He dropped back, waited until he spotted an opening and scrambled
up the middle for a first down that sparked a 99-yard drive,
clinching a 35-17 victory over Toledo on Wednesday night.
The No. 20 Huskies also secured a fourth consecutive trip to the
Mid-American Conference title game.
Lynch, their do-it-all quarterback, said he never felt rattled even
with little room for error. That's because he said the Huskies
practice those 99-yard drives.
"That's a momentum killer," he said. "It's a real dagger to the
defense."
Lynch finished with three touchdowns — all in the second half — and
161 yards. The third score on a 1-yard dive came at the end of the
Huskies' long drive in the fourth quarter.
He ran for 62 yards on seven carries during the drive, the big play
coming when he scrambled out of the end zone to pick up a first
down.
The Huskies (11-0, 7-0 MAC) extended their 24-game conference
winning streak and are off to the best start in school history.
Lynch was 17 of 22 for 202 yards passing and ran for 161 yards on 28
carries. He is 23-2 as a starter.
Northern Illinois is still in the hunt for a second straight Bowl
Championship Series appearance after playing in the Orange Bowl last
season. The Huskies are 16th in this week's BCS rankings.
They need to keep winning and move ahead of Fresno State in the
standings to keep their hopes alive.
Northern Illinois is the first MAC team to appear in four straight
league championship games since Marshall did it six seasons in a row
from 1997-2002. The Huskies have won the past two MAC titles.
The Huskies' offense sputtered in the first half without their two
leading receivers, Tommylee Lewis and Da'Ron Brown, because of
injuries. Lewis didn't dress for the game and Brown went out in the
first quarter with an injured toe.
Toledo (7-4, 5-2) shut down Lynch too, holding him to just 30 yards
on the ground in the first half.
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But there was no panic.
Huskies coach Rod Carey said all he had to do was remind his
team to finish their drives.
"That calmed the guys down," Carey said.
One guy he wasn't worried about being rattled was his
quarterback.
"He's pretty decisive," Carey said. "When he's running and
making plays, that's just him."
Lynch's second touchdown came when he faked a handoff and raced
up the middle for a 31-yard touchdown, pulling the Huskies ahead
for good at 21-17 with 6:15 left in the third quarter.
"He's always poised," said receiver Juwan Brescacin, who had
eight receptions for 121 yards. "That's why we're as good as we
are."
Lynch has thrown for at least 200 yards and run for 100 in the
same game 11 times in his career. He moved into third place on
the school's rushing list behind Garrett Wolfe and Michael
Turner, both of whom went on to the NFL.
Terrance Owens threw two touchdown passes for Toledo.
Toledo's leading rusher, David Fluellen, started after missing
the past two games with what the team has called a lower leg
injury, but he was held to 54 yards on 15 carries — far below
his 133-yard average.
The Rockets led 10-7 at the half after Owens found a wide open
Alonzo Russell along the right sideline for a 45-yard touchdown,
putting Toledo ahead.
The Huskies drove 85 yards on the opening possession of the
second half to take back the lead 14-10, scoring on a 12-yard
run by Lynch, his first of the game.
Owens came back with a 36-yard touchdown to Bernard Reedy, who
stretched out to make the catch in the back of the end zone,
pulling the Rockets ahead 17-14 midway in the third quarter.
[Associated
Press; JOHN SEEWER]
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