MIAMI — Kyle Parker threw
a 26-yard touchdown pass to Jacoby Ford in overtime after Matt Bosher
kicked a 22-yard field goal on Miami’s overtime possession

On
third-and-11, Parker’s third TD pass of the night gave the Tigers (4-3,
3-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) their first win over a ranked opponent
in nine games — and dealt Miami’s ACC hopes a serious blow. C.J.
Spiller had a 90-yard kickoff return and a school-record 310
all-purpose yards for Clemson.

Jacory Harris threw for two touchdowns for Miami (5-2, 2-2), but also threw three interceptions.

It
was the third meeting of these teams since Miami joined the ACC; all
three went to overtime, and all three have been won by the road team.

No. 5 Cincinnati 41, Louisville 10

CINCINNATI — Standing on the sideline in a sweat suit and baseball cap, injured quarterback Tony Pike watched his backup do a nearly perfect job.

Advertisement

Sophomore Zach Collaros threw only two incompletions while passing for 253 yards and three touchdowns in the Bearcats’ first game without their marquee quarterback.

The Bearcats (7-0, 3-0 Big East) are off to their best start since 1954 despite losing Pike, a senior whose strong arm is the perfect fit for their no-huddle, spread offense. He didn’t suit up four days after having surgery on his non-throwing forearm, watching from the sideline with his left arm tucked inside his jacket.

His understudy proved to be a quick study against lowly Louisville (2-5, 0-3).

In his first collegiate start, Collaros went 15 of 17, repeatedly finding receivers running open through one of the conference’s worst defenses.

No. 11 Georgia Tech 24, Virginia 9

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. – Georgia Tech beat the last team with an unbeaten record in Atlantic Coast Conference play Saturday, rushing for 362 yards and taking charge of the Coastal Division.

Advertisement

Josh Nesbitt ran for 82 yards and threw for 85, but he attempted only two passes in Georgia Tech’s four touchdown drives, including a 10-play, 60-yard march in the second quarter; a game-draining 18-play, 82-yard marathon that took up the first 10:47 of the third quarter and an 11-play, 66-yard one to put the game away in the fourth.

Georgia Tech (7-1, 5-1) broke an eight-game Charlottesville losing streak, winning at Virginia for the first time since 1990, the year the Yellow Jackets claimed a share of the national title. The Cavaliers (3-4, 2-1) had a three-game winning streak snapped, a run that followed an 0-3 start that had fans calling for coach Al Groh’s job.

No. 12 Oregon 43, Washington 19

SEATTLE — Jeremiah Masoli returned from a knee injury to run for two scores, and No. 12 Oregon blocked a punt for a touchdown and used a fake field goal to set up another TD.

Oregon extended its dominance of Washington to six straight – longest in the history of the series – and like the previous five this one wasn’t close. Oregon took advantage of Washington’s mistakes and the Ducks’ defense forced three turnovers, corralled Jake Locker and didn’t get the Huskies (3-5, 2-3 Pac-10) into the end zone until the fourth quarter.

All six wins in the Ducks’ streak have been by more than 20 points.

Advertisement

Unlike their last outing two weeks ago at UCLA, the Ducks (6-1, 4-0) got their offense moving. Masoli was a spectator against the Bruins and Oregon needed a kickoff return for a score and an interception return for another TD to get the win.

Masoli completed 14 of 22 throws for 157 yards and a touchdown. He also added TD runs of 1 and 3 yards as part of his 54 yards rushing.

No. 13 Penn St. 35, Michigan 10

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Daryll Clark threw three of his four touchdown passes to Graham Zug, helping the Nittany Lions to their first win at the Big House since 1996.

The Nittany Lions (7-1, 3-1 Big Ten) shut down the Wolverines (5-3, 1-3) Saturday after they opened with a 70-yard TD drive.

Clark connected with Zug on the ensuing possession to tie the game. He threw two more TD passes to Zug in the third quarter, giving Penn State a 32-10 lead that it had until taking 10-plus minutes off the clock and kicking a field goal in the fourth.

Advertisement

Michigan struggled to move the ball and had four turnovers.

Tate Forcier was 13 of 30 for 140 yards and an interception. Denard Robinson was 0 for 2 with an interception and fumbled.

Clark was 16 of 27 for 230 yards and tied his record for TD passes. Zug caught five passes for 59 yards and surpassed the total of TD receptions he had previously this season and all of last year.

Evan Royster had 100 yards rushing on 20 carries.

