Fuller's interception clinches Virginia Tech upset
The Hokies jumped out to a 16-0 lead and held off a late Mountaineers rally.
BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) -- Brandon Pace kicked four field goals to atone for last week's late miss, and Virginia Tech played superb defense to beat No. 6 West Virginia 19-13 Saturday, paying back the Mountaineers for an upset in 2003.
Vincent Fuller intercepted Rasheed Marshall's pass with 18 seconds remaining to seal the victory for Virginia Tech (3-2), which held on after taking a 16-0 lead in the second half.
West Virginia (4-1) had its chances, but its offense sputtered. Marshall ran three times on one drive, then tried passing three times on the following drive without getting a first down.
On their last possession, Marshall pitched the ball to Charles Hales, a backup quarterback who lined up in the backfield on the play and completed a 32-yard pass to Eddie Jackson. With a 15-yard penalty for roughing the passer tacked on, WVU had the ball at Tech's 41.
But on the very next play, Fuller ended the Mountaineers' hopes by picking off a pass at the 22.
Strong showing
Pace made field goals of 29, 30, 35 and a career-long 46 yards, making up for a 43-yard miss as time expired in a 17-16 loss to N.C. State a week ago.
Tech's Mike Imoh gained 115 yards on the ground in his first career start, and stymied the Mountaineers in the final minutes with six carries for 20 yards to force WVU to exhaust its timeouts.
The teams combined for 35 penalties for 255 yards, stifling drives and keeping both teams out of scoring position.
Tech held running backs Kay-Jay Harris and Jason Colson to a combined 69 yards. They entered Saturday averaging 199.2 yards rushing as a tandem.
Tech quarterback Bryan Randall went 16-for-34 for 142 yards, with two interceptions. Marshall was 9-for-19 for just 81 yards and the late interception, but he led his team with 74 yards rushing.
WVU finally put points on the board with under 3 minutes left in the third quarter, when Eric Wicks intercepted Randall and ran untouched 34 yards for a TD. Marshall missed the two-point conversion, throwing over a crowd to keep it 16-6.
Back and forth
Tech came right back. Imoh returned the kickoff 42 yards, and Randall connected on a 15-yard pass to Josh Morgan to set up a 35-yard field goal.
When Marshall broke through the pocket and ran 46 yards down the sideline for a TD, the Mountaineers were suddenly within six points with more than 11 minutes to play.
The Hokies scored first after Harris fumbled on fourth-and-inches at the Tech 45. Josh Hyman caught a 32-yard pass, setting up Pace's 30-yard field goal.
Tech maintained the pressure in the second half. Randall ran 21 yards on a broken play in the opening drive of the third quarter to set up a 29-yard FG.
The furthest the Mountaineers got in the first half was the Hokies 24. But at the end of that drive, Jim Davis broke through the line and blocked a 40-yard field goal attempt by Brad Cooper. Fuller scooped the ball and ran 74 yards to make it 13-0.
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