NEW MEXICO BOWL

Washington State hands it over to Colorado State

Colorado State players celebrate their win after the NCAA New Mexico Bowl college football game against Washington State, Saturday, Dec. 21, 2013, in Albuquerque, N.M. Colorado State won 48-45.(AP Photo/Matt York)
Colorado State players celebrate their win after the NCAA New Mexico Bowl college football game against Washington State, Saturday, Dec. 21, 2013, in Albuquerque, N.M. Colorado State won 48-45.(AP Photo/Matt York)

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - With less than 2 minutes to play and Colorado State trailing by eight points, Shaquil Barrett knew the Rams needed the ball back quickly to finish an improbable comeback against Washington State on Saturday.

Once down by 22 points in the New Mexico Bowl, the Rams got their chance when Cougars running back Jeremiah Laufasa came barreling toward Barrett.

“I was kind of thinking in my mind, yeah, that was our shot to get back in the game right there,” said Barrett, who stripped the ball. “I really didn’t think I was going to get the opportunity.”

That fumble, at the Cougars 33, set up Kapri Bibbs’ 1-yard run score and Donnell Alexander’s two-point conversion run that tied it at 45 with 33 seconds left.

Then Washington State’s Teondray Caldwell fumbled a kickoff return at the 24, setting up Jared Roberts’ 41-yard field goal with 3 seconds left that gave Colorado State a 48-45 victory.

It was a quarterback shootout that saw close to 800 passing yards combined and a game largely dominated by Washington State until the last 2 minutes. Colorado State didn’t have a lead the entire game until the winning field goal.

“That win right there … it’s pretty amazing how it worked but at the end of the day, it’s about being resilient,” Rams Coach Jim McElwain. “It’s about understanding [that] every play has a history and life of its own.”

Garrett Grayson threw for 369 yards and Bibbs ran for 169 yards and three touchdowns for Colorado State (8-6). The Rams overcame three early turnovers.

“I’m still kind of at a loss for words about how that whole thing ended up,” Rams center Weston Richburg said. “That’s the most unbelievable game I’ve ever been a part of.”

Washington State’s Connor Halliday threw touchdown passes to six receivers and finished with 410 yards for Washington State (6-7). The six touchdown passes tied West Virginia’s Geno Smith and Iowa’s Chuck Long for an NCAA bowl record.

After the first touchdown pass, Halliday got into a shouting match with a Colorado State coach when Halliday ran into the Rams’ sideline.

“Coach grabbed me and said some profane things to me, and that’s all I’ll say about it,” Halliday said.

Washington State scored 35 points in the first half but had only 10 in the second. With the game winding down, alack of a running game forced the Cougars to stay with their spread offense and prevented them for running down the clock when ahead by 15 points in the fourth quarter.

“Colorado State finished the game. We didn’t,” Washington State Coach Mike Leach said.

Sports, Pages 30 on 12/22/2013

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