Box Score
PROVO, Utah – An offense that has struggled continued to do
so and a defense that has not uncharacteristically did Saturday night. That
combination, combined with a season-high 11 penalties, made for a long evening
for the Idaho Vandals as they tumbled 42-7 to Brigham Young University in a
non-conference football game.
“This game was two steps forward and three steps back,”
senior offensive tackle and co-captain Tyrone Novikoff said. “We just couldn't
get on a roll. That's frustrating.”
Coach Robb Akey gave full credit to BYU – and wondered what
happened to his team.
“We didn't make any plays tonight,” he said. “That was the
problem. We did a poor job executing offensively. We need to execute those things
better. … It's the whole offense. I'm disappointed we didn't play better
tonight.”
On the other side of the ball, he said, “What hurt us the
most was the lack of ability to stop the run tonight and to make stops on third
down.”
BYU, which missed a field goal on its first possession, came
back on its next to score on a 32-yard pass from Riley Nelson to Cody Hoffman
with 8:26 left in the first. The Cougars made it 14-0 on their next possession with
a 17-yard run by Bryan Kariya with 1:18 to go in the first. On both drives, the
Vandal defense gave big boosts to the BYU offense with penalties – first on an
unsportsmanlike conduct call and then on a pass interference call.
The Cougars made it 21-0 on Kariya's one-yard run with 6:49
to go in the first half. Again, BYU had a first-down by penalty to aid its
progress. With time waning in the first half, BYU struck one more time – a 21-yard
pass from Jake Heaps to Hoffman with :13 to go in the second. Again, the drive
was aided by an Idaho pass interference call.
At the same time the Vandal defense was misfiring, so was
the offense. Idaho had just 28 yards total offense in the first quarter. The
second wasn't much better with the halftime total inching up to just 65. By game's
end, Idaho had 241 total yards –but 82 of those came on a single play.
After the Cougars added two more TDs in the third to go up
42-0, Princeton McCarty provided the first highlight-reel play of the game when
he romped down the left sideline for an 82-yard TD with 3:56 left in the third.
Junior punter Bobby Cowan, a semifinalist for the Ray Guy
Award, did regain the national punting average lead with seven kicks for 322
yards to push his average to 47.0.
McCarty's run was the longest of his career.