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D12 SATURDAY’SLATESHOW Arizona holds off Iowa for signature 34-27 win COMINGUPNEXT BY STEVE YANDA No. 9 Iowamade a habit out of


achieving close comeback wins last season, and when the Hawkeyes scored 20 unanswered points to erase a sizable halftime deficit Saturday night againstNo. 24 Arizona it appeared they were en route to pulling off a similar feat once again. Butwithjust less thanfourmin-


utes remaining, Arizona quarter- backNick Foles threw a four-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver WilliamWright. TheWildcats tal- lied only those points in the sec- ond half, but it was enough to prevail for a 34-27 win, Arizona’s first at home over a nonconfer- ence opponent ranked in the top 10since 1989. Foles completed28 of 39passes


for303yardsandtwotouchdowns to lead the Wildcats in a contest that featured little in the way of offensive balance. The two teams combined to rush for 82 yards on 56 attempts. Indeed, big plays were what


PHOTOS BY CHRISTIAN PETERSEN/GETTY IMAGES


Triumphant quarterback Nick Foles is mobbed by teammates and fans after leading Arizona to a late touchdown to give theNo. 24 Wildcats their first home win over a nonconference top 10 team since 1989.


APTOP25


1.Alabama (55) 2.Ohio State (3) 3.Boise State 4.Texas 5.TCU


6.Oregon


7.Nebraska (1) 8.Florida


9.Oklahoma 10.Wisconsin 11.Arkansas 12.LSU 13.Utah


14.Auburn


15.South Carolina 16.Arizona 17.Stanford 18.Iowa


19.Miami 20.Penn State


21.West Virginia 22.Michigan


23.Michigan State 24.Missouri


25.Oklahoma State


Rec. Pts Pvs 3-0 1470 1 3-0 1410 2 2-0 1291 3 3-0 1251 4 3-0 1188 5 3-0 1181 6 3-0 1135 8 3-0 1092 7 3-0 1060 9 3-0 884 11 3-0 846 13 3-0 801 12 3-0 693 14 3-0 655 15 3-0 612 16 3-0 610 18 3-0 541 19 2-1 463 10 1-1 418 17 2-1 335 20 3-0 315 21 3-0 255 22 3-0 125 — 3-0 123 25 3-0 103 —


COACHES’TOP25


1.Alabama (53) 2.Ohio State (5) 3.Boise St. (1) 4.TCU


5.Oregon


6.Nebraska 7.Texas (1) 8.Oklahoma 9.Florida


10.Arkansas 11.Wisconsin


12.South Carolina 13.Utah


14.Arizona 15.LSU


16.Stanford 17.Auburn 18.Iowa


19.Miami 20.USC


21.Michigan


Ricky Stanzi threwan interception that was returned 85 yards for a touchdown in Iowa’s mistake-filled first half.


AUTO RACING


Bowyer ends drought, captures Chase opener


BY JENNA FRYER


loudon, n.h. — As the last seed in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship, Clint Bow- yer didn’t land on many lists of legitimate title contenders. Bowyer wasn’t mentioned in


the same breath as four-time defending champion Jimmie Johnson, and that spotlight on favorites Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick never drifted in his direction. Bowyer was pressure-free as


he headed into the Chase open- er at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, and with nothing to lose, he swung for the fences. BowyerdominatedSunday at


the Sylvania 300until a series of cautions found him trailing Tony Stewart over the closing laps of the Chase opener. With both drivers trying to nurse their sputteringfuel tanks tothe finish, Bowyer found himself in position to pounce when Stew- art’s tank ran dry a lap fromthe checkered flag. It snapped an 88-race losing


streak for Bowyer, jettisoned him from 12th in the standings to second, and sent the Richard Childress Racing driver into Round 2 of the Chase loving his championship chances. “Ihada lot of fun; itwas kind


of a relaxing weekend,” he said. “I don’t know if it’s going to be that way from now on. But I’m telling you, we launched our- selves into the pressure cooker early. You’ve got to be able to continue to have asmuch fun as we did this weekend. If we can do that,we cancontinue tohave thesuccessandrunat thispace.” In perhaps the best Chase


opener since the format’s 2004 debut, the championship con- tenders bounced all over the fieldSunday asdriver afterdriv- er faced various issues.


