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Doman
leads BYU to blowout win in BCA Classic
Cougars
outrun, outgun Tulane 70-35 in head coach Crowton's debut
Box
Score
PROVO, Utah
(AP) -- In 29 seasons under LaVell Edwards, BYU threw for almost
60 miles of yardage. The Cougars might end up running that far under
new coach Gary Crowton. Brandon Doman was 25-of-31 for 286 yards
and three touchdowns in Crowton's debut as BYU's coach, leading
the Cougars to a 70-35 victory over Tulane on Saturday in the Black
Coaches Association Classic.
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BYU
scores one of its seven rushing touchdowns under a new offense
as head coach Gary Crowton debuted on the Cougar sidelines in
the 2001 BCA Classic. |
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BYU's rushing
attack, which produced 437 of 734 yards, set the tempo and wore
down the Green Wave. Luke Staley ran for 142 yards and Brian McDonald
had 103, each scoring three touchdowns.
"I knew
the game plan going in," Crowton said. "I didn't reveal
any of that, but I just felt like we have two strong running backs
and our quarterback also can run the ball."
It was the first
time since 1972 that Edwards wasn't coaching the Cougars. He retired
after last season, capping a 29-year career where he won 257 games,
20 conference titles and the 1984 national championship.
"It's good
to see them play well. It's very exciting," said Edwards, who
watched from a suite. "They've got a chance to be a real good
ballclub this season if they stay healthy and keep scoring touchdowns."
Twenty years
ago, the Cougars (1-0) dominated opponents with the passing game.
But led by Doman, a high school option quarterback who also ran
for 115 yards and one TD, BYU inflicted its damage with the rush.
"Probably
midway through the second quarter I started licking my chops because
I could see those guys were getting worn down," Doman said.
"They weren't enjoying our game plan very much."
Tulane (0-1)
struck first, needing five plays before Mewelde Moore broke to the
right on a counter that went 75 yards for a TD. But Staley had six
carries for 102 yards and three scores in the first quarter as BYU
led 21-14.
The first half
was more like pingpong than football, as the teams scored on most
of their brief possessions. At one point there were four straight
scoring drives, each consuming less than one minute.
"We both
came out bang, bang, bang," Moore said. "That's what you'd
expect from the types of offense both teams put together. We just
didn't have the juice to keep up with them."
The Cougars
seized control with Doman's three second-quarter scoring passes,
two of them to Spencer Nead. On the second, two Tulane defenders
tipped the ball before it bounced to Nead and he ran in for a 27-yard
play.
"That was
a well-executed offensive machine," Tulane coach Chris Scelfo
said. "They really hit on all cylinders and the ball also bounced
their way."
That gave BYU
a 42-21 lead with 5:52 before halftime. Tulane's Patrick Ramsey
answered with a 10-yard TD strike to Moore, but McDonald gave the
Cougars a 49-28 halftime lead with his 26-yard scoring run with
42 seconds on the clock.
"At halftime
we were at 49 and I was thinking to myself, `This is crazy,"'
Doman said. "BYU is supposed to put up points. We're supposed
to throw a lot of different things at the defense, and we did that
today."
It was a big
day for Crowton, who puffed his cheeks and blew out a big sigh after
running onto the field at LaVell Edwards Stadium ahead of his players.
Then Crowton donned a headset to call plays, something Edwards never
did.
The fiery Crowton
also barked at referees when they approached the BYU sideline. Another
time, he ran over to point at the ground where a Tulane runner went
out of bounds.
"It was
an exciting day and an exciting win," Crowton said.The easygoing
Edwards usually strolled the sidelines with his arms crossed and
his face folded into a scowl that belied his friendly personality.
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