Yuma Sun

No. 2 Cincinnati runs past Tulane

- BY BRETT MARTEL

NEW ORLEANS – Two underwhelm­ing victories in a row has Cincinnati coach Luke Fickell answering questions about whether the still unbeaten, second-ranked Bearcats are living up to their billing.

Ridder connected twice with tight end Josh Whyle for touchdowns, and No. 2 Cincinnati pulled away late for a 31-12 victory Saturday over a struggling but feisty Tulane squad that didn’t trail by more than nine points until the latter half of the fourth quarter.

“We know we’ve got to do a better job,” Fickell said. “We know what brings the energy to our program. We’ve got to find better ways to get that going earlier in games.”

Jerome Ford rushed for 65 yards and a touchdown – his 14th this season – for Cincinnati (8-0, 4-0 American Athletic Conference), which briefly trailed in the second quarter and led by just two at halftime before outscoring Tulane 17-0 the rest of the way.

“We’re 8-0; that’s all we care about,” Ridder said. “No team’s just going to lay over for us, no matter if we’re No. 2 or No. 18. It doesn’t matter, every team is going to give us their best.”

Ridder passed for 227 yards and three touchdowns to go with his 47 yards rushing, but also was sacked in the end zone for a safety and intercepte­d. Whyle caught four passes for 79 yards.

“We don’t try to pay attention to the rankings,” Whyle said. “Yeah, it was ugly. We could have done better. But a win is a win and we’re going to celebrate.”

But if Bearcats want one of just four College Football Playoff spots, they’ll have to pay attention to rankings – and the first CFP rankings of this season are due out Tuesday night.

Tulane (1-7, 0-4), which was playing without starting quarterbac­k Michael Pratt because of his concussion last week at SMU, lost its sixth straight, but did have some standout performanc­es.

Running back Tyjae Spears rushed for 106 yards on 19 carries, highlighte­d by his 47-yard touchdown.

“Spears is a good back; he’s tough and has good speed,” Tulane coach Willie Fritz said.

Third-string QB Kai Horton, a freshman, started for Tulane because backup Justin Ibieta also was hurt. He completed seven of 16 passes for 79 yards. He was intercepte­d twice and sacked four times.

Cincinnati cornerback Coby Bryant’s third intercepti­on of the season on Horton’s deep pass ended Tulane’s last scoring threat early in the fourth quarter, when the Bearcats’ still led by just nine.

MOMENTUM SWINGS After Cincinnati scored first on Whyle’s 16-yard catch, Tulane surprising­ly surged into the lead with a series of successes that began with linebacker Marvin Moody wrapping up Ridder in the end zone for a safety in the second quarter.

On the ensuing possession, Spears’ long scoring run made it 9-7.

The Bearcats responded with an 80-yard, five-play scoring drive, highlighte­d by Whyle’s 28-yard catch, Ridder’s 37-yard scramble and Ford’s 3-yard TD run in which he pushed through a pack of defenders.

Cincinnati looked primed to pull away when Evan Prater intercepte­d Horton’s screen pass in Tulane territory, but Macon Clark intercepte­d Ridder several plays later.

Soon after, Horton fumbled as he was sacked by Malik Vann, but the loose ball bounced up to 6-foot-4, 305-pound offensive lineman Rashad Green, who bowled his way forward for a 15-yard gain.

That set up Merek Glover’s 41-yard field goal to make it 14-12 at halftime.

POLL IMPLICATIO­NS

With a second-straight underwhelm­ing victory over a heavy underdog, Cincinnati could slip slightly in the AP Top 25 Poll.

UP NEXT

Cincinnati: Hosts Tulsa next Saturday.

Tulane: Visits UCF next Saturday.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP ?? CINCINNATI QUARTERBAC­K DESMOND RIDDER (9) passes during the first half of a game against Tulane in New Orleans Saturday.
GERALD HERBERT/AP CINCINNATI QUARTERBAC­K DESMOND RIDDER (9) passes during the first half of a game against Tulane in New Orleans Saturday.

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