Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Black Knights win again

Earn hardware for 1st time since 1996

- By Mike Cranston

Associated Press

PHILADELPH­IA — Just when you thought ArmyNavy couldn’t get any more intense, it snowed.

Then 60 minutes of bruising football came down to squinting through that snow to see where a long field goal attempt would land.

Wide left. Cue the celebratio­n for Army. The Black Knights are back.

Bennett Moehring narrowly missed a 48-yard field goal on the final play and Army held off Navy, 14-13, Saturday at Lincoln Financial Field to win the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy for the first time since 1996.

Army (9-3) earned its second win in a row against Navy (6-6) after 14 consecutiv­e losses in the series.

“We’ve got seniors in there that went 4-8 as freshmen and 2-10 as sophomores,” Army coach Jeff Monken said. “Now they’ve won 17 games in the last two years. Really an incredible change.”

After trailing most of the game, Ahmad Bradshaw pushed over the goal line on a quarterbac­k sneak with 5:10 remaining and Blake Wilson kicked the extra point to put Army ahead.

But Navy’s spectacula­r Malcolm Perry wasn’t finished.

The quarterbac­k, who ran for 250 yards on 30 carries and a 68-yard score in the second quarter, led Navy to the Army 31 with 0:03 left.

Navy elected to try a field goal, and after about 10 players used their feet to clear the steady snow on a timeout, Moehring’s kick was long enough but drifted barely left.

“Came up a couple of feet short,” Navy coach Ken Niumatalol­o said. “This is a great rivalry. It was another classic game.”

Army cut its deficit in the series to 60-51-7 in a matchup of bowl-bound teams. The Black Knights claimed the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy thanks to an earlier victory over Air Force.

“That trophy hadn’t been in our possession for 21 years,” said Monken, in his fourth season. “To be able to accomplish that with this team is a great source of pride.”

In a game that included only three passes — Army completed its lone toss — the Black Knights produced a 13play, 65-yard drive to take a late lead. John Trainor tiptoed the sideline for 8 yards one play before Bradshaw’s 12th touchdown of the season.

Bradshaw also scored the go-ahead touchdown a year ago in the victory.

“I actually don’t think I would’ve gotten in if not for my fullback and my offensive line,” said Bradshaw, who rushed for 94 yards on 21 carries. “I kind of stopped, but I felt like [fullback] Andy [Davidson] picked me up and kind of walked me into the end zone.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States