No. 14 Oklahoma State 34, Baylor 7

WACO, Texas (AP) – Zac Robinson beat his coach’s school record by completing 23 of 27 passes and threw for 250 yards and three touchdowns to give the Cowboys their fifth straight win.

Advertisement

Oklahoma State has (6-1, 3-0 Big 12) won its last four games without injured running back Kendall Hunter or suspended receiver Dez Bryant.

Baylor (3-4, 0-3), which has a 20-game losing streak to ranked teams, has scored only 24 points in its Big 12 games. The Bears are 1-3 since standout sophomore quarterback Robert Griffin tore a ligament in his right knee a month ago.

Oklahoma State, which plays No. 3 Texas at home next weekend, was again just fine without its top running back and top receiver from last season.

Robinson completion percentage broke the record Mike Gundy set by hitting 27 of 35 passes (77 percent) against Kansas in 1989.
No. 18 Ohio St. 38, Minnesota 7

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Terrelle Pryor threw two touchdown passes and ran for another score.

A week after a 26-18 loss at Purdue, the Buckeyes (6-2, 4-1 Big Ten) made Minnesota (4-4, 2-3) pay for its bad plays. The Golden Gophers had two major misplays in the secondary and two turnovers inside their own 20.

Advertisement

Pryor said he was a new man after four turnovers in the Purdue defeat. He played better against Minnesota, but it was difficult to tell how much because the Gophers made so many costly mistakes.

Pryor hit on 13 of 25 passes for 239 yards with one interception and also ran for 104 yards on 15 carries.

Minnesota didn’t offer much resistance, running its scoreless streak to 136:23 before MarQueis Gray’s late 16-yard touchdown pass to Troy Stoudermire.

No. 20 Pittsburgh 41, South Florida 14

PITTSBURGH — Bill Stull threw for two touchdowns, Dion Lewis ran for two more as the Panthers scored on all five possessions in the first half to extend their best start to a season in 27 years.

The Panthers (4-0 in Big East) are 7-1 for the first time since 1982 – Dan Marino’s senior season and the last time Pitt was ranked No. 1.

Advertisement

They made this one look easy as Stull completed his first 11 passes against a Bulls defense that appeared geared to stopping Lewis at the start, before he took over and run for 111 yards in three quarters to push his season’s total to 1,029 yards.

South Florida (5-2, 1-2) repeatedly hurt itself early with penalties – the Big East’s most-penalized team drew the game’s first eight penalties and ended with 71 penalty yards – and never got into an offensive rhythm, partly because Pitt kept scoring so quickly. The Bulls have been outscored 75-31 in losses to Cincinnati and Pitt after moving into the Top 25 two weeks ago.
No. 22 West Virginia 28, Connecticut 24

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Connecticut nearly pulled out a win for Jasper Howard.

Noel Devine’s 56-yard touchdown run in the closing minutes lifted No. 22 West Virginia over the Huskies on Saturday in the Huskies’ first game since he starting cornerback was fatally stabbed outside a university-sponsored dance a week ago.

Devine ran for 171 of his 178 yards in the second half as West Virginia (6-1, 2-0 Big East) overcame the inspired play of the Huskies (4-3, 1-2).

The determined Huskies outgained the Mountaineers 501-387. Sophomore quarterback Cody Endres threw for a career-high 378 yards and two scores. Marcus Easley caught five passes for a career-high 157 yards, including an 88-yard TD.

Advertisement

“We really wanted to go out and get this win for Jazz, but we came up short,” Easley said.
No. 25 Oklahoma 35, No. 24 Kansas 13

LAWRENCE, Kan. — Chris Brown scored three touchdowns, and No. 25 Oklahoma throttled Todd Reesing and the nation’s second-leading offense.

The Sooners (4-3, 2-1 Big 12) intercepted Kansas’ career passing leader on the Jayhawks’ first three possessions. Dominique Franks set the defensive tone with an 85-yard touchdown return of the second interception of the NCAA’s fifth-leading passer.

Landry Jones, starting for injured Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Sam Bradford, threw two touchdown passes and had little trouble with a Kansas defense that has been undergoing a midseason overhaul. Kansas (5-2, 1-2) hurt itself with penalties as well as turnovers and had only two field goals until Reesing’s 5-yard TD run with 4:27 left.

Oklahoma’s powerful defense held Kansas almost 200 yards below its season average of 503 yards. The Jayhawks had hoped for a victory that would elevate them to Big 12 contender status, but it was another Oklahoma domination, the Sooners’ sixth straight victory over them.


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.