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Bulls squash Syracuse


Thankfully, someone set the alarm clock at halftime, because the University of South Florida’s defense finally woke up. The Bulls completely dominated Syracuse, thanks to an impressive second half, for a 45-13 victory Saturday.

In the second half, Syracuse was limited to nine yards on 18 offensive plays and no first downs. The Orange had the ball for only 6 minutes, 40 seconds of the 30-minute second half.

And with UConn’s loss at Rutgers, there are only three remaining undefeated teams in Big East play - West Virginia, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati.

Were you as impressed in the second half with USF or a more scared with the shaky first half defensively? The Bulls kept their Big East title hopes alive and gear up for consecutive road trips at Louisville and Cincinnati. Here’s the game story from Saturday’s game.

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Apparently the University of South Florida thought its off week also included the first half against Syracuse.

The Bulls, who hadn’t played in 16 days, finally awoke from a lethargic first half with a dominating second half to smash Syracuse, 45-13, Saturday.

“We were a little sluggish in the first half,” USF senior linebacker Brouce Mompremier said. “I’m not sure why, but whatever it was, we fixed it at halftime.”

No. 19 USF led 21-13 at halftime, but was outgained by Syracuse 221-212. In the second half, USF outscored SU 24-0, holding the Orange to no first downs and 9 yards on 18 offensive plays.

USF defensive coordinator Wally Burnham, after watching Orange running back Curtis Brinkley rush for 106 yards in the first half, issued a “challenge” to the defense.

“I got on them a little bit,” Burnham said. “Let’s just say I challenged them. I hollered. I made ‘em think I was mad.”

The Bulls bought it.

“Wally, [USF coach Jim] Leavitt and [secondary] Coach [Troy] Douglas went crazy at halftime,” USF senior linebacker Tyrone McKenzie said. “We stepped to the plate and got it fixed. We can’t have that happen anymore.”

The Bulls’ domination wasn’t limited to the field. Even Syracuse’s mascot was no match. Rocky the Bull knocked Syracuse’s Orange to the ground in the fourth quarter.

Long before Rocky’s knockout, USF quarterback Matt Grothe already had administered his own TKO of the Orange. Grothe threw for 248 yards and three TDs, and rushed for 72 yards and another score before leaving with 6:45 remaining. The secret to Grothe’s success?

“I probably was still tired from waking up at 7 o’clock,” said Grothe about the noon start. “I’m still tired from that.

“Normally when I’m not so worried about football [all day], I play better. I was worried about waking up, came out and played well.”

With USF leading 21-13 in the third quarter, Grothe caught Syracuse (1-6, 0-3 Big East) asleep. After USF defensive end Craig Marshall returned a Syracuse fumble caused by Aaron Harris 7 yards to the SU 1, Grothe hit A.J. Love, who was left alone near the right sideline, for a TD with 6:53 remaining in the third.

USF scored points on four consecutive drives to turn the 21-13 lead into a 45-13 laugher before an announced Raymond James Stadium crowd of 51,384.

“We went dormant on offense,” Syracuse coach Greg Robinson said. “I wish I could tell you what specifically was the reason for that but I don’t know. I just didn’t feel like we showed the same explosiveness we showed in the first half.”

USF’s defense was sparked by the return of Mompremier, defensive end George Selvie and nose tackle Terrell McClain. The trio had not been in the starting lineup together since playing at Florida International on Sept. 20.

“It made a great deal of difference,” Burnham said.

While the Bulls defense dominated the second half, the Bulls offense put in a complete performance. USF’s balanced attack had 487 yards — 239 rushing, 248 passing.

“Matt played great,” USF offensive coordinator Greg Gregory said. “We’re a much better team when we don’t worry about who’s carrying the ball and we just go. The offense can revolve around the quarterback and we can rotate the backs in and let ‘em go.”

Mike Ford (51 yards rushing), Moise Plancher (31 yards) and Ben Williams (25 yards rushing, 65 yards receiving) each had at least six carries.

“We were satisfied with our performance,” USF senior guard Matt Huners said.

USF senior wide receiver Taurus Johnson, who had two TD receptions, said Saturday’s performance was more indicative of the Bulls offense.

“We did what we were supposed to do,” Johnson said. “I thought, ‘Now this is the offense.’ I know this is what we usually do.”

Even though the victory made the Bulls bowl eligible, Grothe said USF has bigger goals. “I want to be BCS [bowl] eligible,” he said.

Send Us Your Comments

Posted by  Dan Alatorre, Tampa on 10/19  at  12:45 AM

What a fun game to watch. I wish our special teams would get their act together, though.


Posted by  JT, Tampa on 10/18  at  09:08 PM

Don’t mean to be pessimistic but we are a 20-25 team.  I see us losing one or two more games this year.  I really thought our D would be better than it is.  I hope I’m proved wrong.  Go Bulls.


Posted by  jeffrey saff, annapolis, md on 10/18  at  07:18 PM

I am very pleased with the W.  I wanted to make that very clear.  What I am concerned about going forward is that I want to see a 100 yard rusher.  We need a bruising rb. 

I am a huge Ben Williams fans.  Having him back in the mix will make it possible for usf to go 5-2 in the Big East.  I d/n feel that we will beat both L’ville and Cincy.  If we can take 2/3 on the road and the last two at home, I will be very happy.

I just hope that this usf team does NOT feel the same way.  They should only believe that they will win out and nothing else is acceptable.

I know Ben Williams will be ready.


Posted by  Nabeel Mulla, Dayton, OH on 10/18  at  03:48 PM

The Bulls historically seem to come out ready to play in the second half.  Their third quarter scoring this year has been impressive.  As long as they keep winning, they’ve got just as good of a chance as Pitt, WVU, Cincy and UConn to win the Big East.  I still think the winner will come down to a tie-breaker between 2 two-loss teams.


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About Scott:

Scott Carter covers the University of South Florida for The Tampa Tribune, TBO.com and News Channel 8. Prior to covering the Bulls and Coach Jim Leavitt, Carter spent three years in Tallahassee filling his notebook full of Bobby Bowden quotes while covering Florida State. During his career at the Tribune, Carter has also covered the Rays, Lightning, horse racing and prep sports.


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