South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

No. 10 Nittany Lions survive 45-38 in OT

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STATE COLELGE, Pa. — Amani Oruwariye intercepte­d a Zac Thomas pass in the end zone and No. 10 Penn State held on to beat Appalachia­n State 45-38 in overtime on Saturday, exactly 11 years after the Mountainee­rs stunned Michigan in one of the biggest upsets in college football history.

Miles Sanders rushed 19 times for 91 yards with two touchdowns including the go-ahead score in overtime for the Nittany Lions (1-0). But Penn State let a 31-17 lead evaporate when Appalachia­n State scored on three straight possession­s over 5:53 in the fourth quarter and things were tense in Happy Valley.

Penn State quarterbac­k Trace McSorley, who completed 21 of 36 passes for 230 yards and ran for two scores, led a game-tying drive that ended with a 15-yard touchdown pass to KJ Hamler with 42 seconds left.

Thomas, who returned from injury to lead his team's comeback, completed 25 of 38 passes for 270 yards, threw for two touchdowns and ran for another for Appalachia­n State (0-1). Jalin Moore ran 18 times for 88 yards and a touchdown and Malik Williams caught two touch- downs for the Mountainee­rs.

In 2007, it was No. 5. Michigan fighting for its life at home against a Division I-AA team and when Corey Lynch blocked Michigan's field-goal attempt it sealed a 34-32 win. No Division IAA team had ever beaten a team ranked in The Associated Press Top 25 poll be- tween 1989 and 2006, and it's unlikely it had ever happened before. Afterward, the AP changed the way it conducted its poll, allowing schools from all divisions to be eligible to receive votes.

Fast forward to 2018 and it was another storied Big Ten team on its heels against the Mountainee­rs, a Sun Belt Conference pow- erhouse that went 8-4 a year ago

Mountainee­rs kicker Chandler Stanton added a field goal but missed a 56-yarder wide right with 20 seconds left. Jake Pinegar kicked a 32-yard field goal for Penn State to tie the game 10-10 just before halftime.

No. 17 West Virginia 40, Tennessee 14: Will Grier got his Heisman Trophy campaign off to an impressive start, throwing for 429 yards and five touchdowns as No. 17 West Virginia defeated Tennessee in Charlotte, N.C., in a game delayed for more than an hour at halftime due to lightning.

Leading 13-7 at halftime, the Associated Press preseason All-American turned up the heat in the third quarter, connecting on touchdown passes of 33 yards to David Sills, 28 yards to Gary Jennings, and 14 yards to Kennedy McCoy as the Mountainee­rs opened a 33-14 lead.

Grier, who grew up in the Charlotte area and once threw for 10 TD passes in a high school playoff game, was 14 of 19 for 275 yards and four TDs in the second half.

Sills had seven grabs for 140 yards and two touchdowns after 18 TD receptions last season.

 ?? CHRIS KNIGHT/AP ?? Penn State’s Juwan Johnson (84) makes a catch in front of Appalachia­n State’s Clifton Duck (4) during the second half of Saturday’s game in State College, Pa.
CHRIS KNIGHT/AP Penn State’s Juwan Johnson (84) makes a catch in front of Appalachia­n State’s Clifton Duck (4) during the second half of Saturday’s game in State College, Pa.

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