SUN BELT FOOTBALL

Eagles reverse field to stun Red Wolves

Arkansas State quarterback Justice Hansen runs with the ball Saturday while trying to elude Georgia Southern safety Joshua Moon during the Red Wolves’ 28-21 loss to the Eagles in Statesboro, Ga.
Arkansas State quarterback Justice Hansen runs with the ball Saturday while trying to elude Georgia Southern safety Joshua Moon during the Red Wolves’ 28-21 loss to the Eagles in Statesboro, Ga.

Georgia Southern deviated from the Triple-Option successfully twice.

Sophomore quarterback Shai Werts fired a 61-yard passing touchdown to senior running back Wesley Fields in the second quarter, beginning an uphill climb too high for Arkansas State University to conquer in a 28-21 road loss Saturday at Allen E. Paulson Stadium in Statesboro, Ga. -- the Red Wolves' first loss to begin conference play in six seasons.

"We knew this was possible," ASU Coach Blake Anderson said. "Anytime you go on the road, anytime you play at home with a team in this league, everybody is capable of winning. Everybody is capable of beating you. You've got to play your best ball. We didn't play it tonight."

Fighting off a second-half comeback from ASU, Georgia Southern (3-1, 1-0 Sun Belt) strayed from its run-only, Triple-Option offense once again in the fourth quarter.

At first, it looked like another one of the 49 rushing attempts for 348 yards from the Eagles, a fading run to the left side of its offensive line with a pitch to a tailback or a quarterback keeper possible.

Seconds later, Werts flipped a reverse to sophomore receiver Wesley Kennedy running toward the vacant side of ASU's defense. Kennedy busted out a 47-yard touchdown with 0:19 remaining to sour the Red Wolves' conference opener.

"We've been chasing the ball so well all night," Anderson said. "Our team is built on speed. It's just a great call by them. They called it at the right time.

"It's one of those things if it works, you're a hero. If it doesn't, we're going to go into overtime and we'll keep playing."

Early on, it became obvious the Eagles' offense would force the Triple-Option and infrequently veer away from it. When they put the ground game aside for a few plays -- the big TD pass and the fancy reverse -- the Red Wolves (3-2, 0-1) paid for it.

Georgia Southern gained 12 yards on its opening three drives (8, -6, 10 yards). The 61-yard pass, Werts' first and only completion of the game, came on the fourth drive.

Helped by a 45-yard field goal from redshirt freshman kicker Blake Grupe, the Red Wolves entered halftime trailing 7-3 while having the more productive offense through two quarters.

The Red Wolves posted 235 yards to GSU's 159 in the first half, which was promising, Anderson told ASU's radio broadcast at halftime. However, a season-worst performance by ASU's offensive line was not.

Through the first two quarters, senior quarter Justice Hansen was sacked four times, the most the Arkansas State offensive line has allowed in a game all season.

The Eagles met Hansen for six total sacks. A clogged and muddied pocket did not allow ASU to cash in on points that would have forced the Eagles out of their slow-and-steady offense.

For a moment, the Red Wolves' passing game found life away from the pass rush.

Grupe knocked in a 27-yard field goal, and Hansen found his 67th career passing touchdown -- an 11-yard pass to junior receiver Kirk Merritt -- to tie the game at 14-14 with 58 seconds left in the third quarter.

Fifty-eight seconds later, Georgia Southern needed one play to step on the gas once again.

Fields broke off a 64-yard rush as the final play of the third quarter and landed on ASU's 6 before Monteo Garrett punched in the 6 yards for a six points.

Hansen, ASU's leading rusher and passer with 42 rushing yards and 376 passing yards on 38 completions, steered the Red Wolves to a 16-play, 77-yard drive in the fourth quarter. Hansen, whose 67 career passing TDs tied the school's record Saturday, punched in a 4-yard rushing touchdown before the Eagles soaked up 4:42 of the fourth quarter's remaining five minutes before the reverse.

"We moved the ball everywhere," Anderson said, "just found ways to derail."

Sports on 09/30/2018

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