RUSTON, La. (AP)—Early in the fourth quarter, there was nervous pacing along Boise State’s sideline.
With an opportunity to show a national television audience why they should once again become a BCS buster, a close game on the road was not what the fifth-ranked Broncos had in mind.
They looked anxious, but they weren’t rattled.
“We know we are going to have people’s best shots,” Boise State quarterback Kellen Moore said. “It’s kind of fun playing in tight games I think. Throw in a little pressure and it just shows the resiliency of this team.”
Moore threw for 354 yards and three touchdowns, and Boise State remained unbeaten and in contention for a BCS bid with a 45-35 victory over Louisiana Tech on Friday night.
Tech had pulled within 30-28 early in the fourth quarter on Dennis Morris’ leaping catch in the corner of the end zone. The Broncos defense buckled down long enough after that for Boise State to pull away with touchdowns on consecutive drives, first on Moore’s 12-yard pass to Austin Pettis and then on Jeremy Avery’s 44-yard touchdown run.
“We made more plays then they did tonight when it mattered and we were able to finish it out,” Moore said.
Avery finished with 146 yards rushing, while Titus Young caught eight passes for 110 yards, including a 40-yard touchdown for Boise State (9-0, 4-0 Western Athletic Conference).
Boise State has scored no fewer than 45 points in each of its four WAC games this season.
Still, the Broncos could have used a more dominant victory in their quest to prove they are more deserving than unbeaten and sixth-ranked TCU for a Bowl Championship Series bid.
“That’s how it always is when we play,” Boise State coach Chris Peterson said. “It’s never good enough, but it’s good enough for us. We are going to try to do better next week and just go from there.”
Trailing 27-7 at halftime, Tech (3-6, 2-4) made a game of it in the third quarter, starting with Josh Victorian’s first career touchdown on Moore’s third interception of the season. It was an ill-advised throw under pressure that hung in the air for Victorian, who raced down the sideline and cut inside Moore to cap a 75-yard return.
“Throwing that stupid pick, I think that really gave them some momentum that they were able to build on and take advantage of,” Moore said. “I think that certainly kept them in the game and it is definitely something that I shouldn’t have done.”
Moore responded by leading a 15-play drive to set up Kyle Brotzman’s third field goal, then Tech’s offense suddenly came to life. The Bulldogs got their first first down in two quarters on the way to a 73-yard scoring drive capped by Ross Jenkins’ 9-yard keeper around the right end to make it 30-21.
Tech’s Matt Nelson then caught the Broncos by surprise with an onside kick that he recovered himself. Shortly after, Jenkins found Morris over the middle for 36 yards to the Boise State 12, setting up Jenkins’ third-down pass to Morris, who leaped to catch the ball over defensive back Kyle Wilson’s head to pull Tech within 30-28.
“It looked like the game was going to get away from us, but I was really proud at how well we did in the second half,” Louisiana Tech coach Derek Dooley said. “We didn’t make the plays at the end of the game we needed to win, but if we keep fighting the way we’ve been fighting, we’ll play out of it eventually.”
When Brotzman missed his second field goal of the game on the Broncos’ next drive, the crowd was going wild, and it appeared the Bulldogs just might upset the highest-ranked team ever to play at Joe Aillet Stadium.
Instead, Boise State put its figurative foot down, forcing a quick punt. Then Moore floated a pass down the sideline to Kyle Efaw for his second 40-yard completion of the game, setting up his scoring pass to Pettis to make it 38-28.
Soon after, Tech failed to convert a fourth-and-6 on its own 44, setting up Avery’s game-clinching run that made it 45-28 with 4:52 to go. Tech managed one more touchdown after that.
Jenkins finished 10 of 19 for 114 yards and one interception. Daniel Porter rushed for 92 yards and a score for Tech.
Moore’s three TD passes gave him 27 on the season, eclipsing the 25 he had last year as a freshman.
Pettis finished with nine catches for 105 yards. Richie Brockel had a 2-yard TD catch in the first half and Doug Martin scored on 2-yard run for the Broncos.
