Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Bulldogs handle threat from Irish

- By Associated Press

ATHENS, Ga. — Jake Fromm threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Lawrence Cager early in the fourth quarter and No. 3 Georgia, getting a tougher fight than many expected, held off No. 7 Notre Dame 23-17 on a raucous Saturday night between the hedges, a result that could have ramificati­ons all the way to the College Football Playoff.

The Bulldogs (4-0) trailed 10-7 at halftime but turned the momentum when redshirt freshman Divaad Wilson intercepte­d a pass by Ian Book deep in Notre Dame territory. The Fromm-to-Cager combinatio­n gave Georgia a 23-10 lead, but the Fighting Irish (2-1) had a chance at the end.

Book’s 4-yard touchdown pass to Chase Claypool cut the deficit with 3 minutes, 12 seconds remaining, the Notre Dame defense held and Book got the ball back at his own 48 after a poor punt with just under two minutes to go.

The Irish got as far as the Georgia 38, but no further. It ended with Book zigzagging on a desperate scramble before hurling up a long pass that fell incomplete, denying Notre Dame the signature win over a top opponent it so desperatel­y needs.

With Georgia up 13-10 after a pair of field goals by Ro d r i g o B l a n ke n s h i p, Cager hauled in a 36-yard pass along the sideline to push the Bulldogs into the red zone. Then, on thirdand-7 from the 15, Notre Dame brought a blitz and Fromm coolly lofted one toward Cager along the left side of the end zone.

A half-foot taller than cornerback Troy Pride Jr., the 6-foot-5 graduate transfer leaped high to make the catch and tapped down his right foot before tumbling out of the bounds to give Georgia a commanding 2010 lead with 13:19 remaining.

Desperate to cut into the deficit, Notre Dame called a flea-flicker play. But when Book was pressured out of the pocket and let go of a pass on the run, J.R. Reed dove in front of the intended receiver to make a brilliant intercepti­on as he slid into the Irish bench.

Reed sprinted all the way across the field, hopped atop the Georgia bench and bounced for the record crowd of more than 93,000 at Sanford Stadium while wearing shiny, Road Warrior-style shoulder pads that go to the latest Bulldog defender to get a turnover. It led to Blankenshi­p’s third field goal and a seemingly comfortabl­e lead for the Bulldogs.

A two -touchdown underdog, Notre Dame took advantage of a huge turnover by Georgia punt returner Tyler Simmons to grab the lead. Attempting to make a fair catch, he fumbled the ball away and Claypool recovered for the Irish at the Georgia 8 to set up Book’s 1-yard touchdown pass to Cole Kmet.

Georgia’s D’Andre Swift scored on a 3-yard run, but Jonathan Doerer booted a 27-yard field goal on the final play of the first half.

The takeaway: Notre Dame drops to 8-29 against top-10 teams since Lou Holtz left after the 1996 season, but this still seemed like a step in the right direction for the Irish. But Book’s two intercepti­ons were a killer, and the Irish also seemed to struggle with the noise judging by five false-start penalties. … Georgia, after three straight blowouts, got the test it needed. It wasn’t as dominating as some were expecting, but the win should look good on the resume.

PITTSBURGH — Wide receiver Aaron Matthews hit quarterbac­k Kenny Pickett on a 3-yard, fourthdown touchdown pass with 56 seconds remaining and Pittsburgh stunned No. 15 UCF 35-34 on Saturday.

The Panthers (2-2) ended UCF’s 25-game regular-season winning streak on a play head coach Pat Narduzzi called the “Pitt Special” in a nod to the Philadelph­ia Eagles, who ran a similar play two seasons ago in their

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