Tony Pike threw two touchdown passes in a
limited role in his return, and Isaiah Pead ran for 175 yards and a score, as
fifth-ranked Cincinnati held off West Virginia, 24-21, to keep its perfect
season alive.
The Bearcats moved to 10-0 for the first time in school history, improving on
the 9-0 start accomplished by the current and 1951 squads. They also moved to
6-0 in the Big East and extended their regular season winning streak to 16
games.
Pike was 2-of-4 for 16 yards, as the majority of the snaps went to Zach
Collaros, who finished 17-of-24 for 205 yards with an interception. Cincinnati
head coach Brian Kelly opted to start Collaros after he impressed in three
starts in place of Pike, who is still recovering from a forearm injury.
"I think at the end of the day, Tony knew this wasn't going to be his game in
totality. He was focused on that," said Kelly, who added that Pike is on track
to start against Illinois on November 27.
Armon Binns and D.J. Woods caught the touchdown passes for the Bearcats, who
had never before beaten West Virginia at Nippert Stadium in seven tries.
Jarrett Brown was 17-for-25 for 188 yards and a TD for the Mountaineers (7-3,
3-2), who fell off the pace in the Big East race with their second loss in
three contests.
Brown also ran for a score, as did Ryan Clarke, while Brad Starks had the lone
touchdown catch with 39 seconds remaining, bringing West Virginia within three
points. But Binns successfully recovered the onside kick.
The Bearcats drove 73 yards for a score on its first possession of the game.
Pead powered the march with four runs for 38 yards before Collaros found Ben
Guidugli for 18 yards to set up a 1st-and-goal. On the next play, Pike
threaded a pass to Binns in the center of the end zone as Cincinnati took a
7-0 lead.
"At first, it caught me off guard," Collaros said of the rotation. "After the
touchdowns, we were messing on the sidelines that it was like basketball with
the assist. As long as we score, it doesn't matter to me that it happens."
But the Bearcats struggled with mistakes in the first half, and on their next
possession, tight end Adrien Robinson fumbled after making a catch.
The Mountaineers recovered near midfield, and needed seven plays to find the
end zone. Brown ran it across the goal line from eight yards out with 3:19
left in the quarter.
Early in the second quarter, Cincinnati set up for a 34-yard field goal, but
Jake Rogers' attempt was wide left, and again West Virginia took advantage of
the turnover.
The Mountaineers went 80 yards in eight plays, as Brown kept the drive going
with a 24-yard pass to Alric Arnett on 3rd-and-12. Clarke capped the march
with a 37-yard TD run, putting WVU on top 14-7 with 8:05 left in the half.
Cincinnati responded with its own scoring drive. The Bearcats faced a 1st-
and-25 at the WVU 29, but Collaros found Binns for 13 yards, then ran for 14
to gain the first down. Pead got into the end zone on the next play.
The Bearcats had another possession later in the half, but Collaros was
intercepted, and it was a 14-14 game going to the break.
Cincinnati had the ball first in the second half and drove for a score to
regain the lead for good. After Pead began the march with four consecutive
rushes, Collaros took over and completed three consecutive passes for 38
yards, the last a 22-yard pass to Woods to get the ball to the six-yard line.
Pike threw a two incompletions before hitting Woods for a TD and a 21-14 lead.
The score remained that way going to the fourth, and WVU had a chance to tie
the contest with a long drive. The Mountaineers used the running game to get
across midfield, and Brown ran for 23 yards on a 3rd-and-12 to reach the
Cincinnati 26.
But the drive stalled there, and WVU went for it on 4th-and-8. Brown, though,
was hurried by Curtis Young and threw incomplete to turn the ball over.
Cincinnati then drove down the field and went up 24-14 with 2:08 left on
Rogers' 38-yarder.
The Mountaineers managed to score in the remaining time, going 64 yards in
just 1:27 and getting into the end zone on Brown's three-yard pass to Starks
in the back of the end zone.
Game Notes
Binns finished with five catches for 62 yards for Cincinnati...Starks had five
grabs for 50 yards for WVU, while Noel Devine gained 88 yards on 25
carries...Despite the loss, WVU still holds a 14-3-1 advantage in the all-time
series between the schools...Cincinnati has off next weekend before hosting
Illinois on November 27. The Bearcats end the season December 5 at Pittsburgh,
which sits second in the Big East at 5-0, with an 8-1 overall record...West
Virginia also does not play next weekend, and hosts Pitt on November 27 before
ending its season December 5 at Rutgers.
©2009 Sports Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.