SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Garett Shrader threw for one touchdown and ran for another, Syracuse overcame a first-half dominated by Army and scored 26 unanswered points to defeat the Black Knights 29-16 Saturday and remain unbeaten.
Army totally dominated the first half statistics, but not on the scoreboard, where it led just 10-3. The Black Knights held the ball for 23:24, had 149 yards to the Orange’s 77, ran 41 plays to Syracuse’s 17. Army gained 129 yards on the ground, while the Orange could muster just 18.
Syracuse (4-0) came alive in the second half, scoring on five straight possessions. LeQuint Allen scored on a 13-yard touchdown run to tie the game at 10 midway through the third and a 13-yard pass from Shrader to Umari Hatcher on the Orange’s next possession gave Syracuse a 16-10 lead over the Black Knights (2-2). The Orange defense held Army to just five first downs, minus four yards rushing yards, sacked Bryson Daily three times and intercepted him twice after intermission.
“I wouldn’t necessarily say things didn’t go our way in the first half,” Syracuse coach Dino Babers said. “I would’ve liked it for it to be a tie game or for us to be slightly ahead, but we were down by the score that if we came out (on the first drive) we could get it even.
“The big conversation was that we needed to score on that drive in the third quarter and when we did that we switched the pressure back to them,” Babers added. “If we do not score it might have put some doubt in their mind, but because we did, it put them back in the right frame of mind.”
Shrader was 21 of 26 for 245 yards through the air and 49 more rushing. Allen had 127 total yards with 104 coming on the ground. Damien Alford led Syracuse receivers with nine receptions for 135 yards. Brady Denaburg chipped in with three field goals.
“Alford is a captain and has a C on his chest,” Babers said. “It was a breakout game for him. I was excited about his performance today.”
Daily was 9 of 21 for 145 yards and rushed for a team-leading 47.
The Black Knights set the tone for the first half on its first possession. A 1-yard run by Jakobi Buchanan culminated a 17-play, 75-yard drive that took more than nine minutes off the clock. A 4-yard-run by Buchanan on a 4th-and-1 kept the drive alive.
For Army, the main concern was the health of junior defensive lineman Andre Miller, who was carted off the field in the fourth quarter.
“We’re certainly disappointed with the result of the game, but our biggest concern is Andre Miller,” said Army coach Jeff Monken, who added Miller had feeling in his extremities and was responding to him.
On the game itself, Monken said: “In the first half our guys were battling and were in position so at least we had a chance. Bottom line is in the second half, they made way too many plays and way more than us. The reason we lost is in the second half they played like a team that’s a top-scoring offense and defense in the country and looked like it.”
THE TAKEAWAY
Army will have a tough time against more athletic teams, a big problem with its next two games against Power 5 teams.
Syracuse showed it’s capable of making significant in-game adjustments on both sides of the ball, which will be key moving forward. The Orange took advantage of its athleticism to dominate on offense after being dominated by the Black Knights and its defense put the clamps on Army after an impressive start. … The Orange are 4-0 in non-conference play for the first time since it joined the Big East in 1991.
PERFECT
After converting three fourth downs, Army is now a perfect 13-of-13 on the season. … The Black Knights had just one penalty.
GOT NO QUARTER
Army’s defense has held its opponents scoreless in the first quarter this season.
LeQUINT MULTI Le-TALENTED
Babers said Allen is capable of accumulating 200 yards rushing and receiving in a game. “He’s that talented.”
UP NEXT
Army: After a bye week, the Black Knights host Boston College Sat., Oct. 7.
Syracuse: The Orange kick off ACC play hosting Clemson in a nationally televised showdown Saturday.
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