Chase for the Cup 1


2


Denny Hamlin Clint Bowyer


3 Kevin Harvick 4 Kyle Busch 5


Jeff Gordon


6 Kurt Busch 7 8


Jimmie Johnson Carl Edwards


9 Greg Biffle 10 Jeff Burton 11 Tony Stewart 12 Matt Kenseth


5,230 5,195 5,185 5,168 5,155 5,144 5,138 5,135 5,122 5,118 5,106 5,094


Hamlin, the points leader,


was spun by Carl Edwards on a mid-race restart and rallied from 22nd to finish second. Harvick, the points leader for most of the “regular season,” struggled through a series of bad pit stops to fall to 18th before finishing fifth. Johnson was derailed by a


loose rightwheel late inthe race to finish 25th, the lowest of the Chase drivers. And after stress- ing that New Hampshire was his biggest concern of the Chase, Matt Kenseth capped a weekend of struggles with a 23rd-place finish. Then therewas Stewart,who


tried to stretch his gas the final 92 laps in pursuit of the victory. When it backfired, he limped


his car home to a 24th-place finish that cost himfive spots in the standings. The Chase shifts this week-


end to Dover, Del., where Ham- lin takes a 35-point lead over Bowyer into one of his weakest race tracks. “It gives me somewhat of a


buffer,” he said. “We all know howDover is forme.” The race at the top of the


standings is still tight, even for Johnson, who dropped five spots to seventh. —Associated Press


GOLF


PGAEUROPEAN AUSTRIANOPEN


AT DIAMOND COUNTRY CLUB IN ATZENBRUGG, AUSTRIA YARDAGE: 7,242; PAR 72 X-WON ON FIRST PLAYOFF HOLE x-Jose Manuel Lara, Spain.................... 66-71-70-64 — David Lynn, Eng ............ 68-71-64-68 —


Danny Willett, England ......................... 69-69-65-71 —


Graeme McDowell, N.Ireland ....................... 69-68-68-69 —


Alexander Noren, Sweden ......................... 69-70-67-68 —


Damien McGrane, Ireland........................... 67-76-67-65 — Chris Gane, Eng............. 69-70-66-70 — C. Carranza, Arg............ 68-70-68-70 —


Raphael Jacquelin, France ........................... 69-69-70-69 —


Luis Claverie, Spain............................. 71-71-66-69 — Steve Surry, Eng........... 70-73-66-69 —


Richard Green, Australia....................... 72-72-69-65 —


Andrew Coltart, Scotland........................ 69-70-70-69 — Pelle Edberg, Swe. ....... 69-69-68-73 —


Todd Hamilton, U.S................................. 73-68-71-67 —


Terry Plikadaris, Australia....................... 66-75-71-67 —


G.Fernandez Castano, Spain.............. 68-72-70-69 —


Miguel Angel Jimenez, Spain.............. 72-68-70-69 — Sam Hutsby, Eng .......... 69-72-69-69 —


Alastair Forsyth, Scotland........................ 74-68-70-68 — Mikko Ilonen, Fin. ......... 73-72-65-70 — John Parry, Eng. ....... 69-67-72-72 —


SOCCER MLS


EASTERN CONFERENCE TEAM


W L T


Columbus .................. 13 7 5 New York .................. 12 8 5 Toronto FC .................. 8 10 7 Kansas City ................ 8 9 6 Chicago ....................... 6 9 8 Philadelphia ................ 6 12 6 New England .............. 7 14 3 D.C. ............................. 5 17 3


WESTERN CONFERENCE TEAM


Pts GF GA 44 41 31 30 26 24 24 18


33 32 24 24 28 27 24 17


27 27 28 24 31 39 41 39


TENNIS


DAVISCUP WORLDGROUP SEMIFINALS


Winners toWorldGroup finals,Nov. 26-28 FRANCE 5,ARGENTINA0


271 271 274


274 274 275


275 276


277 277


278 278


278 278 279


279 279 279


279 280 280


280


In Lyon, France Singles:MichaelLlodra,France,def.JuanMonaco,Argen- tina, 7-5, 4-6, 7-5, 6-3; Gael Monfils, France, def. David Nalbandian,Argentina, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3. Doubles:MichaelLlodraandArnaudClement,France,def. Eduardo Schwank and Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, 6-4, 7-5, 6-3. Reverse Singles: Gilles Simon, France, def. Eduardo Schwank, Argentina, 7-6 (7-5), 6-7 (8-6), 6-3; Arnaud Clement, France, def. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, 7-5, 6-1. SERBIA3, CZECHREPUBLIC 2


