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Sunday, September 14, 2003

Ohio St. 44, N. Carolina St. 38


Buckeyes have to go 3 OTs after blowing
17-point lead in last 8 minutes

The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio - There's something about overtime that brings out the best in the Buckeyes.

ohio state
Ohio State's Michael Jenkins catches the winning TD pass in the third overtime.
(AP photo)
| ZOOM |
Craig Krenzel hit Michael Jenkins on a 7-yard scoring pass in the third overtime and No. 3 Ohio State made a goal-line stand to beat No. 24 North Carolina State 44-38 on Saturday.

"Our guys never stop playing. They never stop believing they have a chance," Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. "College overtime is extraordinary. It's great football."

It was the first overtime game in 81-year-old Ohio Stadium, coming in the old gray horseshoe's 472nd intercollegiate game.

Will Allen barreled into Wolfpack tailback T.A. McLendon on fourth-and-goal, lowering his left shoulder to stop McLendon just inches from the end zone as the defending national champion Buckeyes (3-0) won their 17th consecutive game.

It took several moments for the officials to determine McLendon had not crossed the goal line. When they finally signaled that he had not, the Buckeyes wildly ran around the field, tossing their helmets in the air in celebration.

"I saw an opening. I don't know who hit me, but I fell with my arms in the air," McLendon said. "I think I have it every play, but I guess I didn't here."

McLendon lay where he fell, surrounded by teammates and coaches. Some protested to the officials as they left the field.

Last Jan. 3, No. 2 Ohio State needed double-overtime to beat top-ranked Miami 31-24 in the Fiesta Bowl, capturing its first national championship in 34 years. The Buckeyes also beat Illinois in overtime a year ago to remain unbeaten.

North Carolina State (1-2) trailed 24-7 with just over 8 minutes remaining in regulation, but scored on its next three possessions to force overtime.

"We let up," Ohio State defensive lineman Will Smith said. "Everybody got complacent in this game when it was 24-7 in the fourth quarter. Everybody said, 'Oh, this game's over.' "

Philip Rivers, who completed 36 of 52 passes for 315 yards and four touchdowns with two interceptions, led the charge. He found Jerricho Cotchery on a 9-yard score, A.J. Davis picked off Krenzel's pass, and Adam Kiker kicked a 24-yard field goal with 5:51 left to cut the lead to 24-17.

North Carolina State pulled even on Rivers' 5-yard scoring pass to T.J. Williams with 21 seconds left.

The Wolfpack won the coin flip and elected to play defense first. Ohio State needed four plays to score, with Krenzel connecting with Ben Hartsock on a 10-yard pass and Mike Nugent adding the first of two extra-point kicks in overtime.

The Wolfpack countered with a three-play scoring drive, with Rivers hitting Tramain Hall for the score on second-and-goal from the 17. Hall went high between Chris Gamble and Nate Salley, helicoptering to the ground after he was hit, but holding onto the ball. Kiker added the important point-after kick.

North Carolina State had the ball first in the second overtime, and scored in three plays on McLendon's pitch-sweep around right end with Kiker converting the kick.

Krenzel, who completed 26 of 36 passes for 273 yards and career highs of four touchdowns and three interceptions, then found tight end Ryan Hamby over the middle on a 2-yard pass. Nugent's extra point tied it at 38.

In the third overtime, Krenzel took a moment to speak to his teammates in the huddle.

"That's one of the reasons we come here - it's the tradition and the type of games you're going to play in," Krenzel said. "I brought that up and said, 'Let's go do our jobs."'

They did. On third-and-3 at the 7, Krenzel faked a handoff to Lydell Ross and found Michael Jenkins between two defenders. Teams are required to go for a 2-point conversion after the second overtime, and the Buckeyes failed to convert when Krenzel's pass for Maurice Hall was batted down by linebacker Pat Thomas.

The Wolfpack benefited from Ohio State mistakes on their final possession. The Buckeyes - who had five turnovers and 129 penalty yards - were flagged for offsides, facemasking and defensive holding as the Wolfpack moved to a first down at the 4.

Rivers kept for 2 yards, then his pass for Hall was wide. Rivers picked up a half-yard on another keeper before both teams took timeouts to assess the fourth-down play from just outside the 1.

With four receivers split wide, McLendon took a pitch from Rivers and cut back off left tackle. He made contact with linebacker A.J. Hawk, but it was Allen's shoulder that prevented him from tying the game.

