Southern Mississippi 'embarrassed' by Cincy



Quarterback Gino Guidugli led the Bearcats over the ranked Golden Eagles.
HATTIESBURG, Miss. (AP) -- Gino Guidugli kept throwing touchdowns, Hannibal Thomas kept catching them and Southern Mississippi made history for all the wrong reasons.
Guidugli threw three of his school-record five touchdown passes to Thomas on Saturday to lead Cincinnati to a 52-24 rout of the 21st-ranked Golden Eagles.
Guidugli was 19-of-26 for 308 yards for the Bearcats (5-4, 4-2 Conference USA), who snapped the Golden Eagles' 13-game league winning streak and beat a ranked team for the first time in four years.
"Things are starting to go our way," Guidugli said. "I don't care if we get five [touchdowns] on the ground or in the air, as long as we score."
Southern's streak
This wasn't how Southern Miss was supposed to make history. The Golden Eagles were one win from tying their 4-year-old record of 14 straight conference victories.
Instead, the Golden Eagles absorbed their worst conference loss at home since the league formed in 1996.
"It hurts. I've coached a lot of games in there, and I don't know that I can remember one like this," Southern Miss coach Jeff Bower said.
The dagger came on the second play of the second half, when Guidugli found Thomas over the middle for an 80-yard touchdown. It was the Bearcats' longest completion in nearly a decade.
"He's playing better than he has ever played," Bower said of Guidugli.
He also hit Thomas for touchdown passes covering 15 and 47 yards. Thomas finished with 168 yards on seven catches.
Cincinnati turned three turnovers into 17 points and never trailed in its third straight victory since an embarrassing turnover-filled loss at Army that snapped the Black Knights' 19-game losing streak.
"We're continuing to build confidence after the last couple of weeks," Cincinnati coach Mark Dantonio said. "This is another confidence builder for us."
In the conference
It was the first Conference USA defeat for Southern Miss (5-2, 4-1) since a 31-10 loss at Tulane in November 2002. The Golden Eagles also fell behind 14th-ranked Louisville in the league standings.
Cincinnati's last win over a ranked team also came against the Golden Eagles, who were No. 24 in November 2000 when the Bearcats won 27-24. That was the last time Southern Miss was ranked until this season.
The Golden Eagles have lost three straight games as a ranked team, including twice this year. Southern Miss was ranked 24th last month when Alabama routed the Golden Eagles 27-3.
"I'm very humiliated and embarrassed, especially in front of the home crowd," Southern Miss defensive back John Eubanks said. "I looked at the scoreboard and saw 52-24. Four touchdowns. ... I'm ready to come back hard."