Head to Head - Week 10
| Team | Total Yds | Pass Yds | Rush Yds | First Downs | 3rdD% | Pen./Yds | Turnovers | Time of Poss. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boise State | 507 | 354 | 153 | 25 | 41.7% | 8/63 | 1 | 33:01 |
| Louisiana Tech | 250 | 114 | 136 | 15 | 37.5% | 5/46 | 1 | 26:59 |

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327. Posted by John F
I keep reading posts from these Boise State homers saying that the SEC teams are afraid to play their beloved Broncos.
The last SEC team Boise State played was Georgia. It wasn't that long ago.
I'll let you Bronco fans look up the score.
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Of course, the SEC needs to stay away from the Mountain West Conference. Last time they tried it was Utah humiliating Alabama in the Sugar Bowl. Might happen again this year with the TCU Horned Frogs.................
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Wow! What an ignorant approach to take. ASk any team who has played BSU if they consider them a "real football" team and I think they will beg to differ from your opinion. I am sure that is what big bad Oregon thought this year (by the way OU....sorry about that Stanford loss today). I am also pretty sure that is why Oklahoma got caught with their pants down in the Fiesta Bowl. I can guarantee that after what BSU delivered in the Fiesta Bowl a few years back...a whole lotta people would turn in to any national bowl game they play.
Furthermore, you keep mentioning the National Championship....which isn't even really the point right now. BSU just wants to be allowed to play a BCS bowl game....period!! I think with ESPN as well as YAHOO Sports bringing this little situation of no one wanting to play BSU into the spotlight...maybe one of your "real/true" college teams will step up. But I doubt it....
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I'm not saying that teams like Boise State, TCU, Cincinnati, Utah, etc. are any better or worse than any of the teams from the high profile conferences, but with the BCS' stance on profitability taking a much, much higher priority than competitiveness, we'll likely never know how these teams truly stack up.
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They'll give you "reasons", such as how it will taint the true nature of the sport, and garbage like that, and how a team from a "minor" conference hasn't been around long enough to join their grandiose conference. But really what it's about is money. Their view of the world is a pie, and the more people you have to share a pie with, then the less pie that exists for each person, or in this case school. What generates the most money in college athletics today is football, and any talk about changing the way money is made in college football, makes a certain group of elitists very nervous.
The sad thing is, is that they have deep pockets, and just looking over the posts to this topic, one can easily see that the propaganda that they're pushing out is being recycled and being regurgitated back out. So, what you have are elitists, who think that because it's always been a specific way, so it should continue to be that same way, and their parrots, who are incapable of speaking for themselves and so just spout hype.
So the question is, why can't the college football landscape be redrawn tomorrow? Or more realistically, at the end of the season. The quickest way to reset a broken bone is to break it back into place. The college football system worked at one time, we've moved beyond that time. Resetting a broken bone is painful, there will probably be some screaming, but if we ever want to get things back on track, we'll have to do something sooner or later. And the longer it takes, the more likely this thing will stay broken, it only makes since to gradually implement a different system, if you're afraid that you're going to lose money, and you're attempting to squeeze out every last dollar that you can.
-Just something to think about.
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Boise is talking out of both sides of its mouth. Bleymeier dodged top level competition by insisting on home-and-homes, knowing full well that there isn't a top team in America that needs to come to Boise, Idaho and play in front of 35,000 fans. They then tried to justify their weak schedule by saying that "if we're undefeated, it shouldn't matter".
The problem with that scenario is that you can no longer fault the top teams for scheduling a couple of easy games, especially if they play in a tougher conference. Now that THAT little argument doesn't hold any water, the line is that "nobody wants to play us, even if we don't demand a home game."
News flash, Boise: your argument helped create the situation that you are currently whining about. You wanted to be taken seriously without playing a difficult schedule, and you got what you wanted. Now nobody has any incentive whatsoever to play you. Well, except in a bowl game, and Boise has lost its last two to...get this... TCU and East Carolina.
Top five? BCS? Riiiight.
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http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/football/news?slug=dw-boise110709&prov=yhoo&type=lgns
read it, then comment
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