The Oklahoman

Taylor blocks field goal to preserve OSU win

- OSU Insider Scott Wright The Oklahoman USA TODAY NETWORK

BOISE, Idaho – Oklahoma State’s Jason Taylor II noticed that Boise State’s placekicke­r, Jonah Dalmas, didn’t kick the ball very high on one of his earlier field goal attempts.

So when the teams lined up for Boise State’s potential go-ahead field goal with just over two minutes left in the game, Taylor made sure to jump.

He deflected the kick to preserve Oklahoma State’s 21-20 win over Boise State on Saturday night at Albertsons Stadium.

“Really, I was just trying to make a play,” Taylor said. “I saw earlier in the game, he kicked it kinda low, and I thought I could’ve got it if I jumped. So this time, desperatio­n, just jumped up there trying to make a play.”

Taylor said he got three fingers on the ball — more than enough to make sure it didn’t make it to the goal post.

“My whole hand was numb for about five minutes after,” Taylor said with a laugh. “It was worth it.”

Coaches unclear on reason for late roughing penalty

Oklahoma State defensive end Brock Martin dove and sacked Boise State quarterbac­k Hank Bachmeier as he attempted to throw a pass late in the fourth quarter in what appeared to be a huge play for the Cowboy defense.

Instead, it turned out to be a big swing for Boise State.

The sack would have left Boise State with a second-and-long at the 35, but Martin was flagged for roughing the passer, setting up the Broncos with a first down at the 20. The defense held, setting up the field goal that was blocked by Taylor.

But the penalty remained a confusing one for OSU coaches.

After the game, Martin told defensive coordinato­r Jim Knowles that the flag was because the quarterbac­k was “defenseles­s in the pocket.”

“I don’t know what that means,” Knowles said. “I’m interested to see that one on film, because I have no idea what happened.”

OSU coach Mike Gundy was equally confused.

“A very unusual call,” he said. “I know what the call was, but I’m not sure how it happened. I wish I would’ve seen the replay.”

Defensive adjustment­s carried Cowboys in second half

After a first half in which his players were struggling to contain Boise State, OSU defensive coordinato­r Jim Knowles figures he rattled off 15 adjustment­s he wanted made at halftime.

“Really, I felt like it was a matter of catching up to what they were doing,” Knowles said. “They do a lot of challengin­g things. It’s a multiple offense with a lot of moving parts. We have a lot of veterans and there was never any panic.

“There was a lot about keeping the edge on our rush, making some coverage adjustment­s to get people over the top. There were some blitz adjustment­s and things we needed to do to keep the quarterbac­k in the pocket.”

Knowles credited Kolby Harvell-Peel for making an adjustment in coverage that resulted in his fourth-quarter intercepti­on.

Gundy excited by second-half time of possession

Gundy’s portion of the post-game press conference was finished and offensive coordinato­r Kasey Dunn was at the microphone answering questions when Gundy’s voice interrupte­d.

“Twenty-one minutes,” Gundy said, walking back in holding a stat sheet and pointing to the second-half time of possession.

“Nobody ever talks about that anymore, but that’s a big deal.”

The Cowboys had the ball for 21:09 in the second half to 8:51 for Boise State, keeping the OSU defense fresh and shortening the game.

The Pokes relied on a heavy dose of the run game, rushing it 35 times and throwing it only seven in the second half. The Cowboys also regularly huddled on offense to let the clock run more — something they rarely do in their typical up-tempo offense.

Defense overcame early exhaustion

With the Oklahoma State offense failing to stay on the field with a string of three-and-outs early in the game, the Cowboy defense found itself going back into the game over and over again to try to contain a fast-paced Boise State offense.

“Their tempo was good,” linebacker Malcolm Rodriguez said. “Sometimes we had a little trouble lining up.

“We just kept throwing punches and kept battling.”

The defensive line was rotating heavily when it could to try to battle the up-tempo pace of the Broncos.

“We could definitely feel their tempo,” defensive tackle Jayden Jernigan said. “We tried to practice it as best as we could throughout the week. The first two or three drives, they were moving the ball pretty fast. But after the start of the second quarter, they started slowing down a little bit and we started getting used to it.”

 ?? BRUCE WATERFIELD/OSU ATHLETICS ?? OSU's Jason Taylor (25) blocks a field-goal attempt from Boise State's Jonah Dalmas (35).
BRUCE WATERFIELD/OSU ATHLETICS OSU's Jason Taylor (25) blocks a field-goal attempt from Boise State's Jonah Dalmas (35).
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