Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iowa rallies to win frosty Pinstripe Bowl

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NEW YORK — Akrum Wadley had never been to Yankee Stadium, even though he grew up about 20 miles across the river in New Jersey. On his first visit, he seemed to bring out all of Newark to cheer him on. His 40 tickets to give away weren’t enough to satiate his hometown fans.

“I couldn’t get more tickets,” he said, laughing.

Wadley’s homecoming ended with an MVP trophy that helped put the Hawkeyes’ bowl misery on ice.

Wadley rushed, received and returned in dazzling fashion on a frozen field and Iowa beat Boston College 27-20 in the frigid Pinstripe Bowl on Wednesday night to snap a five-game bowl losing streak.

The only milestone that eluded him was the winning touchdown: Drake Kulick fought for a 1-yard run late in the fourth quarter on his only carry of the game that clinched the victory for the Hawkeyes.

The Hawkeyes (8-5) had been the only team in the nation to lose a bowl game in each of the past four seasons. Iowa had last won a bowl game in 2010 and started the losing streak the next season.

It ended Wednesday in New York.

The Hawkeyes used their first sack of the game late in the fourth to spark the winning drive. Iowa defensive end Anthony Nelson hit Darius Wade, and Parker Hesse recovered a fumble at the BC 45.

Nate Stanley’s pass to Nate Wieting on a rollout was ruled a touchdown until a review showed the tight end was down at the 1. No worries. Kulick got the call over Wadley, who had 283 total yards in his final game, and barged through for the go-ahead score. The smattering of Iowa fans went wild and Josh Jackson gave them reason to stay on their feet when he sealed the victory with an intercepti­on.

“For our team to come out the way they did in the second half, it was a breakthrou­gh moment for us,” Iowa Coach Kirk Ferentz said.

Boston College (7-6) had nothing on its final drive, which ended an otherwise miserable day at Yankee Stadium. The Yankees’ postseason games in October seemed downright balmy compared to the kickoff temperatur­e of 23 degrees and a wind chill that made it feel like 12 degrees.

The stadium turf was akin to running on ice and the conditions forced players to change from cleats to sneakers to get some grip. The most common huddle was the one around the sideline heaters.

Boston College’s AJ Dillon found the field just to his liking, and ripped off a 66-yard run in the second quarter and had 126 yards rushing overall in the first half.

He had a 4-yard TD run in the first quarter. His monster half helped the Eagles hold a 281-56 edge in total yards, a staggering discrepanc­y that made little impact on the scoreboard.

“I thought we moved the ball well given what the conditions were,” Boston College Coach Steve Addazio said.

The Hawkeyes had two clutch plays that kept it close: Iowa safety Jake Gervase intercepte­d a pass on the third play of the game and returned it to the BC 6. The Hawkeyes got a field goal. And Wadley returned a kickoff 72 yards that led to a touchdown on Stanley’s 8-yard TD pass to Noah Fant. With a short field, Iowa was stout and kept it at 17-10 at halftime.

Wadley, a two-time 1,000 yard rusher, scored on a 5-yard run in the third and Miguel Recinos and Colton Lichtenber­g swapped field goals in the fourth to make it 20-20 with 8:09 left in the game.

 ?? AP/KATHY WILLENS ?? Iowa right tackle Sean Welsh (79) celebrates with the Pinstripe Bowl trophy. The Hawkeyes defeated Boston College 27-20 on a frigid night in New York.
AP/KATHY WILLENS Iowa right tackle Sean Welsh (79) celebrates with the Pinstripe Bowl trophy. The Hawkeyes defeated Boston College 27-20 on a frigid night in New York.

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