InBelgrade, Serbia Singles: Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, def. Viktor Troicki,Serbia,4-6,6-2,6-4,6-4;JankoTipsarevic,Serbia, def. Tomas Berdych, Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-2, 2-6, 7-6 (7-5). Doubles: Tomas Berdych and Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic,def.NovakDjokovicandNenadZimonjic,Serbia, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4, 6-1. Reverse Singles: Novak Djokovic, Serbia, def. Tomas Berdych,CzechRepublic,4-6,6-3,6-2,6-4; JankoTipsare- vic, Serbia, def. Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, 6-0, 7-6 (8-6), 6-4. PLAYOFFS


Winners to 2011WorldGroup UNITEDSTATES 3, COLOMBIA1


InBogota, Colombia Singles: Mardy Fish, United States,def. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4; Santiago Giraldo Colom- bia, def. SamQuerrey,United States 6-2, 6-4, 7-5. Doubles: Mardy Fish and John Isner, United States, def. Robert Farah and Carlos Salamanca, Colombia, 6-4, 6-4, 6-7 (7-5), 6-3. ReverseSingles:MardyFish,UnitedStates,def.Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, 4-6, 8-6; Alejandro Falla, Colombia, vs. SamQuerrey,United States, ccd., rain.


OTHERTEAMRESULTS -WORLDGROUP


India 3,Brazil 2 Australia 2,Belgium1 Kazakhstan 5, Switzerland 0 Romania 5, Ecuador 0 Germany 5, SouthAfrica 0 Sweden 3, Italy 2 Austria 3, Israel 2 WTABELL CHALLENGE INTERNATIONAL


InQuebec City Championship Tamira Paszek, Austria, def. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States, 7-6 (8-6), 2-6, 7-5. Doubles Championship Sofia Arvidsson and Johanna Larsson, Sweden, def. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States, and Barbora Zahlavova Strycova (1), Czech Republic, 6-1, 2-6, 10-6 tiebreak.


W L T


Los Angeles .............. 15 5 5 Real Salt Lake .......... 13 4 8 Dallas ........................ 10 2 12 Colorado ................... 10 7 7 San Jose ................... 10 7 6 Seattle ...................... 10 9 6 Chivas USA ................. 7 13 4 Houston ...................... 6 13 5


SUNDAY'S RESULT Kansas City 2, Chivas USA 0


SATURDAY'S RESULTS


Los Angeles 2, D.C. United 1 Colorado 3, New England 0 Real Salt Lake 1, Chicago 0 Seattle FC 4, Columbus 0 Toronto FC 2, Houston 1


washingtonpost.com


Pts GF GA 50 47 42 37 36 36 25 23


38 38 31 32 25 30 25 29


19 16 19 24 23 29 31 40


COLLEGES FIELD HOCKEY


American 2, James Madison 1 Bridgewater 2, St. Mary’s (Md.) 1 Maryland 2, Massachusetts 0 SOCCER


WOMEN


American 1, UMBC 0 James Madison 1, Navy 0 George Washington 2, Delaware 1 West Virginia 1, Virginia 0 TENNIS


MEN


Catholic 9, McDaniel 0 WOMEN


Catholic 9, McDaniel 0 GOLF


MARYLAND INTERCOLLEGIATE


1. Penn State, 844; 2. UNC Wilmington, 852; 3. Xavier, 856; 5.Maryland, 867; 8.GeorgeMason, 889; 8. William & Mary, 889; 11. Navy, 892; 12. James Madison, 894; 14. GeorgeWashington, 907.


