
Nebraska quarterback Eric Crouch (7) is tackled by Kansas linebacker Andrew LeClair (55) during the second quarter Saturday, Oct. 30, in Lawrence, Kan.
Photo by Orlin Wagner/AP
|
No. 8 Nebraska 24, Kansas 17
By Steve Brisendine
Associated Press
Posted: Oct. 30, 1999
LAWRENCE, Kan. -- A week after seeing its national
championship hopes dashed in a loss to Texas, No. 8 Nebraska faced
the prospect of an even more embarrassing loss to a team that
hadn't beaten the Cornhuskers since 1968.
But after trailing 9-0 at halftime Saturday night, Nebraska made
a succession of clutch plays in the second half and pulled out a
24-17 victory over Kansas.
"We came into the locker room at halftime a little down," said
wingback Bobby Newcombe, who caught the game-winning, 49-yard
touchdown pass from Eric Crouch with 3:24 left. "We were
disappointed with our play. But we went back out there with a lot
of enthusiasm. There was a lot of drive and fire."
But before Nebraska could go those last 49 yards to victory, the
Cornhuskers first had to move just 6 inches.
Crouch came up just short on third-and-1 at midfield, but
converted on another keeper on fourth down. His game-winning pass
came on the next play.
"I think the team showed a lot of character for us to come back
and win," Nebraska coach Frank Solich said. "They really
responded when they had to."
Crouch also ran for one score and Newcombe returned a punt 86
yards for another for Nebraska (7-1, 4-1 Big 12).
"I don't think anyone walked out of the stadium, whether he was
from Nebraska or Kansas, without appreciating the great athletic
skills that Bobby displayed today and what he got done," Solich
said.
Kansas (3-6, 1-4) saw its hopes for a winning season end just a
week after a 21-0 victory over archrival Missouri.
"I think we're getting better every week. I think the people
who follow us know that," coach Terry Allen said. "But in order
to beat a team like Nebraska you have to believe you can beat a
team like Nebraska. So you don't compliment yourself when you lose
with a good effort, even against a good team."
Correll Buckhalter ran for 116 yards on 22 carries for Nebraska,
which won despite a lost fumble at Kansas' 1-yard line and two
missed field goals by Josh Brown.
The Cornhuskers, who managed only 64 of their 366 yards in the
first half, went up 10-9 on Newcombe's third-quarter punt return
and led 17-9 after Crouch's 8-yard keeper with 12:09 left in the
fourth.
But Kansas tied it one play after Crouch's score, on Dylen
Smith's second touchdown pass of the game. Smith found Michael
Chandler at the Nebraska 45, and Chandler sprinted down the right
sideline to complete a 77-yard scoring play. Smith then threw to
Chandler for a 2-point conversion.
"The whole team was pumped up out there," Smith said. "We
didn't just think we could stay in there. We knew we could win, but
we just didn't get it done."
Two freshmen gave the Jayhawks the halftime lead.
Matt Jordan blocked Dan Hadenfeldt's punt out of the end zone
for a safety in the first quarter, and tight end David Hurst beat
linebacker Tony Ortiz for a 22-yard touchdown catch with 9:12
remaining in the second.
Nebraska drove deep into Kansas territory late in the first
half, but a holding penalty wiped out Buckhalter's 15-yard gain to
the 3 and Brown missed a 41-yard field goal attempt.
His second miss came with the game tied 17-17 and just over
eight minutes remaining.
A 63-yard pass from Crouch to Matt Davison on the first play of
the second half gave the Cornhuskers a first down at the Kansas 17,
but Dan Alexander fumbled two plays later and Andrew LeClair
recovered for the Jayhawks at the 1.
At that point, Solich said, "We knew we had our backs to the
wall."
Kansas was unable to move the ball, and Gregg List's partial
block of Joey Pelfanio's punt set up Brown's 31-yard field goal
with 10:23 to go in the third.
(Copyright 1999 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)