Jackson's five touchdowns leads Beavers in Las Vegas



The running back said he will skip his senior season and enter the NFL draft.
LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Steven Jackson joined Barry Sanders in the NCAA record book -- not a bad way to end a college career.
Now the Oregon State star is ready to see if he can succeed in the NFL, too.
Jackson tied a bowl game record by scoring five touchdowns, and Oregon State's defense overwhelmed New Mexico in a 55-14 win at the Las Vegas Bowl on Wednesday night.
Afterward, Jackson, who rushed for 3,625 yards in three years with the Beavers, said he'll skip his senior season and enter the NFL draft. He's expected to be a first-round pick.
"No matter what I do, I know I'm going to be successful," he said.
"As a running back, everybody is gunning for you and you've only got so many carries left in your body."
Jackson, the leading rusher in the Pac-10 this year, ran for 149 yards on 28 carries.
The 6-foot-3, 225-pound back caught a 34-yard pass from Derek Anderson five minutes in and added touchdown runs of 3, 11, 6, and 1 yards.
Sanders scored five touchdowns for Oklahoma State against Wyoming in the 1988 Holiday Bowl, and Sheldon Canley of San Jose State had five against Central Michigan in the 1990 California Bowl.
Jackson's five TDs are also an OSU record.
"That was what we were going for in the huddle," he said. "I told the guys on the offensive line: 'If you score, I score."'
Two of Jackson's scores came in the second quarter. That got the Beavers (8-5) rolling and extended the Lobos' bowl drought.
Lobo's bowl drought continues
New Mexico (8-5) hasn't won a bowl game since 1961 and lost its third postseason game since 1997. It was the second straight defeat for New Mexico in this game, having lost to UCLA 27-13 last year.
The Lobos' scores came on a 27-yard pass from Casey Kelly to Hank Baskett in the first quarter and Kole McKamey's 17-yard toss to Dwight Counter in the fourth.
Unable to run or pass against OSU's defense, the Lobos had only one first down in the first half and 21 total yards through the first three quarters. The bleak stats also included 6 yards rushing, seven first downs and 127 total yards.
"When you get beat that badly and you play that poorly and the other team dominates you in every phase of the game, it really hurts," New Mexico coach Rocky Long said.
New Mexico got its second first down on a 46-yard pass from wide receiver Baskett to Counter with just more than 10 minutes left.
New Mexico helped the rout by getting penalized for 103 yards.
Moore shut down
Lobos sophomore tailback DonTrell Moore, who led the Mountain West Conference with 1,438 yards this season, finished with 5 yards on 11 carries. His second-quarter fumble at the New Mexico 15 led to Jackson's third TD and second in a span of 1:39.
It was also a tough night for senior starting defensive back Terrell Golden. Angry and upset, he was escorted to the Lobos' locker room by an assistant coach early in the second half.
"He lost emotional control, so we sent him in," Long said. "He wasn't making any sense on the sidelines."
New Mexico had the fourth-best rushing defense in the country this season, but after gaining just 11 yards in the first quarter Jackson found plenty of holes.
Anderson was equally impressive. He completed 21 of 32 passes for 322 yards, raising his season total to 4,058. The only other player in Pac-10 history to pass for more than 4,000 yards in a season was Washington's Cody Pickett, who had 4,458 last year.
"Our team did a good job of putting all the ingredients together," Beavers coach Mike Riley said. "We came out of the blocks and really finished well."
Oregon State scored on its first two possessions, with Jackson catching a 34-yard screen pass from Anderson on third-and-19 and Kirk Yliniemi booting a 21-yard field goal.
New Mexico kept the Beavers' touchdown drive going with an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for celebrating too long and too loudly after stopping Jackson for a 2-yard loss on third down at the OSU 40.
"That was a big momentum shift," Long said. "We had them stopped and we get a personal foul and they go down and score. The first drive ... was an indication of how the rest of the day was going to go."