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How to Watch/Listen
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LaVell Edwards Stadium
1700 North Canyon Road Provo UT 84604
PROVO, Utah – Juniors Adam Hine and Taysom Hill electrified the crowd as No. 21/23 BYU overcame an early deficit to notch a win over Virginia, 41-33 at LaVell Edwards Stadium Saturday afternoon.
Hine’s 132 kickoff return yards, including a 99-yard return for a score in the fourth quarter, proved to be a necessary buffer to preserve the victory. Hill added two passing touchdowns and 17 carries for 72 yards and one rushing touchdown to energize the offense.
"Each time we took (the lead) from eight to 15, to their (Virginia) credit they responded. We needed the players to respond as well,” BYU head coach Bronco Mendenhall said. “Between Taysom and Adam Hine and what was happening with that combination, at least offensively, kind of kept us separated."
Junior running back Jamaal Williams helped pace the offense with his 68 yards on 13 carries and a touchdown while senior receiver Jordan Leslie had four receptions for 41 yards and a touchdown. Sophomore receiver Mitchell Juergens chipped in with two catches for 53 yards and a touchdown.
On the defensive side of the ball, senior Craig Bills tallied 10 tackles, 0.5 tackle for loss and one pass breakup. Senior Robertson Daniel notched four tackles, an interception and two pass breakups. Seniors Skye PoVey and Alani Fua each contributed with eight and nine tackles, respectively.
Beginning the third quarter down 16-13, the Cougars were forced to punt on their first possession. Scott Arellano notched a season-long 65-yard punt down to the Virginia 5-yard line. The BYU defense stalled Virginia.
With 10:45 left in the third quarter, the Cougar offense manufactured a 49-yard drive to take the lead for the first time in the game. On second down and 11 yards to go, Hill rushed to the right side, stiff-arming his way around and dragging a Virginia defender into the end zone for the 20-16 lead.
On the subsequent drive and after a 20-yard Virginia completion, the BYU defense ratcheted down to force fourth and inches. On the Cavaliers’ conversion attempt, the Cougars forced and recovered a fumble.
The teams then exchanged punts before BYU renewed its ground attack on the next drive with 4:28 left in the third quarter. The Cougars issued a 10-play drive to stretch the lead to 27-16. The drive featured 25 yards on the ground for Hill and 29 yards and a touchdown for Williams.
Virginia countered with a drive starting from its own 25-yard line. The drive stalled due in part to three tackles for loss by the Cougars. The Cavaliers then kicked a 46-yard field goal to cut the lead to 27-19 with 12:14 left in the game.
After Hine’s 33-yard kickoff return to the BYU 33, the Cougars struck again to make the score 34-19. The offense moved the ball to the 50-yard line on five plays. Hill then completed a pass to Juergens who bolted down the right sideline for a 50-yard touchdown, the first of his career.
Virginia took over at the 10:17 mark and countered again, this time with a touchdown to narrow the lead to 34-26. Sophomore backup quarterback Matt Johns passed for 51 yards while Khalek Shepherd rushed for 24 yards and the touchdown.
On the ensuing kickoff, Hine received it at the 1-yard line and sprinted up the middle of the field for a 99-yard return for the touchdown, upping the score to 41-26. It was the first BYU kickoff return for a touchdown since Cody Hoffman’s in 2011 against Central Florida.
The Cougar defense forced a Virginia turnover on downs to take over possession at 5:53 left in the game. The offense was forced to punt, and Arellano pinned the Cavaliers at the 2-yard line and inside the 20-yard line for the fourth time in the game.
Virginia marched down and scored after a 98-yard drive ended with a touchdown pass to Kyle Dockins from Johns, cutting the lead to 41-33. BYU secured the win as Fua successfully held on to the onside kick.
The Cavaliers began the game with a burst, returning the opening kickoff 47 yards. Virginia quarterback Greyson Lambert then had a 37-yard carry to set up a score two plays later at 1:06 into the game to take the 7-0 lead.
At 8:10 in the first quarter the Cougar offense fought back to get on the scoreboard. Hill completed five passes on a 10-play, 66-yard drive that culminated in the first score of the game for BYU, a 28-yard Trevor Samson field goal.
The Cavaliers marched back down the field behind 3 of 5 throwing by Lambert and 17 yards rushing by Shepherd. On fourth down on the BYU 1-yard line, the Cougar defense held strong as Virginia commited a penalty before the play was snapped, resulting in a field goal of 23 yards and a 10-3 Cavaliers lead.
