Arizona rallies to edge Nevada

Arizona’s Tyler Slavin falls into the end zone with a touchdown catch to tie the score with 19 seconds left in Saturday’s New Mexico Bowl against Nevada. John Bonano kicked the extra point to give the Wildcats a 49-48 victory

Arizona’s Tyler Slavin falls into the end zone with a touchdown catch to tie the score with 19 seconds left in Saturday’s New Mexico Bowl against Nevada. John Bonano kicked the extra point to give the Wildcats a 49-48 victory

Sunday, December 16, 2012

— In charge nearly the entire way, Duke Williams and Nevada let the New Mexico Bowl spin out of control at the end.

Matt Scott threw two short touchdown passes in the final 46 seconds and college football’s postseason started with a wild one when Arizona recovered a late onside kick and rallied past the Wolf Pack 49-48 Saturday.

Nevada led 21-0 in the first quarter and was ahead 45-28 entering the fourth quarter. The Wolf Pack (7-6) had a chance to seal the victory, but a hard-spinning kick bounced off Williams’ chest and was covered by Arizona’s Marquis Flowers.

Scott then tossed a 2-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Slavin with 19 seconds left.

“You come down to the last two minutes or whatever it was and we don’t make a play,” Nevada Coach Chris Ault said. “It happened. It’s reality.”

“You look at that and you feel, I’m just sick for those seniors. There’s no question about it. I’m sick for this whole football team. We had an opportunity to win a football game and we didn’t,” he said.

Nevada led 48-35 with 1:48 left after Allen Hardison made a 25-yard field goal.

Arizona (8-5) quickly scored a touchdown, setting up the onside try. Wildcats kicker John Bonano grounded it fast at Williams.

Earlier, Williams made an interception at the Wolf Pack 8. This time, no such luck.

“The ball bounced 2 feet away from me,” he said. “It was coming hot. I just figured I’d make the play and when it counted, I wasn’t able to make it. It was coming hot. The ball was coming real fast. Two feet away from me, it bounced up, popped up and bounced off my shoulder pad.”

Arizona was still 51 yards away from the end zone without a timeout, Wolf Pack linebacker Albert Rosette pointed out.

“If we recover it, the game is over,” he said. “They got it, but they still have to go down and score a touchdown. They don’t have any timeouts. The game is not over. We can still keep them out of the endzone. It’s not like they can kick a field goal. It’s hard to see them recover, but it wasn’t the game.”

Matt Scott passed to Garic Wharton for 28 yards and Austin Hill for 21 yards. The Wildcats completed the improbable comeback with Scott’s short throw to Slavin.

“They scored 14 points in less than two minutes,” Rosette said. “I don’t know. I’m still in shock right now. We made some mistakes there at the end. We still felt we were in it. We still felt that we were going to win that game and to lose like that, it hurts.”

Nevada quarterback Cody Fajardo finished with 256 yards passing and three touchdowns, while also rushing for 140 yards and another score.

Wolf Pack running back Stefphon Jefferson gained 180 yards and scored twice.

Two of Fajardo’s scoring tosses went to tight end Zach Sudfeld, both in the first half as Nevada took a big lead.

Arizona came back behind running back Ka’Deem Carey, who finished with 172 yards and three touchdowns. Scott threw for 382 yards and three scores and also ran for one.

“It was an unbelievable game,” Sudfeld said. “Just the momentum swings back and forth. Just big swings on both sides. It was a crazy game to play in.”

FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL UTAH STATE 41, TOLEDO 15

BOISE, Idaho - Kerwynn Williams ran for 235 yards and three touchdowns and No. 22 Utah State won a bowl game for the first time in nearly 20 years, beating Toledo in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl.

The victory capped the best season in Utah State history. The Aggies finished 11-2, won the Western Athletic Conference title outright and had their first bowl victory since 1993.

Chuckie Keeton scored on a 62-yard run to put Utah State up 7-3, and Williams, the game’s MVP, sparked a 28-point fourth quarter for Utah State when he broke through the defense and raced 63 yards for a touchdown to put the Aggies up 20-9. Williams, who had 18 carries, followed that with touchdown runs of 5 and 25 yards. Keeton ran for 92 yards and was 21-of-31 passing for 229 yards.

Toledo (9-4) was able to move the ball and made five trips inside the red zone. But penalties and miscues forced the Rockets to settle for Jeremiah Detmer’s three field goals.

The Rockets’ only touchdown came when Bernard Reedy returned a fourth quarter kickoff 87 yards. Reedy was the only big producer on a Toledo offense held to 315 total yards. Reedy had 51 yards rushing and caught six passes for 62 yards.

Sports, Pages 34 on 12/16/2012