Saturday’s 20-15 BC loss to Nebraska in the Pinstripe Bowl had so many of the ups and downs of the season that preceded it. Inexplicable failures to score, questionable play calls, unanticipated successes, dazzling plays, and a comeback that fell just short.
At halftime, the Eagles had had the ball for more than 17 minutes, outgained Nebraska 197 yards to 189, and were five of nine on third down conversions. BC also had zero offensive points, scoring only on the return of a blocked point-after attempt, and trailed the Cornhuskers 13-2.
“I thought we were productive, but we couldn’t score,” Coach Bill O’Brien said. “That’s a problem.”
The Eagles didn’t punt in the first half, giving up the ball each time in Nebraska territory. Their first drive ended on the 35-yardline with a missed field goal. Their next three drives all ended on failed fourth-down conversions.
After stopping Nebraska on fourth down at the BC seven early in the second half, the Eagles drove to midfield, but lost the ball on a fumble. Nebraska then lengthened the lead to 20-2, but it was the Cornhuskers’ last score.
BC’s first touchdown came with just over six minutes left in the game. RB Turbo Richard plunged a yard into the endzone to cut the score to 20-8. A two-point conversion pass was incomplete.
Forcing a Nebraska punt on the next series deep in Cornhusker territory, BC blocked the attempt and freshman DB Omar Thornton carried the ball to the Nebraska two. RB Jordan McDonald ran the ball in and, after a successful PAT, the Eagles trailed by only five, 20-15, with 4:18 left in the game.
Nebraska was able to get two first downs and move the ball to the BC 31, where it was fourth and one. The Cornhuskers rushed for 11 yards to get the first down with two minutes left. They then ran out the clock, taking kneel downs, and secured the win.
Statistically, the game was quite close. BC ran 67 plays overall, three more than Nebraska, and gained 348 yards, 15 fewer than Nebraska.
BC’s offense was heavily through the air. QB Grayson James attempted 41 passes, completing 26 for 301 yards, no touchdowns and no interceptions. James was also BC’s leading rusher, with 22 net yards on nine attempts. He was sacked three times. WR Lewis Bond led the Eagles in receptions, with seven for 99 yards, while TE Jeremiah Franklin had six receptions for 56 yards. Seven other Eagles had pass receptions.
Junior linebacker Daveon Crouch led the BC defense with 14 tackles, nine of them solo.
Highlights (3:14)
The Eagles finish the season 7-6 (4-4). BC has had six or seven wins in 10 of its last 12 seasons and still seeks its first eight-win season since 2009.
Opening game next season is at home against Fordham in late August.
BC’s men’s hockey team is 12-3-1 (6-2-1 in Hockey East) and ranked #2 in the country. The women’s lacrosse team defends its national championship beginning February 7. Look for San Diego gamewatches.