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Sunday, November 2, 2003

7 OTs, 1 more loss for UK


71-63 Arkansas win matches mark for NCAA's longest game

The Associated Press

LEXINGTON - Multiple-overtime football games are becoming a habit for Arkansas. The Razorbacks finished another one the right way on Saturday.

DeCori Birmingham scored on a 25-yard run in a record-tying seventh overtime, and Arkansas stopped Kentucky on a fourth-down play to finish a 71-63 victory at Commonwealth Stadium.

The football game was the longest in NCAA history, matching the seven overtimes in Arkansas' 58-56 victory at Mississippi in 2001. The game lasted four minutes shy of five hours.

Arkansas also played a six-overtime last year, losing to Tennessee, and beat Alabama earlier this year in a two-overtime game. The Razorbacks have played six overtime games, winning five times, since Division I-A adopted the tiebreaker in 1996.

"As long as we get to seven (overtimes), it's OK," said Arkansas coach Houston Nutt, whose team snapped a three-game losing streak.

"The game was meant for us and we believe we're going to win in overtime. We were prepared for overtime. We had three or four two-point plays ready. We didn't draw up things in the dirt like we did two years ago in Oxford (Mississippi)."

Birmingham, a converted wide receiver forced to play tailback because of injuries, rushed 40 times for a career-high 196 yards and two touchdowns for Arkansas (5-3, 2-3 Southeastern Conference). Jason Peters caught a 2-point conversion pass from Matt Jones after Birmingham's final score.

Kentucky (4-5, 1-4) had a fourth-and-3 at the 5 in the seventh overtime, but quarterback Jared Lorenzen failed to make a first down when he fumbled on a keeper.

"There is nothing like being on the wrong side of an NCAA record," Kentucky coach Rich Brooks said. "I never thought I would be in a game like that. We had ample opportunities to win the game.

"It was very tough to swallow. We made such a great comeback. Talk about an emotional rollercoaster. One thing about it: the fans got their money's worth."

Kentucky forced overtime with a 13-yard touchdown pass from Lorenzen to Chris Bernard with 1:38 left in regulation. That tied the score at 24 and capped a 14-point Kentucky rally.

Arkansas scored 47 points in overtime, breaking the record of 41 it set in the 2001 game against Ole Miss. The 86 combined overtime points also broke the record of 80 set in the 2001 game.

Until the seventh overtime, both teams scored touchdowns in each overtime except for the third, when they kicked field goals. In the fourth and sixth overtimes, the teams had successful 2-point conversions.

Kentucky's best chance to win came in the third overtime.

Arkansas had kicked a field goal to go ahead 41-38, and Kentucky had a fourth-and-goal at the 1. But the Wildcats were penalized for illegal substitution when Draak Davis ran off the field after Kentucky broke its huddle, and the Wildcats chose to kick a tying field goal.

In the fourth overtime, Arkansas converted on a fourth-and-2 play at the 3 when Jones scored, then threw a conversion pass to Mark Pierce.

Jones, who did not start the game but relieved Ryan Sorahan in the second quarter, passed for 260 yards and three touchdowns, completing 16 of 25 passes. He also rushed for 112 yards and one touchdown.

George Wilson had nine catches for 172 yards and one touchdown for the Razorbacks.

Birmingham scored on a 10-yard first-quarter run. Kentucky's Andrew Hopewell blocked a punt and returned it 6 yards for a tying touchdown, but Jones threw a 26-yard scoring pass to Richard Smith to put Arkansas ahead 14-7.

The Razorbacks then scored on a blocked punt of their own, as Tom Crowder blocked Anthony Thornton's kick and recovered the football in the end zone.

Kentucky had plays of 26, 31 and 25 yards to reach the Arkansas 3 late in the second quarter, but Ahmad Carroll intercepted Lorenzen to end the threat.

Lorenzen, who rushed for three touchdowns in overtime, threw his two touchdown passes in the second half. One was a 51-yard flip to fullback Alexis Bwenge, who eluded two defenders and broke two tackles on the play. Bwenge added two other touchdowns in overtime.

Bwenge ran for 89 yards in addition to the 51-yard reception. Lorenzen completed 28 of 49 passes for 326 yards. Derek Abney led the Wildcats with 10 catches for 91 yards.

Kentucky dropped to 1-2 in overtime games. The Wildcats beat Alabama 40-34 in 1997 and lost to Louisville by the same score in 2000. Both games ended after only one extra period.

Ark. 714037738688-71
Ky.707107738680-63

First Quarter

Ark-Birmingham 10 run (Balseiro kick), 7:57.

Kent-A.Hopewell 6 blocked punt return (Begley kick), :10.

