., on Friday.

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