"I just reacted to the football," Allen said. "I had to get off of a block and had to stop him. It felt great to make the hit."

The Wolfpack held the upper hand in first downs (28-15), yards (336-317) and had fewer turnovers (4-3) and penalty yards (129-46).

Rivers ended up setting Atlantic Coast Conference career records for passing yards, touchdowns and completions.

All he could think about, though, was the final play.

"This is the worst loss I've ever been through by far," Rivers said. "You tie it up and you're fighting and then you lose. It comes down to a few inches against a great team."

NC State07017770-38
Ohio St.14037776-44

First Quarter

OSU-Jenkins 44 pass from Krenzel (Nugent kick), 4:13.

OSU-Ross 2 run (Nugent kick), 2:47.

Second Quarter

NCS-Cotchery 11 pass from Rivers (Deraney kick), :18.

Third Quarter

OSU-FG Nugent 22, :00.

Fourth Quarter

OSU-Krenzel 6 run (Nugent kick), 11:25.

NCS-Cotchery 9 pass from Rivers (Kiker kick), 8:26.

NCS-FG Kiker 24, 5:51.

NCS-Williams 5 pass from Rivers (Kiker kick), :21.

First Overtime

OSU-Hartsock 10 pass from Krenzel (Nugent kick).

NCS-Hall 17 pass from Rivers (Kiker kick).

Second Overtime

NCS-McLendon 2 run (Kiker kick).

OSU-Hamby 2 pass from Krenzel (Nugent kick).

Third Overtime

OSU-Jenkins 7 pass from Krenzel (pass failed).

A-104,890.

NCSOSU
First downs2815
Rushes-yards30-2132-44
Passing315273
Comp-Att-Int36-52-226-36-3
Return Yards7996
Punts-Avg.7-41.65-49.4
Fumbles-Lost4-12-2
Penalties-Yards6-4614-129
Time of Possession29:2930:17

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING-NC State, McLendon 8-32, Hall 4-13, Washington 3-12, Cotchery 2-8, Brown 1-6, Jackson 2-(minus 1), Rivers 10-(minus 49). Ohio St., Krenzel 13-37, Schnittker 1-5, Hall 13-2, Ross 4-1, team 1-(minus 1).

PASSING-NC State, Rivers 36-52-2-315. Ohio St., Krenzel 26-36-3-273.

RECEIVING-NC State, Hall 9-67, Clark 6-73, Washington 5-39, Cotchery 4-44, Williams 4-18, McLendon 3-56, Jackson 2-15, Barrett 2-5, Hicks 1-(minus 2). Ohio St., Jenkins 7-124, Hartsock 7-65, Carter 6-39, Schnittker 2-17, Holmes 1-29, Hamby 1-2, Hall 1-0, Ross 1-(minus 3).




COLLEGE FOOTBALL
UC 15, West Virginia 13
Ohio St. 44, N. Carolina St. 38 (3 OTs)
Miami 44, Northwestern 14
Bearcats expect receivers to excel
No excuses today for Ohio St.
Kicking game must be on for MU's struggling offense
Amputee Parry's dreams coming true
Alabama's big concern is Kentucky's Lorenzen
Louisville faces Loud House
Rivalry one of game's greatest
Interesting matchups await Colorado, Wake Forest

PREP SPORTS
Anderson prevails in thriller
No. 1 Highlands 35, No. 2 Boone County 24
Colerain 30, Middletown 27
Elder 17, Indianapolis Bishop Chatard 16
Glen Este 16, Loveland 10
La Salle 42, Ontario Markham District School 7
Beechwood 55, Holmes 0
Dixie Heights 31, Lloyd 0
Lakota East 14, Sycamore 0
Roundup of Friday's other games
Roundup of Kentucky's other games
Scores, how poll teams fared
'Showdown' creators expand into soccer
Prep sports results
Prep sports schedules

BENGALS / NFL
Brown remains Raiders' cornerstone
Isolation Booth: James vs. Rice
Keys to winning
Notes: Johnson, Williams hurt but will play
NFL Notes: Recovering QB Warner accepts role as backup

REDS / BASEBALL
Cubs 7, Reds 6
Notes: Miley keeping his cool in bigs
Lowell hopeful of late regular-season return
NL: Pirates' Sanders downs Phillies
AL: Indians snap Twins' two-game streak

GOLF
U.S. trails in Solheim Cup

HORSE RACING
Baffert conditions 2 favorites

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