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Last-second field goal trips up Eastern Michigan's bowl dreams

By John Zenor
Associated Press
Eastern Michigan wide receiver Mathew Sexton (87) blocks a punt during the Camellia Bowl.

Montgomery, Ala. — Tyler Bass found a way to top his last-play 50-yard field goal to end the first half.

Bass kicked a 40-yarder as time expired to give Georgia Southern a 23-21 victory over Eastern Michigan in the Camellia Bowl on Saturday night.

Shai Werts kept the winning drive alive with a 29-yard scramble on fourth-and-10. Bass came on for his third field goal after Wesley Fields’ two runs pushed Georgia Southern (10-3) 7 yards closer.

“Right when Shai got that first down, I knew we had a chance to kick it,” Bass said. “We’ve been preparing all week for it, all year for it. When I got out there, I didn’t think about anything but the snap, the hold and me just kicking it through. That was it.”

Georgia Southern completed the biggest turnaround in the Football Bowl Subdivision this season, going from 10 losses to 10 wins.

“I said at the beginning of the year, we’re not sexy, we’re just blue collar,” coach Chad Lunsford said. “That showed tonight.”

Eastern Michigan (7-6) had delivered its own big fourth-down play to take the lead for the first time.

Mike Glass threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Arthur Jackson with 3:33 left on fourth-and-4, followed by Chad Ryland’s extra point.

“It was a great football game, and they’re obviously a great football program and a great football team,” Eastern Michigan coach Chris Creighton said. “They got it done in the end. Much as it rips our heart out to say, we do congratulate them, and (it was) an awesome football game.”

Georgia Southern took over at its own 25 with a triple-option offense that attempted fewer passes than every FBS team but Army. Werts completed a 15-yard pass to tight end Ellis Richardson, but Georgia Southern fittingly covered most of the 52 yards with runs.

Werts ran for 79 yards and two first-half touchdowns while completing 4 of 7 passes for 33 yards to receive Most Valuable Player honors. His biggest play came on the fourth-and-10.

“I really should have thrown the ball. Ellis was wide open,” Werts said. “Wesley had made a block on the linebacker. There was nobody in front of me so I just took off running.”

Wesley Kennedy III gained 107 yards on nine carries.

Eastern Michigan’s Glass completed 17 of 25 passes for 204 yards and three touchdowns, including a 75-yarder to Jackson on the opening play of the second half. He had missed the final two games of the regular season with a right leg injury and had only two previous starts.

Glass found Jackson in the back of the end zone to cap a 16-play, 75-yard drive that consumed more than six minutes.

“I was just going through my reads and came back to it late,” Glass said. “The linebacker stepped up a little bit and I saw I could get it over their heads.”

As it turns out, it left too much time on the clock.