Sept. 4, 1999
BOSTON -
Boston College took a thrilling 30-29
overtime win from Baylor as a Bear extra point
attempt went wide left.
The Bears and Eagles had played a hard-fought
game that wound up tied 23-23 in regulation. BC's
Cedric Washington scored on his squad's first
overtime drive and the Bears answered with a
Jermaine Alfred sneak from the one.
The final difference came down to a PAT attempt
by Kyle Atteberry which went wide.
"The snap was good and the hold was good," coach
Kevin Steele said of the missed extra point. "He
just said he mis-hit it. He's an outstanding
young man and a good kicker who's hit that 100
times.
"We had trouble stopping the running game and we
had three breakdowns in the kicking game," coach
Steele said. "You can't win many games like that."
Earlier the Bears had a PAT and punt blocked. BC
totalled 350 yards on the ground while the Bears
netted 110. Washington totalled three touchdowns
and led all rushers with 177 yards.
Baylor countered with Alfred's pinpoint passing.
The senior connected of 15-of-18 passes for 254
yards. He threw two touchdowns, incuding a
beautiful scoring strike to Andra Fuller for 73
yards, and no interceptions.
The season opening win put the homestanding
Eagles at 1-0 while BU opens the Steele era at 0-
1.
After Baylor's first drive ended in a punt, the
Bears batted down two Eagle passes to end the
drive. (The BU linemen and linebackers totalled
four on the day, equalling the entire season
total of 1998.) On the ensuing punt, Samir Al-
Amin broke through to block the punt and set the
Bears up on the BC 28.
Alfred led the Bears down to the five, where
Atteberry hit a 22-yard field goal to make it 3-
0, Bears, with 8:21 remaining in the first
quarter. The drive covered 27 yards in six plays
and consumed 3:18.
The Eagles responded with a methodical 15 play,
80-yard scoring drive. The key play came when
Eagle QB Tim Hasselbeck faced a third-and-10 from
the 14. Dropping back to pass he found everyone
covered, but he scrambled for 12 yards to keep
the drive alive.
Halfback Carlton Rowe scored his first career
touchdown from the one and with 2:33 to play in
the opening quarter, and BC had taken a 7-3 lead.
Baylor recorded its initial touchdown of 1999 on
a wild play as Alfred hit fullback Melvin Barnett
in the left flat at about the five. As Barnett
struggled for extra yardage the ball popped free
into the endzone where wide receiver Lanny
O'Steen recovered it for the six pointer.
Before O'Steen recorded his first career TD,
tailback Elijah Burkins took an Alfred screen
pass in the left flat and turned it into a 46-
yard gain after the Bears faced a third-and-10.
The 10-play, 80-yard drive took 3:56 off the
clock and put the Bears up 10-7 with 9:39
remaining before intermission.
Boston College took possession late in the half
and appeared to be ready to retake the lead when
they moved right through the Bears and reached
the BU 20 with just 30 seconds remaining. But
linebacker McKinley Bowie thwarted the threat
when he intercepted a Hasselbeck pass in the left
flat and returned it 83 yards for a touchdown to
put BU up 16-7.
It stayed that way at halftime as BU was flagged
for excessive celebration and the 35-yard extra
point attempt was blocked. Baylor's lead came
despite a big Eagle statistical advantage. BC led
in first downs 13-4 and total yards 200-131.
While BC controlled the lines, the Bears hung in
the game with big plays.
Boston College wasted no time in establishing
dominance on the lines again as they took the
second-half kick and marched down to the Bear
five. With the help of back-to-back delay of game
penalties, BU held at the four, forcing the
Eagles to kick a 21-yard field goal.
John Matich capped the 11-play, 68-yard drive
when hit the three-pointer and pulled BC to
within six at 16-10 with 9:40 to go in the third.
The Eagles kept it going when they stopped the
next Bear drive and then broke through to block
Kyle Atteberry's punt. Ralph Parent's block set
halfback Washington up for a four-yard run up the
middle.
Just as Baylor had done earlier, Boston College
was flagged for excessive celebration on the TD.
The result was similar as the 35-yard PAT kick
flew wide left.
With 8:08 in the third, the game stood tied at 16.
Baylor's next drive reached the Eagle 38 but died
when an option pitch right to Bush lost a yard.
The Eagles had a nice drive to the Bear 30 stall
out, but they managed to pin Baylor deep in their
own territory.
A rushed Atteberry punt and good return quickly
set the Eagles up on the BU 30. But the Bear
defense stiffened and held the Eagles to a 38-
yard field goal attempt that sailed wide right.
Baylor then had a promising drive of its own
stall. Mixing the pass and run well - both Mark
Cogdill and Reginald Newhouse caught nice Alfred
passes - the Bears reached the Eagle 28. But
Bush, struggling for extra yardage, lost the
handle and gave the Eagles life.
But the BU picket line held again. Baylor got it
back on its own seven after a 61-yard Kevin
McKyler punt with 9:57 to play.
The Bear drive netted six yards and forced a punt
by Atteberry. It went 49 yards and set BC up on
its own 48 with 8:21 showing.
The Eagles made the most of this opportunity as
Washington bounced around right end to score and
put his team up 23-16 with 6:42 to play. The six-
yard score capped a five-play, 51-yard drive that
consumed 1:40 off the clock.
With the Eagles seemingly in control, Baylor
refused to die. Alfred hit a streaking Andra
Fuller down the right sideline where he broke a
tackle and kept his balance for a 73-yard scoring
strike, the longest of his career.
With 5:42 remaining the game was again tied, this
time at 23.
Each team had a possession before the overtime
period.