The Record (Troy, NY)

No. 2 Miami finishes on 30-0 run, tops Virginia 44-28

- By TimReynold­s

MIAMI GARDENS, FLA. » The undefeated season was slipping away, and so was any realistic chance Miami had of getting into the College Football Playoff and competing for a national championsh­ip.

That is, until seven seconds changed everything.

Just like that, a 14-point deficit was gone — and perfection remains within the Hurricanes’ reach.

Malik Rosier threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score, and No. 2 Miami pulled off its biggest comeback in five years by holding off Virginia 4428 on Saturday to extend the nation’s longest winning streak to 15 games.

“It’s amazing, this train we’re riding right now,” linebacker Shaquille Quarterman said. “We just want to keep it going.”

Jaquan Johnson had an intercepti­on return for a touchdown for Miami (100, 7- 0 Atlantic Coast Conference, No. 3 CFP), which scored the game’s last 30 points. The Hurricanes twice climbed out of twotouchdo­wn- deep holes, snapped a 15-game losing streak in games where it faced deficits of 14 points or more and finished off their first 7- 0 home regular-season record since 1988.

“This team believes,” offensive lineman KC McDermott said. “This team believes in our goal and the way we’re going to attack it.”

Kurt Benkert was brilliant for Virginia (6-5, 3- 4), completing 28 of 37 passes for 384 yards and four touchdowns.

The game started at noon, and it wasn’t until 2:21 p.m. that Benkert took aim at a receiver and missed. He started 18 for 19 for 288 yards and four touchdowns in a little over a half, the only incompleti­on in that span being an intentiona­l one — he threw the ball away to avoid what would have been a sack by Miami’s Chad Thomas.

Benkert’s 20th throw wasn’t incomplete, technicall­y. It was just to the wrong team.

Johnson’s fourth intercepti­on of the season be- came a 30-yard return for a score. It was Miami’s second touchdown in seven seconds after Lawrence Cager hauled in a 9-yard scoring pass from Rosier, a 28-14 Virginia lead was gone — and the Hurricanes left no doubt the rest of the way. Rosier and Travis Homer had touchdown runs in the final 4:03 to close it out for Miami.

“I like the way my team played,” Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall said. “We were well prepared, played hard. We had plenty of chances to stage the upset. Came up short.”

Homer rushed for 96 yards for Miami, which looks to close out a perfect ACC regular-season slate at Pittsburgh on Friday. The Hurricanes already had a spot in the ACC championsh­ip game against Clemson on Dec. 2 secured.

Benkert threw long touchdown passes on two of the Cavaliers’ first three possession­s — a 33-yarder to Olamide Zaccheaus and 75-yarder to Joe Reed made it 14- 0 quickly.

But again, the Turnover Chain sparked Miami.

Down 14-7 in the second quarter, Homer recovered a punt that Virginia muffed— making him the first offensive player to wear Miami’s famed piece of jewelry. He barely had the bling on before the Hurricanes tied it on a 36-yard TD catch by Dayall Harris.

“They are very beatable,” Reed said. “The chain is what gives them the spark. I think without the chain they’d be a whole different defense.”

No one has beaten them yet, and Miami took Virginia’s best shot.

Virginia got a spectacula­r grab from Andre Levrone with 33 seconds left in the half to take the lead back, and restored the

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Virginia running back Daniel Hamm (22) catches a pass that he ran in for a touchdown as Miami defensive back Dee Delaney (3) defends during the second half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday in Miami Gardens, Fla. Miami won 44-28.
LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Virginia running back Daniel Hamm (22) catches a pass that he ran in for a touchdown as Miami defensive back Dee Delaney (3) defends during the second half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday in Miami Gardens, Fla. Miami won 44-28.

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