BYU football: Phhheeew! Team happy to escape with victory

Published: Saturday, Nov. 14, 2009 9:39 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

ALBUQUERQUE — If not for a few kicks smacking into the uprights Saturday afternoon at University Stadium, New Mexico might have recorded its first victory of the season — and the first under first-year coach Mike Locksley — as well as a huge upset of No. 22 BYU.

In the end, though, the Cougars (8-2, 5-1) hung on for a 24-19 triumph over an inspired Lobo team (0-10, 0-6) desperate for a win.

"New Mexico plays tough. I was happy to see them come out and fight, not just kind of lay down," said quarterback Max Hall. "They haven't won a game, but they fought us to the end."

Snake-bitten Lobo kicker James Aho hit the goalpost on three different kicks — twice on field goals and once on an extra point — and had another field goal blocked by BYU senior Andrew Rich. Had those kicks sailed through, the outcome might have been different.

"You can't explain it," BYU defensive lineman Jan Jorgensen said of those bizarre misses, "but we'll take it."

Hey, there's a reason why this place is named Albu-QUIRK-e.

Asked why his team struggled against the winless Lobos, coach Bronco Mendenhall replied, "Maybe New Mexico had something to do with it. I think they drew a line in the sand and really were motivated to play a good football game today. To their credit, they did."

No doubt, the Lobos earned BYU's respect.

Story continues below

"I was impressed with how the Lobos played on both sides of the ball," said Mendenhall, who served as UNM's defensive coordinator for five years. "I was excited to see New Mexico's kids play that hard and make as many critical plays as they did. This is what this place is all about, I'm talking about Albuquerque. It should be difficult to come in here and win a football game."

New Mexico outgained BYU in total yards 360-355, and had the ball nearly 10 minutes longer, but the Cougar defense came up big in the end.

After a fumble by BYU running back Bryan Kariya at the UNM 37 with 3:13 remaining in the game, the Lobos, trailing 24-19, had a chance to stage a game-winning drive.

On first down, Cougar safety Scott Johnson was flagged for a personal foul on an incomplete pass to put the ball in BYU territory. But on the following play, senior defensive lineman Jan Jorgensen sacked quarterback Donovan Porterie for a 9-yard loss.

Recent comments

What in the world is wrong with you people? A win is a win. Sometimes...

Joni Tanner | Nov. 21, 2009 at 5:14 p.m.

when Byu played against UW BYU won. they had 52 to 0.

pth cook | Nov. 17, 2009 at 12:19 p.m.

Hey yewties -

How often do you see a football bounce off of the...

Magic? | Nov. 16, 2009 at 11:06 a.m.

Image
Roberto E. Rosales, Associated Press

BYU's Andrew George, left, runs in for a touchdown against the defense of New Mexico's Nathan Enriquez Saturday in Albuquerque, N.M.

previousnext

Latest comments

Well the Mayan’s did say the world will end in 2012...

Letters: Global warming a lie

If you're willing to take research data wildly out of context you can just...

Answers for the BCS

TCU gets jumped? Unbelievable. They beat ranked opponents by a ton;...

TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl

The MWC and WAC should take the money they will receive from these bowls and...

Bro. LeBaron was my professor at BYU. He was instrumental in helping me to...

How to pay for the war

More like "pay as you slay."

They needed a better matchup than lame Boise. Boise is really average. Look...

Let's face it...Utah busted the BCS last year and they did not want it to...

University of East Anglia emails have relevance to global warming??? Wouldn't...

Utah/BYU rivalry can be more civil

He needs to put his words to action. He does nothing to make it safe at REC....

Advertisements