Utah Utes football: Smith's touchdown sparks memories
The running back-turned receiver-turned defensive back wanted it, missed it, talked about it, too.
"I haven't scored in a long time," he reminded reporters.
Which made this afternoon all the sweeter for Smith.
Though it was officially homecoming for Wyoming, Smith enjoyed a little reunion of his own during the Utes' dominating defensive performance. The 6-3 speedster had two interceptions and reunited with his long-lost friend the end zone in Utah's 40-7 walloping of Wyoming at War Memorial Stadium.
Though he didn't crack open his yearbook or swap prom stories, this game brought out some nostalgic feelings for Smith.
"It felt good to score. It's been a long time. I'm way past due," Smith said. "It brings back a whole lot of memories."
And sparked the Utes, too.
Coach Kyle Whittingham called Smith's first highly anticipated return to paydirt a 25-yard interception return that put Utah up 7-0 four minutes into the game a "huge" tone-setting play. Defensive end Paul Kruger jumped and got a piece of the pass headed for the tight end, and Smith was in one of those right-place-right-time situations.
Smith then quickly made his 25-yard speedy stroll to memory lane.
Smith's second interception didn't result in another touchdown, but he had the ball in the end zone. That's why he might have been hearing "no, no, no" instead of "go, go, go" when he picked off a touchdown toss attempt by Wyoming's Karsten Sween using a tricky one-handed athletic move in the Utes' end zone and then tried and hoped to bring it back the length of the field for yet another score.
He craved another return trip.
Whittingham credited Smith, who was converted to a receiver in 2006 and then a DB after that, for making "a couple of nice plays" with his INTs. But he added one of those admonishing "buts" in regards to Smith's second takeaway. Midway through the third quarter, he snagged the errant fourth-down pass with one hand inside of the end zone. Wow, great catch, but ...
"If we're really heads-up, we drop it because it's fourth down or you take a knee after you've caught it, so we made two errors out of those," Whittingham said with a slight grin. "Still, heck of an athletic play on his part."
Smith ended up returning the ball to the 31, but his eyes widened and he got tunnel vision for a goal line 100 yards away. He didn't want to let years go between his first visit to the end zone in college and his second. The 21-year-old got used to crossing the goal line as a teenager at Blair High School in Pasadena, where he scored 18 rushing TDs and was recruited by the U. to be a running back.
Recent comments
The Utes secondary will be their downfall. Well, that and laughable…
U secondary | Oct. 14, 2008 at 5:36 p.m.
Dude, that was a sick reaching back one handed catch... Love it!
Go Utes | Oct. 13, 2008 at 12:30 p.m.
I've ever seen (Smith's second pick). And I've watched a lot of football.
One of the best catches... | Oct. 13, 2008 at 1:01 a.m.



