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Pierre Banks celebrates after clinching ASUís victory with a fumble recovery with 22 seconds remaining against JMU last Saturday in Boone.† Photo courtesy of DEREK DESHEA/The Appalachian
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BOONE ó Armanti Edwards scored the go-ahead touchdown with 1:10 remaining and Gary Tharrington forced a fumble at the Appalachian State University nine-yard line with just 22 seconds left to play to give fifth-ranked ASU a heart-stopping 28-27 win over No. 12 James Madison in the first round of the 2007 NCAA Division I Football Championship last Saturday afternoon at Kidd Brewer Stadium.
With its ninth-straight postseason victory, ASU (10-2) advances to Saturdayís national quarterfinals. where it will host Eastern Washington (9-3), a 44-15 winner over second-seeded McNeese State at noon Saturday. The game will be televised as part of ESPNís Game Plan package. Tickets ($20 adults, $5 for ASU students and children ages 3-12) can be purchased as GoASU.com.
The Mountaineers used big plays throughout the game to overcome
disadvantages in nearly every statistical category, most notably time
of possession, where James Madison (8-4) held a whopping 40:27-19:33
edge. JMU also boasted huge advantages in total plays (84-57), first
downs (25-15), rushing yardage (312-204) and total yardage (436-330).
Despite the overwhelming numbers in the Dukesí favor, it was the Apps
that turned in the game-changing plays throughout to escape with the
thrilling victory.
The first came in the second quarter, with JMU already in possession of
a 7-0 lead and inside the ASU 25 thanks to a 17-play, 68-yard that took
9:04 off the clock. On third-and-six from the 23 yard line, Appalachian
linebacker Pierre Banks forced a fumble that was scooped up by fellow
ëbacker Jacque Roman, who returned 77 yard to the ASU two yard line.
Three plays later, Edwards ran it in from four yards out to knot the
game at 7-7.
The Dukes scored on the ensuing possession to regain a 14-7 lead, but
the Mountaineers exploded for three-straight touchdowns, the first of
which was set up by defensive end Tony Robertsonís first-career
interception on a pass deflected by cornerback Justin Woazeah. However,
the Apps failed to convert on two of the three PATs (one that was
blocked and one that was attempted from 35 yards out thanks to an ASU
personal foul call) and held just a five-point halftime advantage at
19-14.
James Madison seemingly took control of the game after the break, as it
put together scoring drives of 11 and 16 plays and grabbed a 27-19 lead
on Jamal Sullivanís two-yard touchdown dive midway through the fourth
quarter.
Things got even bleaker for the Mountaineers on the first play of the
next drive when Walter Payton Award candidate Kevin Richardson went
down with an ankle injury. However, the Apps managed to move the ball
52 yards in nine plays before settling for a 44-yard Julian Rauch field
goal that cut the deficit to five with 4:51 to go in the ballgame.
With Appalachian needing its most critical stop of the season, James
Madison picked up nine yards on the first two plays of its ensuing
possession. However, Buck Buchanan Award candidate Corey Lynch stopped
Sullivan for no gain on third down and on fourth-and-one, defensive
tackle Anthony Williams stood up JMU quarterback Rodney Landers to give
ASU possession on the James Madison 32-yard line with 2:35 left to
play.
Needing a touchdown, Edwards and Co. faced fourth-and-three from the
JMU 25 with less than two minutes remaining. The sophomore
signal-caller delivered perhaps the biggest play of his young career, a
20-yard completion to Richardsonís backup, Devon Moore, who made a
diving catch that gave the Apps first-and-goal from the five-yard line.
On the next play, Edwards capped the Mountaineer comeback with his
third touchdown run of the afternoon. The two-point-conversion attempt
failed, leaving the Mountaineers with a tenuous 28-27 lead with 1:10
remaining on the clock.
In the back-and-forth affair, the Dukes took advantage of their final
opportunity by driving 62 yards in just four plays into seemingly
chip-shot field-goal range at the ASU nine yard line. With one timeout
remaining, JMU sent Sullivan off tackle to apparently try to move the
ball into better position for place-kicker Dave Stannard. However,
Tharrington broke through the line and swiped at Sullivan, knocking him
over and the ball to the turf. A scrum ensued, culminating with Banks
emerging with the ball, setting off a wild celebration on the
Appalachian sideline and in the loud, raucous crowd of 14,040 at The
Rock. Edwards ended the saga by taking a knee on the final play.
In all, Edwards accounted for 258 (132 rushing and 126 passing) of
Appalachianís 330 yards of offense and three of their four touchdowns.
Defensively, Roman led four Mountaineers in double-figures with a
career-high 19 tackles to go along with the 77-yard fumble return. The
19 stops are tied for the second-most in ASU postseason history, behind
only Sam Smallsí 21 in a first-round loss to Maine in 2002. Freshman
linebacker D.J. Smith added 12 tackles and Banks and Lynch chipped in
with 11 and 10, respectively.
Landers paced the Dukes with 253 yards of offense (129 rushing, 124 passing).
ASU secured its third-consecutive and seventh-overall 10-win season.
The Mountaineersí trip to the national quarterfinals is also their
third-straight and seventh in the past 14 seasons.
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