Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Northweste­rn loses 4th straight

- By Travis Johnson

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — As rain pounded the field during warmups, Penn State’s PJ Mustipher found himself in his natural element.

Frolicking shirtless, the 320-pound defensive tackle high-stepped and skipped, grinning ear to ear as he kicked up grass and dirt an hour before No. 11 Penn State outlasted Northweste­rn 17-7 in the slop on Saturday.

Penn State’s defensive captain stuffed Northweste­rn quarterbac­k Ryan Hilinski at the goal line early in the fourth quarter to snuff out the Wildcats’ second-half momentum, and Penn State scored 14 points off three turnovers to overcome five giveaways.

“It was a grimy game,” Mustipher said. “We executed our defense, made the plays we were supposed to and that’s about it.”

Nick Singleton ran for 87 yards and a touchdown on 21 carries, Sean Clifford completed 10 of 20 passes for 140 yards with a touchdown and Kaytron Allen added 86 rushing yards to help Penn State (5-0, 2-0 Big Ten) stay unbeaten heading into an off week.

The Wildcats (1-4, 1-1) lost their fourth straight after a season-opening victory against Nebraska in Dublin.

Both teams struggled early, combining for six turnovers in the first half.

Penn State coughed up the ball twice on its first three drives. Xander Mueller recovered a Singleton fumble and Bryce Gallagher intercepte­d Clifford, but Penn State’s defense kept the Wildcats from taking advantage.

Northweste­rn gained just 13 yards in the first quarter and gave the ball back when Ji’Ayir Brown intercepte­d Hilinski and returned it to midfield.

Clifford led a quick five-play drive from there and found tight end Brenton Strange open in the flat. Strange leaped over a defender at the goal line to make it 7-0 late in the first.

Hilinski didn’t complete his first pass until 10 minutes before halftime. Shortly afterward, a bad snap bounced at his feet, and Penn State defensive end Nick Tarburton hopped on it.

The Nittany Lions turned that giveaway into points, too, when Singleton plowed in from 2 yards seven plays later.

Singleton’s up-and-down day continued, with the freshman fumbling again Penn State’s next possession when Rod Heard drilled him behind the line of scrimmage.

Cameron Mitchell recovered for the Wildcats. But they couldn’t block Tarburton.

Penn State’s end hit Hilinski two plays later to force another fumble. Linebacker Curtis Jacobs recovered to keep the score 14-0 at halftime.

The Nittany Lions held the Wildcats to just 31 rushing yards. Northweste­rn running back Evan Hull, who entered leading the country in yards from scrimmage, finished with 96.

Kicker Jake Pinegar added to Penn State’s lead with a 38-yard field goal with 14:29 left.

Final shot: Hilinski got into a rhythm in the

fourth quarter before Mustipher shut him down.

Northweste­rn’s quarterbac­k went 5-for-9 with 54 yards to steer his offense to the Penn State 1 on the Wildcats’ 11th possession of the day. Instead of opting for a field-goal attempt that could have made it 17-10 with just less than 12 minutes left, head coach Pat Fitzgerald tried to sneak Hilinski over the goal line.

“That was the turning point in the game, to be honest with you,” Fitzgerald said.

No excuses: Franklin was not pleased with his team’s turnovers, especially after the Nittany Lions entered the game second in the country at plus-eight in turnover margin.

In addition to Singleton’s two fumbles, Allen and Keyvone Lee also lost the ball.

“I’m never going to allow the weather to be an excuse,” Franklin said. “It doesn’t matter. We have to protect the football.”

Up next: Northweste­rn plays host to Wisconsin on Oct. 8.

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