UConn's Late Comeback Bid Falls Short As Wyoming Knocks Off UConn 24-22 토토사이트 검증
Simply the outstretched hands of Wyoming's Rome Webber isolated the winless UConn football crew from an unrealistic and improbable first success of the period rather than a 24-22 loss to the Cowboys on Saturday.
UConn, which had driven from the 11:39 characteristic of the primary quarter to the 6:31 sign of the fourth, ended up in a more comfortable situation with four seconds left in the game.
Yet, trust, which had been everything except lost after the Huskies permitted two final quarter scores and followed by eight, was siphoned once more into the reported horde of 12,538 at Rentschler Stadium as rookie Nate Carter covered off a 15-play, 64-yard drive with a 2-yard score rush to pull the Huskies inside two focuses with only seconds staying in guideline.
On the eventual game-tying 2-point transformation UConn rookie quarterback Tyler Phommachanh (19-for-40, 171 yards, one score and one interference) dropped back to pass, looked to one side and let a pass head toward Aaron Turner in the level, who he'd associated with multiple times on the day.
Just there was Gandy, who had run immaculate around the edge and jumped sufficiently high to warn the pass its course before Turner and pulverize UConn's rebound bid.
So close, however one more misfortune, as unbeaten Wyoming held tight for against the 0-5 Huskies, who were 30 1/2 point longshots.
"We're improving," UConn break lead trainer Lou Spanos said. "Their heads must be up, in light of the fact that what they did, they battled. They battled as far as possible ... We must completion the following chance."
Here's the way it occurred.
UConn's protection set up its best exhibition of the period holding the Cowboys (4-0) to only 10 focuses on their initial nine drives of the game — two of which finished in interferences.
Yet, the Huskies' safeguard, which had permitted in excess of 40 focuses in three of UConn's four misfortunes, at long last broke. Wyoming arranged a 10-play, 79-yard drive that finished with a 1-yard score run from Xazavian Valladay that gave the Cowboys their first lead of the game after an additional a point kick, 17-16. There was 6:31 leftover.
On the principal play of UConn's following drive, Phommachanh — who had played generally botch free the entire day — was blocked by Gandy. Wyoming scored five plays later on a 2-yard run from Titus Swen to take a 24-16 lead with 3:34 left in the game.
"They had lengthy drives, we had botched freedoms," Spanos said. "We might have made a superior showing swarm handling, by and large, since they had some yardage after contact. They continued to assault and assaulting."
Wyoming was 2-for-2 on third-down changes in the final quarter, 9-for-15 on the game. UConn completed only 3-for-13.
Green bean Joe McFadden kicked a 28-yard field objective with 11:39 left in the primary quarter to give UConn a 3-0 lead, its first over a FBS adversary the entire season. However, the Huskies' next score showed they weren't only a one-kick wonder.
With 1:25 left in the principal quarter Phommachanh gave the ball off to Carter, who threw it to Turner on an end-around, who then, at that point, pitched it back to the quarterback. Phommachanh dispatched a pass down the right sideline to a totally open Jay Rose, who got the ball, jumped over a Wyoming safeguard at the 5-yard line and into the end zone for a 41-yard score. An additional a point kick from McFadden gave the Huskies a 10-0 lead.
"We dealt with that play all training," Carter said. "We got the look that we needed, we knew what we could expect out of the guard and the mentors settled on an incredible decision and we executed it well. It worked out, and it truly brought the group a ton of certainty the remainder of the game."
McFadden attached another field objective from the get-go in the second quarter prior to Wyoming reacted with one of its own with 4:44 left in the half to slice UConn's lead to 13-3. The Cowboys at last crossed into the end zone on a 18-yard pass from Sean Chambers to Isaiah Neyor with 10:15 left in the second from last quarter, slicing UConn's lead to only three focuses.
Wyoming wrapped up with 351 complete yards of offense to UConn's 281.
UConn's auxiliary shook a portion of its initial season botches. In the initial four games, missed handles and tasks turned UConn's guard permeable and powerless to large plays. However, Saturday those were at any rate.
On Wyoming's initial drive green bean Malik Dixon separated a second-down pass endeavor from Chambers to Ayden Eberhardt. Two plays later the Cowboys had to dropkick. On the resulting ownership following Rose's score sophomore Myles Bell blocked Chambers, setting up a drive that finished with McFadden's second field objective. Chime likewise separated a third-down pass later in the subsequent quarter compelling Wyoming to dropkick after a three-and-out.
Chime left the game with a physical issue in the final quarter. Spanos said he was "feeling great" and will be additionally assessed.
Junior cautious back Jeremy Lucien blocked a profound pass from Chambers with 2:31 left in the second from last quarter. The Huskies' offense followed through on the turnover, and coordinated a 16-play, 74-yard drive that ate up over six minutes and finished with a 35-yard field objective from McFadden to make it 16-10 with 11:16 left in the game.
"We moved forward," Lucien said. "I think correspondence was at a lot more significant level than it has been for the most recent few weeks, everyone was truly fixed on their tasks."
At the point when UConn required a stop most however, the Cowboys — who had won their initial two rounds of the period on last-minute scores — walked down the field easily. Wyoming found the middle value of more than seven yards for each play on their last two scoring drives as 71 of their 106 aggregate yards came on the ground.
"I wouldn't say that we got level by any stretch of the imagination," Lucien said. "We simply need to, presently, finish the game. We got off to an incredible beginning, presently we've quite recently had the chance to chip away at wrapping it up."
The Cowboys offered themselves no courtesies from a punishment viewpoint. Wyoming was punished multiple times for 99 absolute yards, remembering four individual fouls for the main quarter worth 60 yards, and three pass obstruction approaches UConn's last drive that finished in Carter's score.