22.West Virginia 23.Penn State 24.Oregon State 25.Michigan State


Rec. Pts Pvs 3-0 1,492 1 3-0 1,435 2 2-0 1,333 3 3-0 1,280 4 3-0 1,238 5 3-0 1,175 8 3-0 1,164 6 3-0 1,114 7 3-0 1,044 10 2-0 903 12 3-0 803 11 3-0 739 13 3-0 703 14 3-0 663 24 3-0 654 15 3-0 606 19 3-0 600 16 2-1 482 9 1-1 472 17 3-0 414 18 3-0 291 20 3-0 258 21 2-1 198 22 1-1 3-0


buried Iowa in the first half, and they were what revived the Hawkeyes in the second. On Iowa’s first offensive series, Arizo- na wide receiver David Roberts blockedaHawkeyespuntattempt. Three plays later, the Wildcats helda 7-0 lead. On Iowa’s ensuing possession,


Hawkeyes quarterback Ricky Stanzi threw an interception to TrevinWade thatwas returned 85 yards for a touchdown. Arizona answered Iowa’s lone score of the first half with a 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by Travis Cobb. The kickoff return “was tough


towatch fromthe sidelines,” Iowa defensive end Broderick Binns told reporters afterward. “Iowa is not normally known for having a lot ofproblems onspecial teams.” In fact, special teams and de-


75 25 45 —


fense were what sparked Iowa’s second-half comeback. The Hawkeyes set up one score by re- covering amuffed punt at theAri- zona18-yardline.OntheWildcats’ next drive, Binns nabbed a pass attempt at the line of scrimmage and returned the interception 20 yards for a touchdown. But the extra point attempt was blocked, and Arizona would go on to win the game. “I’m speechless right now try-


ing to figure out what just hap- pened out there,” Arizona Coach


Boise State-Oregon State, SEC battles looming large


A pair of Southeastern Conference battles and one final opportunity


for Boise State to boost its BCS credentials highlight next weekend’s docket of college football games. One week after escaping Georgia with a last-minute victory, No. 10


ArkansaswillhostNo. 1Alabama.Last season,Alabama’sdefense stifled the Razorbacks in a 28-pointwin in Tuscaloosa. But led by quarterback RyanMallettandthenation’sNo.3passingoffense,Arkansaslookstoput upmore of a fight this time around. FreshoffanovertimevictoryagainstClemson,No. 17Auburnwillhost


No. 12 South Carolina,which is looking to unseat Florida’s recent reign atoptheSECEastDivision.TheGamecocksareledbydynamicfreshman tailbackMarcusLattimore,whohas talliedfive touchdowns. As for No. 3 Boise State, the Broncos will need a strong showing at


home against No. 24 Oregon State next weekend. The Beavers likely represent the final top 25 opponent Boise State will face in the regular season, a point of contention for some critics as the Broncos continue their attempt to break into the BCS national championship game. Boise State’s primary task will be keeping a sharp eye on Oregon State junior tailback JacquizzRodgers,who is averaging 4.9 yardsper carry. —SteveYanda


NEWS&NOTES


Spartans’ Dantonio suffers heart attack Michigan State Coach Mark Dantonio was hospitalized after


suffering a mild heart attack shortly after the Spartans defeated Notre Dame in overtime, 34-31, Saturday night. A stent was inserted into a blocked blood vessel that leads to Dantonio’s heart. Offensive coordina- tor Don Treadwell will take over the team while Dantonio, 54, recovers. Michigan State lined up to kick a 46-yard field goal that could have


forced a second overtime against Notre Dame, but holder Aaron Bates instead threw a touchdown pass to tight end Charlie Gantt. Big East officials confirmed Sunday thatMichigan State got the final play off in time, something that wasn’t clear Saturday night. The win vaulted the Spartans into the Associated Press top 25 poll atNo. 25. . . . Miami quarterback Jacory Harris told reporters Sunday that he


received at least one racially motivated hate message on Twitter following theHurricanes’ 36-24 loss Sept. 11 at Ohio State.Harris threw four interceptions in that game. According to Harris, the person who sent the message stated that


Miami should not have “a black quarterback.” The school told its football players last week to stop using Twitter. Harris, whose Twitter account has since been deleted, said he could notrememberif the tweet contained any threats.


