Asheville Daily Planet
RSS Facebook
Mountaineers punch ticket for 2nd straight ride to finals
Tuesday, 12 December 2006 18:54
BOONE ÇƒÓ Led by 100-yard performances from running back Kevin Richardson and quarterback Armanti Edwards, No. 1 Appalachian State University racked up 353 yards on the ground and secured its second-straight berth in the NCAA Division I national championship game with a resounding 49-24 victory over fourth-seeded Youngstown State last Saturday at Kidd Brewer Stadium.

With its school-record 13th win of the season, ASU (13-1) is set to square off with No. 3 Massachusetts (13-1), with kickoff at 8 p.m. Friday at Finley Stadium in Chattanooga, Tenn. Ticket information is available at GoASU.com. The game will be televised live on ESPN2.

Last Saturdayës attendance of 18,040 at 16,650-seat Kidd Brewer Stadium was an ASU postseason record. The previous record of. 15,307 was set in the 2005 semifinal against Furman.

With 145 and 110 rushing yards, respectively, Richardson and Edwards both topped the 100-yard mark for the third-consecutive week. Prior to the duo accomplishing the feat for the first time on Nov. 25 versus No. 13 Coastal Carolina, ASU hadnët had two 100-yard rushers in the same game since 2003.

Behind Edwards and Richardson, the Mountaineers dominated from the outset. Richardson, the Southern Conference Offensive Player of the Year, notched 141 of his 145 yards and Edwards, the leagueës  Freshman of the Year, totaled 178 yards of offense on nine rushes and 7-of-7 passing to spark the Apps to 343 yards before the break and a 28-14 halftime lead. The duo accounted for all four Mountaineer touchdowns in the first half ÇƒÏ Edwards on an 18-yard pass to Hans Batichon and a six-yard run and  Richardson on runs of one and 18 yards.


Things continued to go downhill for Youngstown State (11-3) after halftime. Thanks to Marques Murrellës second sack of the afternoon, YSU was forced to punt from its own end zone on its first possession of the second half. The snap on the fourth-and-23 was low and YSU punter Joe Bishop was only able to get off an eight-yard punt. One play later, Edwards scored from 10 yards out and the rout was on.


Appalachian scored twice more in the final period on a 25-yard touchdown run by true freshman Devon Moore and Edwardsë career-high third rushing touchdown of the game, an eight-yarder that stretched the lead to 49-17. YSU added a late touchdown to account for the final margin.


In addition to the 110 on the ground, Edwards completed 10-of-12 passes for 164 yards. The performance gave the Greenwood, S.C., native 2,105 passing yards and 1,072 rushing yards for the season, making him just the second freshman and fifth player overall in NCAA Division I history to throw for 2,000 yards and rush for 1,000 in a single season.


Not to be overlooked by ASUës playoff-record 517 yards of offense was the performance turned in by the Mountaineer defense. The Apps held the Penguins without a first down until early in the second quarter and held YSUës Marcus Mason, the nationës second-leading rusher coming in with 1,726 yards coming in, to 121 yards, 38 below his average. Fifty-eight of the Walter Payton Award finalistës 121 yards came after Appalachian had opened up a three-touchdown lead.


Murrell led the defensive effort with two sacks, a forced fumble, a quarterback hurry and a pass break-up.


The win was Appalachianës 27th-straight at home, sending its senior class out without a loss in four years at The Rock. ASUës last home loss came in the first round of the 2002 playoffs, a 14-13 setback to Maine.


The Mountaineersë 27-game home winning streak is the longest in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS ÇƒÏ formerly I-AA) and second-best in all of Division I, behind only Southern California (32 games).

 



 


contact | home

Copyright ©2005-2015 Star Fleet Communications

224 Broadway St., Asheville, NC 28801 | P.O. Box 8490, Asheville, NC 28814
phone (828) 252-6565 | fax (828) 252-6567

a Cube Creative Design site