September 17, 2011
Mountaineers hang on
Late interception derails Terps’ second-half rally
Page 2 of 2
AP Photo
West Virginia's Vernard Roberts (9) races into the end zone to score a first-half touchdown Saturday against Maryland.
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And the Terrapins didn't. What happened next was a momentum shift of the first order.

West Virginia, which would finish with 480 yards of total offense (388 passing), gained two first downs on its next three possessions. The Mountaineers punted twice and Smith threw his first interception of the season, a spectacular sideline grab by Dexter McDougle on a ball that bounced off of Ivan McCartney. A team that couldn't help but move the ball for 21/2 quarters and had three 100-yard receivers - Tavon Austin had 11 catches for 122 yards, Bailey eight for 113 and McCartney eight for 101 - suddenly couldn't get out of its own way.

"The only way to stop [that momentum shift] is to put together a string of plays and a drive and get back on track,'' Smith said. "But we couldn't do it.''

That opened the door for the Terps, who suddenly had no trouble against West Virginia's defense. Maryland, with O'Brien making clutch throws and running backs Davin Meggett and D.J. Adams running in wide-open spaces - drove 61 yards in five plays, 44 yards in seven (after the interception) and 66 yards in 12. In three possessions over 10 minutes, Maryland scored three times and suddenly that 34-10 rout was a 34-31 nail-biter. Nearly 101/2 minutes remained.

"It's a game of momentum and they had it,'' Holgorsen said. "I'm just glad we hung on. I think some guys showed some real leadership at the end.''

West Virginia hung on when its offense and defense did just enough, just in time. First, the offense chewed up almost six minutes and, although failing to score after getting first-and-goal at the 3, did get Tyler Bitancurt's third field goal to make it 37-31.

Maryland got the ball with 4:36 to play on its own 26 and seemed destined to score and win by the point spread, which was one. The Terps converted a fourth-and-1 at their own 35, then sliced easily down the field until facing third-and-8 at the WVU 35. The clock was ticking down past the 1:20 mark.

That's when O'Brien tried to hit a receiver on a post route at about the WVU 10. The ball was underthrown and Eain Smith stepped in front of it, made the interception and then tripped to the ground at the 14.

Game over. Finally.

Afterward, Holgorsen almost seemed at a loss for how to react to the game. He stood in that interview tent outside the locker room, interrupted first by the sound of Maryland's band marching by and then by Edsall's postgame press conference being piped over the stadium public address system. He forged on, though.

"It's a big win, right?'' Holgorsen said.

Yes. Geno Smith threw for a career-high 388 yards, completing 36-of-49 passes. The three 100-yard receivers is believed to be a school record. The running game wasn't great, but it was better, including the return of Shawne Alston as a short-yardage back. And the defense, while surrendering 477 yards (O'Brien finished 34-of-52 for 289 yards and three interceptions), made the one play that had to be made.

"We have to be able to finish,'' said Alston. "We didn't play four quarters, but we were good enough to come away with the win. But one half of football just won't do it, especially with LSU coming in next week.''

Reach Dave Hickman at 304-348-1734 or dphickm...@aol.com.

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