Second Quarter

Ark-Smith 26 pass from Jones (Balseiro kick), 8:54.

Ark-Crowder recovered blocked punt in end zone (Balseiro kick), 6:45.

Third Quarter

Kent-Bwenge 51 pass from Lorenzen (Begley kick), 3:44.

Fourth Quarter

Kent-FG Begley 34, 7:11.

Ark-FG Balseiro 37, 3:22.

Kent-Bernard 13 pass from Lorenzen (Begley kick), 1:38.

First Overtime

Ark-Pierce 1 run (Balseiro kick).

Kent-Bwenge 2 run (Begley kick).

Second Overtime

Kent-Bwenge 7 run (Begley kick).

Ark-Peters 7 pass from Jones (Balseiro kick).

Third Overtime

Ark-FG Balseiro 25.

Kent-FG Begley 24.

Fourth Overtime

Kent-Lorenzen 1 run (Abney pass from Lorenzen).

Ark-Jones 3 run (Pierce pass from Jones).

Fifth Overtime

Ark-Wilson 15 pass from Jones (pass failed).

Kent-Lorenzen 2 run (pass failed).

Sixth Overtime

Kent-Lorenzen 1 run (Cook pass from Lorenzen).

Ark-Pierce 2 run (Wilson pass from Jones).

Seventh Overtime

Ark-Birmingham 25 run (Peters pass from Jones).

A-66,124.

ArkKent
First downs2929
Rushes-yards71-33452-180
Passing271326
Comp-Att-Int17-28-028-51-1
Return Yards199104
Punts-Avg.6-34.37-40
Fumbles-Lost5-22-1
Penalties-Yards12-878-60
Time of Possession32:5327:07

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING-Arkansas, Birmingham 40-196, Jones 15-112, Cobbs 9-46, Ousley 1-9, Pierce 2-3, Harris 1-(minus 15), Sorahan 3-(minus 17). Kentucky, Bwenge 22-89, Lorenzen 15-39, Davis 5-35, Boyd 4-17, Abney 1-2, Johnson 1-1, Burton 3-(minus 3).

PASSING-Arkansas, Jones 16-25-0-260, Sorahan 1-3-0-11. Kentucky, Lorenzen 28-49-1-326, Boyd 0-2-0-0.

RECEIVING-Arkansas, Wilson 9-172, Smith 5-69, Ousley 1-12, Hicks 1-11, Peters 1-7. Kentucky, Abney 10-91, Bernard 4-82, Cook 4-39, Davis 4-13, Drobney 2-25, Bwenge 1-51, Holt 1-17, Burton 1-7, Boyd 1-1.




REDS - PETE ROSE
Back in the saddle?

BENGALS / NFL
Bengals strive to reach .500
Bengals-Cardinals: The Edge
Strahan is putting up Hall-worthy sack totals
Curnutte's NFL power rankings

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
OSU 21, Penn St. 20
Tressel puts off decision on QB
Gamble again starts on both sides of ball
7 OTs, 1 more loss for UK
No. 10 Virginia Tech 31, No. 2 Miami 7
No. 1 Oklahoma 52, No. 14 Oklahoma State 9
No. 23 Florida 16, No. 4 Georgia 13
No. 16 Texas 31, No. 12 Nebraska 7
No. 5 Florida State 37, Notre Dame 0
No. 11 Michigan 27, No. 9 Michigan State 20
No. 3 USC 43, No. 6 Washington St. 16
Top 25 roundup: Eli racks up big numbers
Quarterback corner
Mount loses early lead, falls to Anderson
Scores; how Top 25 fared

BASKETBALL
UC 61, Northern Kentucky 48
Xavier 100, EA Sports 63
Daugherty: Look past the wins, find the wonder
Kenyon Martin hurts left ankle

PREP FOOTBALL
Elder 28, Anderson 7
Colerain 45, LaSalle 21
Moeller 14, Huber Heights Wayne 10
Northmont 52, Mason 35
Highlands 21, CovCath 7
Roundup of Ohio's other playoff games

OTHER PREP SPORTS
Lakota West closer to championship after tough 2-1 win
St. Ursula drops McNick to reach state semifinals
Holy Cross' title hopes sunk by Sacred Heart
Ousted Bacon planning for bright future
Ursuline, St. Ursula may meet for title
St. X proves itself when it matters
A surprise winner gives 1A field a jolt
Leeper, Thompson race to titles
Highlands set to defend title at state meet
Coaches' futures remain unclear
Kozerski has own field of dreams
Prep results
Prep schedule

ENQUIRER PAGE TWO
In the end, it seems mother knows best
Page Two power rankings

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