Pierce runs for 172 yards, late field goal gives Temple 34-32 win over Miami of Ohio

By Dan Gelston, AP
Thursday, November 5, 2009

Temple win seventh straight, 34-32 over Miami

PHILADELPHIA — Bernard Pierce ran for 172 yards and three touchdowns, and Brandon McManus kicked an 18-yard field goal with 3 seconds left to give Temple a 34-32 victory over Miami of Ohio on Thursday night.

The Owls (7-2, 5-0 Mid-American Conference) won their seventh straight game and are on their longest winning streak since they won the final eight games of the 1973 season.

Temple blew leads of 21-3 and 31-13 against the RedHawks (1-9, 1-5). McManus bailed out the Owls with their biggest kick of the season.

Coach Al Golden’s Owls were already bowl eligible and they now have the MAC title game in sight. To put the winning streak in perspective, the Owls won seven games total from 2002-05.

The Owls opened the 1974 season with six straight victories and finished the 1970s with three straight bowl games. Temple then sunk into three decades of football futility that made it one of the worst programs around.

No more.

The Owls showed some grit on the final drive after blowing the huge leads.

Zack Dysert threw for 415 yards and three touchdown passes for the RedHawks (1-9, 1-5). Dysert tossed TD passes of 25 and 14 yards in the fourth quarter to slice the deficit to five at 31-26.

Dysert rushed for the first down on a crucial fourth-and-1 at Temple’s 2 on the final drive. Thomas Merriweather capped the comeback with the short TD run to make it 32-31. The 2-point conversion failed.

Golden, a former Penn State captain, needed only four seasons to turn a a demoralized program into conference contenders. Once an automatic “W” on any team’s schedule, the Owls are on track for their first bowl game since 1979.

The Owls haven’t had a winning record since they went 7-4 in 1990.

Temple’s sob story — kicked out of the Big East, winless seasons — has been recounted countless times.

Pierce is among the Owls trying to write a new story in Temple’s history. He already set a Temple record for yards rushing and touchdowns by a freshman. He now has six 100-yard rushing games this season.

Pierce had TD runs of 1 and 7 yards in the first half, then capped a 15-carry third quarter with a 14-yard score that made it 31-13.

His 14 rushing touchdowns put Pierce one shy of the single-season rushing record held by Paul Palmer (1986) and Walter Washington (2004).

Golden benched starting quarterback Vaughn Charlton for Chester Stewart. Charlton started every game, but had only completed 51 percent of his passes and threw seven interceptions.

Charlton still made an impact, scoring on a fake field goal on fourth-and-1 late in the first quarter for a 14-3 lead.

With Pierce carrying the load, Stewart wasn’t asked to do much and threw for 142 yards.

Golden has done a masterful job with the rebuilding project on the field. He has miles to go to spark massive interest in a city that has never fallen in love with college football. Perhaps suffering from a World Series hangover with the Phillies loss to the New York Yankees, only a few thousand fans showed up on a brisk night perfect for football.

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