FCS School James Madison Shocks No. 13 Virginia Tech, 21-16

by

Sep 11, 2010

BLACKSBURG, Va. — Drew Dudzik
ran for two touchdowns and threw for another Saturday and James Madison
handed No. 13 Virginia Tech its second loss in six days, 21-16.

Dudzik scored on second-half runs
of seven and 12 yards as the Dukes (2-0) became only the second team
from the Football Championship Subdivision to beat the Hokies. Richmond
did it in 1985, a year after the Spiders dropped down to the Football
Championship Subdivision.

The Hokies (0-2) began the season
with national championship aspirations, but the offense that was
supposed to be their strength did less against the Dukes than against
No. 3 Boise State on Monday night. They lost that game 33-30 on a TD
with 1:09 remaining.

The Hokies' rebuilt defense also struggled to make stops when it needed them most.

James Madison coach Mickey
Matthews
joked this week he'd arrive at Lane Stadium with 60 players the
Hokies didn't want; he left with several that Virginia Tech could have
used.

Chief among them was Dudzik, who
completed 5 of 8 passes for 121 yards, including three huge third-down
conversions in the second half. The Hokies also helped on both of the
Dukes' second-half scoring drives with personal fouls for tackling
players out of bounds.

Dudzik also ran 12 times for 35
yards, and went in virtually untouched on both of his scoring runs. The
latter came with 13:45 remaining, and while Virginia Tech drove deep
into Dukes territory twice thereafter, Tyrod Taylor's fourth-down pass
to Jarrett Boykin in the end zone was broken up by Leavander Jones.
Darren Evans fumbled on the next series.

Taylor also fumbled once, and threw a second-half interception.

The Hokies looked strong early,
driving 94 yards in 17 plays to Taylor's 9-yard TD pass to Boykin on
their opening series. Taylor had an 18-yard scramble on third-and-6 in
the drive, but Virginia Tech managed only two field goals and 104 yards
the rest of the half.

The Dukes did even less and had
just 91 yards at the break. But they were right in the game because 77
of them came on one play, a swing pass that Jamal Sullivan took down the
left sideline for a touchdown on a third-and-17. It was the second play
of 70-plus yards allowed by the Hokies this season, and both came on
third down.

Previous Article

Red Sox’ Slide Continues as Athletics Rally in Late Innings

Next Article

Red Sox Need Offense to Awaken After Punchless Performance in Series Opener

Picked For You