—Steve Yanda


Mike Stoops told reporters Satur- day after the game. “When [the Wildcats] were challenged, they challenged [the Hawkeyes] right back.” With the loss, Iowa’s national


title hopes were all but dashed. The Hawkeyes will have opportu- nities to redeem themselves against top 25 foes during Big Ten play, but unless they run the table it is unlikely they’ll be able to


SCOREBOARD LOCALGOLF


Senior A TeamMatch Congressional 12, Crofton 0 CareerWomen Westwood 39.5, Hidden Creek 32.5 Argyle -- Kyle Stoughwonthe men’s club championship. Carol Davies Lillie won the ladies’ club championship. Helen Sedor won the nine-hole event. Belle Haven -- Bill Howard won the men’s senior club championship. Gen. Minter Alexander won first net. Bretton Woods — Jim Stephons won the match play championship. Jingping Yang won the ladies’ champion- ship. Bryce —Don Goddard and Mark Montrey won the Bryce classic. Chevy Chase —Josh Hartman won the Horstmann cup. Pressie Hoffman won the Sheridan cup. Evergreen -- Andy Harris won the club championship. Rebecca Compton won the ladies’ club championship. Fairfax —Steve Marino and Don Gibson won the men’s four-ball championship, 3 and 1. Fauquier Springs – In the two-person points tourna- ment, Mike Smith and Randall Jones won first gross with 61 points. Dick Spears and Jim Peters won first net with 82 points. In the ladies’ division, Wendy Edwards and Karen Mesick won first gross with 40 points. Helen King and Maggie Zinser won first net with 75 points. International — In the president’s cup, Mike Howell wonlow gross with 140. JoeyCushmanwonlow net with 141. In the women’s division, Jamie Brewer won low gross with 76. Doris Trussell won low net with 52. Trump National — In the adult-child championship, Dayton and TrevorMacowonlow gross. Barry and Taylor Culman won low net. Mt. Vernon — In the mixed couples club championship, Dave Bennett and Linda DiVall won first gross with 67. Patti Davidson and Marty Falk won first net with 62. Patuxent -- Sandy Clatworthy and Carrie Lawn won the Beth Byrne Memorial Tournament.


AUTORACING


NASCARSPRINTCUP SYLVANIA300


At New Hampshire Motor Speedway In Loudon, N.H. Lap length: 1.058 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (2) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 300 laps 2. (22) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 300, 3. (4) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 300, 4. (32) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 300, 5. (27) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 300, 6. (17) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 300, 7. (7) David Reutimann, Toyota, 300, 8. (24) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 300, 9. (9) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 300, 10. (15) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 300, 11. (10) Carl Edwards, Ford, 300 12. (6) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 300 13. (12) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 300 14. (21) Kasey Kahne, Ford, 300 15. (13) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 300 16. (5) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 300 17. (14) Greg Biffle, Ford, 300 18. (1) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 300 19. (20) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 300 20. (16) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 300 21. (19) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 300 22. (11) David Ragan, Ford, 300 23. (33) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 300 24. (3) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 300 25. (25) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 299 26. (29) Robby Gordon, Toyota, 299, 27. (37) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 299 28. (8) Paul Menard, Ford, 299 29. (26) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 298 30. (23) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 298 31. (30) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 297 32. (40) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 295, 33. (39) David Gilliland, Ford, 295 34. (41) Tony Raines, Ford, 295 35. (31) Joey Logano, Toyota, accident, 256 36. (28) Scott Speed, Toyota, 213 37. (42) Andy Lally, Chevrolet, brakes, 138 38. (18) Casey Mears, Toyota, vibration, 93 39. (43) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, electrical, 89 40. (35) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, clutch, 60 41. (36) Mike Bliss, Toyota, brakes, 55 42. (34) Landon Cassill, Toyota, brakes, 40 43. (38) Michael McDowell, Dodge, engine, 29


COLLEGEFOOTBALL SATURDAY’S LATE GAMES


NO.6TEXAS24, TEXASTECH14 Texas ...................................... 14


Texas Tech ............................... 7


re-insert themselves intotheBowl Championship Series national championshipdiscussion. Arizona, on the other hand,


nowhas a signature victory as the Wildcats continue their emer- gence onto the national scene. They begin their Pacific-10 slate nextweekwhen they host Califor- nia,which suffered a 21-point loss Friday atNevada. yandas@washpost.com


EZ SU


KLMNO COLLEGE REWIND


MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010


0 7


3 0


7 — 24 0 — 14


Tex: Whittaker 7 run (Tucker kick), 13:16 first. Tex: Davis 7 pass from Gilbert (Tucker kick), 8:41 first. TT: Phillips 87 interception return (M.Williams kick), 1:39 first. TT: Leong 15 pass from Potts (M.Williams kick), 11:52 second. Tex: FG Tucker 27, 8:39 third. Tex: Matthews 1 pass from Gilbert (Tucker kick), 9:26 fourth.


