November 23, 2012
Score one for the defense
Forced fumble helps WVU end losing streak with 31-24 win at Iowa State
Page 2 of 2
AP Photo
Iowa State's Jeff Woody fumbles as he's hit by West Virginia's Darwin Cook near the goal line in the fourth quarter.
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But While Austin's heroics were the highlights, the biggest play might have come from a defense which had been ripped again, this time by redshirt freshman quarterback Sam Richardson. Making his first college start, Richardson ran for 119 yards, passed for three touchdowns and time and again burned the Mountaineers with huge third- and fourth-down conversions.

But when it mattered most, Iowa State elected to put the ball in the hands of fullback Jeff Woody and paid for it. With Iowa State on the WVU 7 with a first-and-goal, trailing 31-24 and four minutes to play, Cook tackled Woody and forced the ball loose. Joseph recovered at the goal line with 3:59 to play and the Mountaineers ran out the clock.

"I really wasn't going for the ball,'' said Cook. "I was just trying to tackle him at the chest and the ball popped out.''

Iowa State led 21-20 going to the fourth quarter after trailing most of the game and 24-21 after trading field goals. The Mountaineers led 10-0 and 17-7 in the first half and seemed at times ready to explode and put the game away. It never happened, though, in part because they couldn't score touchdowns when they got within striking distance.

They did, however, get points most of the time by electing to go for field goals instead of fourth-down conversions. Bitancurt was 3 for 4 on his attempts, even though two hit the left upright (one bounced back and another ricocheted through).

"We weren't going to go for it on fourth down in this game,'' said Holgorsen, who had made it a practice of doing so in several other games. "In other games we knew we needed touchdowns [because of the potency of the opponents]. In this game points were going to be important and we knew that.''

After Edwin Arceo made a 49-yard field goal with 6:42 to play to allow ISU to go up 24-23, Austin made his biggest play of the game to give WVU the lead, taking one of those little jet sweep passes, turning up the left sideline and needing only a couple of moves to break into the open. He then took a handoff out of the backfield and surprisingly powered his way into the end zone for the conversion to make it a 7-point game.

But Austin and the defense weren't all the Mountaineers had going for them on this frigid day in front of a crowd of 53,792. Tailback Shawne Alston also returned to the form he hadn't displayed since the opener against Marshall, finally overcoming his season-long thigh injury and running 19 times for 130 yards.

As for Smith, he didn't have his best game but he was efficient when it counted. He completed 22 of 31 passes for 236 yards and two touchdowns. Stedman Bailey caught seven passes for 82 yards and a score.

The Mountaineers gained 475 yards of total offense, split almost evenly between passing (239) and rushing (236). Iowa State's 396 yards of total offense was the lowest allowed by the WVU defense since Maryland gained 351 in the season's third game.

Reach Dave Hickman at 304-348-1734 or dphickm...@aol.com or follow him at Twitter.com/dphickman1.

 

 

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