(AP) -- The comeback
Cougars still have BCS dreams.
Matt Payne kicked a 25-yard field goal as time
expired to give No. 10 BYU a 41-38 victory
over Mississippi State on Saturday night, keeping
the Cougars' slim hopes for a BCS bowl bid alive.
BYU (12-0) extended its winning streak to 14 games and for the third
straight game needed last-minute heroics to remain unbeaten.
Brandon Doman threw for 390 yards and five touchdowns, but it was Luke
Staley who did most of the work on the final 63-yard drive, running five
times for 33 yards.
``We've done this before,'' Doman said. ``The guys just put it all together on
that last drive.''
The Cougars scored two touchdowns in the last 3 1/2 minutes to beat Utah
in their last game and made a last-minute defensive stand to beat Wyoming
the week before. Earlier in the season, they pulled out late victories at
UNLV and New Mexico.
As has been the case all season, the offense was potent and the defense did
just enough against the Bulldogs (3-8).
Staley ran for 149 yards on 28 carries, though he limped off the field after
his final carry favoring his left leg. The team said he may have broken his
fibula, and that he will undergo tests Sunday in Provo.
Reno Mahe caught 10 passes for 189 yards and two touchdowns and the
BYU defense had three takeaways.
The Cougars were No. 12 in the BCS rankings this week. The top 12 are
eligible to be selected for one of four big-money bowl games.
``It's out of our hands,'' Doman said.
BYU and No. 1 Miami are the only unbeaten major-college teams.
First-year coach Gary Crowton defended BYU's so-called soft schedule.
``What else can we do,'' Crowton said. ``We played seven road games. A
Pac-10 team (California), an SEC team (Mississippi State). ... I commend
our players for keeping focused and going undefeated because it's hard to
get up for every game.''
BYU finishes its season against Hawaii next Saturday.
With an offense ranked 113th in the nation in scoring, Mississippi State
looked comfortable going shot-for-shot against the nation's highest scoring
team.
Kevin Fant was 20-for-28 for 346 yards with three touchdowns and an
interception, Dicenzo Miller ran for 119 yards and two touchdowns on 12
carries and Justin Jenkins had seven catches for 133 yards and two scores.
The teams combined for 1,035 yards of offense.
Bulldogs coach Jackie Sherrill said poor officiating marred a great game. He
said officials missed numerous penalties against the Cougars and made too
many calls against his team.
``This is the first time I can honestly say the officials
took the game away from us,'' he said.
BYU was flagged nine times for 70 yards.
Mississippi State was called for 10 penalties for 127
yards.
BYU, which needed two touchdowns in the final 3
1/2 minutes to beat Utah in its last game, trailed
31-21 in the third quarter before rallying behind Doman, who was 23-for-32
with three interceptions.
The senior quarterback found Doug Jolley deep down the sideline for a
26-yard scoring play early in the fourth quarter to tie it at 31.
BYU was threatening again on its next drive when Pig Prather intercepted a
long pass at the Bulldogs 9.
Fant and the Mississippi State offense went to work with a well-balanced
91-yard drive that BYU's offense would have been proud.
Miller finished the drive by darting into the end zone from 22 yards out to
give Mississippi State a 38-31 lead with about 10 minutes left.
The Cougars came right back with a 69-yard touchdown drive of their own.
Doman rolled right and threw back to a wide-open Spencer Nead, who
rumbled in from 12 yards to tie it at 38 with 6:11 left.
BYU's defense finally came up with a stop, forcing the Bulldogs to punt on
their last drive.
The Cougars drove down the field methodically on the final drive, with
Doman completing two passes for 31 yards.
Payne said he wasn't nervous before the game-winning kick.
``Those are the kind of kicks that you love,'' he said. ``If you make them you
win, if you miss then you go to overtime.''
After the winning field goal, there were big cheers by the fans at the Delta
Center in Salt Lake City, who watched the end of the game on the big
screen after the Utah Jazz lost 100-97 to Indiana in the NBA.