Following the kickoff, junior receiver Devon Blackmon hauled in a 56-yard pass from Hill for the longest reception of the season, advancing the Cougars down to the Virginia 19-yard line. Two BYU carries for 11 yards set up an 8-yard Leslie touchdown, securing the reception as he headed across the field from the right side and over the goal line to tie the game at 10 with 13:48 left in the half.
Scoring for the Cavaliers continued as they converted a 41-yard field goal to take a 13-10 lead.
On the next Virginia possession, Daniel nearly intercepted Lambert’s pass on the second play of the drive . Four plays later on third and 10 yards to go, Daniel stepped in front of the intended receiver and intercepted Lambert’s pass to the right side of the field and returned it 32 yards to the Vigrinia 23-yard line. The Cougars then knotted the game on the next drive at 13 apiece on Samson’s field goal from 37 yards out.
Despite the aggressive play by the BYU defense, Virginia advanced down the field for 70 yards on 16 plays to take a 16-13 halftime lead with a 22-yard field goal as the clock expired.
The Cougars have a bye next week and return to action at home Oct. 3 against Utah State at 8:15 MDT.
PROVO, Utah–No. 21/23 BYU football welcomes Virginia to LaVell Edwards Stadium for its white-out game, which kicks off at 1:35 p.m. MDT Saturday on ESPN.
In addition to the ESPN broadcast, fans can tune in for live coverage on the Cougar IMG Sports Network with Greg Wrubell, which can be found on Sirius XM 143, 1160 AM, 102.7 FM and BYUcougars.com. IMG's radio coverage will begin at 11:30 p.m. MDT.
BYUtv will provide pregame and postgame coverage, with Countdown to Kickoff starting at 12:30 p.m. MDT. Postgame coverage runs for half an hour after the game.
Virginia at No. 21/23 BYU
Saturday, Sept. 20, 2014 at 1:30 p.m. MDT
LaVell Edwards Stadium
Provo, Utah
Notes Highlights
Last meeting. The Cougars and Cavaliers last met in the season opener of 2013. Virginia pulled off the 19-16 home win after a two-hour lightning delay between the first and second quarters.
BYU vs. ACC. The Cougars have eight wins against ACC schools. The last time BYU played an ACC team, the Cougars defeated Georgia Tech 38-20 in Provo for homecoming in 2013.
Run, Taysom, run. Junior quarterback Taysom Hill averages 118.7 rush yards per game, the most of all FBS quarterbacks and No. 24 across all positions. He averages 348.3 yards of total offense per game, good for No. 16.
Making history. Hill is one of eight players in NCAA history to ever throw for 400 yards and run for 100 yards in the same game, which happened against Houston in 2013. He finished that game with 417 passing yards (4 TDs) and 128 rushing yards.
10 seasons. Bronco Mendenhall began his 10th season as head coach of the Cougars with the season opener at UConn. Mendenhall has an 85-34 record entering his 10th year. BYU ranks 12th in total wins during his tenure.
Beating the best. Since 2003, BYU has 16 wins against Power 5 schools, which ranks second among non-Power 5 schools behind fellow independent Navy.
White out. The BYU vs. Virginia game is the Cougars’ white-out game. Fans are encouraged to all wear white to Saturday’s game.
Three-peat. For the third week in a row, Hill earned FBS Independent Offensive Player of the Week honors.
What They're Saying...
“[Taysom Hill]’s one of the top mobile quarterbacks in the country. He’s strong. He can run through tackles.” - Mack Brown, ESPN
“Hill’s national reputation may as well be, ‘That guy who keeps humiliating Texas.’” - Matt Hinton, Grantland
“Hill might be the player who most resembles the idea of a “dual-threat quarterback” in college football.” - Jungkyu Lee, ESPN
“This guy [Hill] is one of the best players in college football.” - Dave Flemming, ESPN
“This wasn’t just an impressive woodshed beating of the Longhorns...This is a good team with the potential for great. Yes, Texas is bottoming out as Charlie Strong tries to rebuild it, but this wasn’t close, and this is still Texas.” - Dan Wetzel, Yahoo Sports
“Three games into the season, the Cougars are already making a case as the College Football Playoff’s party crashers, and Taysom Hill as the Heisman party crasher.” - Nick Bromberg, Yahoo Sports