Texas First Downs .......................................... 18


Texas Tech 11


Rushes-Yards ................................. 43-93 18-(-14) Passing ................................................ 227


Comp-Att-Int ............................... 21-36-3 21-36-2 Return Yards ....................................... 131 Punts-Avg. ..................................... 6-42.3 Fumbles-Lost ...................................... 1-1 Penalties-Yards .............................. 11-95 Time Of Possession ......................... 37:44


158 103


8-43.3 3-1


8-98 22:16 RUSHING


Texas: Whittaker 15-55, C.Johnson 17-35, Monroe 1-14, Newton 1-13, Roberson 1-2, M.Williams 1-(minus 3), Kirkendoll 2-(minus 10), Gilbert 5-(minus 13).Texas Tech: Batch 7-37, Stephens 4-7, Sheffield 2-(minus 8), Team 2-(minus 21), Potts 3-(minus 29).


PASSING


Texas: Gilbert 21-36-3-227.Texas Tech: Potts 21-35-2- 158, Sheffield 0-1-0-0.


RECEIVING Texas: Kirkendoll 6-122, Davis 6-45, Goodwin 4-25, M.Williams 2-25, G.Smith 1-5, Whittaker 1-4,Matthews 1-1.Texas Tech: Lewis 6-42, Leong 4-34, Franks 3-39, Torres 3-17, Stephens 2-12, Douglas 2-8, Zouzalik 1-6.


NAVY37, LOUISIANATECH23


Navy ......................................... 7 Louisiana Tech ......................... 3 20


9 14 0


7 — 37 0 — 23


Navy: Stukel 4 run (Buckley kick), 7:06 first. LaT: FG Nelson 25, 3:26 first. LaT: FG Nelson 36, 12:38 second. LaT: Fitte 2 run (Nelson kick), 9:08 second. Navy: Howell 25 pass from R.Dobbs (kick failed), 6:53 second. LaT: FG Nelson 42, 5:09 second. Navy: FG Buckley 37, 3:18 second. LaT: Ikharo 8 pass from Cameron (Nelson kick), :29 second. Navy: R.Dobbs 1 run (Buckley kick), 9:55 third. Navy: Proctor 7 run (Buckley kick), :31 third. Navy: Murray 17 run (Buckley kick), 11:09 fourth.


Navy


First Downs .......................................... 24 Rushes-Yards ............................... 61-297 Passing ................................................ 219


Louisiana Tech 21


32-154 251


Comp-Att-Int ................................. 8-14-1 31-43-2 Return Yards ........................................... 0 Punts-Avg. ..................................... 3-36.3 Fumbles-Lost ...................................... 0-0 Penalties-Yards ................................ 2-15 Time Of Possession ......................... 34:21


2


3-44.0 1-1


4-25 25:39 RUSHING


Navy: Greene 6-87, R.Dobbs 19-67, Murray 14-62, Proctor 6-24, Teich 5-23, Stukel 4-15, Byrd 4-13, Howell 1-8, Team 2-(minus 2).Louisiana Tech: Creer 13-90, Holley 6-28, Fitte 4-21, Cameron 8-15, Molton 1-0.


PASSING


Navy: R.Dobbs 8-14-1-219.Louisiana Tech: Cameron 31-43-2-251.


RECEIVING Navy: Greene 3-58, G.Jones 2-68, Turner 1-63, Howell 1-25, Murray 1-5.Louisiana Tech: Ikharo 10-88, Fitte 5-37, Casey 4-45, Holley 4-20, A.Paige 2-16, Jackson 2-11, Molton 2-5, Harper 1-20, Creer 1-9.


NAVY - SCHEDULE


Oct. 2 at Air Force, 2:30 p.m. Oct. 9 at Wake Forest, TBA Oct. 16 SMU, 3:30 p.m.


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