SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Walter
Reyes wasn't about to lose that big grin after leading Syracuse
to a season-ending victory over Notre Dame. Neither were
his teammates -- or his beleaguered coach.
"What a great win!" Reyes said
Saturday after rushing for 189 yards and five touchdowns
to lead Syracuse to a 38-12 victory.
"It just showed a lot of character
and heart. For the program, we wanted to come out here and
show the nation that Syracuse football is still here."
It was the first meeting between the teams
in 40 years and the outcome was a bitter disappointment
for the Irish (5-7). Instead of extending their winning
streak to four games, they finished with their third losing
season in five years, something that had never happened
in the storied history of the program.
"We felt that this game could have
been a good springboard into the offseason," coach
Tyrone Willingham said. "This could be a very difficult
loss, but we can't allow it to be."
It could have been very difficult for Syracuse
coach Paul Pasqualoni if the Orangemen had lost. He has
been heavily criticized since last year's team went 4-8.
Instead, the Orangemen (6-6) snapped a three-game losing
streak and averted another losing season.
Athletic director Jake Crouthamel said after
the game that he would sit down with Pasqualoni on Sunday
for an evaluation and make an announcement later in the
week.
Pasqualoni, 101-53-1 in 13 years as head
coach, basked in the happy aftermath of the victory and
declined to speak about his status. His players clearly
adore him.
"We love that man," said defensive
tackle Christian Ferrara, who had five tackles for losses.
"If something does go bad like that, I think it's the
biggest mistake this university will ever make."
"He ain't going anywhere. I hope he
doesn't," said Reyes, who has a school-record 38 rushing
touchdowns, three more than Floyd Little in his career,
and also finished the season with a record 134 points. "He's
done so much for us. If he does, it will be heartbreaking."
The victory ended a difficult week for the
Orangemen. Not only did they have to forget last week's
embarrassing 24-7 loss at Rutgers, they had to deal with
the prospect that Pasqualoni's job was in jeopardy.
"This whole week ever since the drama
was going on about him being fired, I think he did a great
job. He didn't really care about that," Reyes said.
"He wants to beat Notre Dame, and the players fed off
that."
Especially Reyes, who had not rushed for
100 yards since the fourth game of the season. He scored
twice in a 95-second span in the third quarter on runs of
3 and 15 yards to give Syracuse a 24-6 lead, then stunned
the Irish on a 71-yard TD run off right tackle with 11 seconds
left in the third after they had moved to 24-12.
"It was kind of a momentum breaker
for them," said Reyes, who finished the season with
1,347 yards rushing and 21 touchdowns.
The Irish had been winning behind the running
of Julius Jones, who had averaged 200 yards per game during
their three-game winning streak.
Against the fired-up Syracuse defense, Jones
gained only 9 yards on eight carries in the first quarter.
Right after he had a 26-yard run to the Syracuse 14 early
in the second, he fumbled on the next play and Steve Gregory
recovered for the Orange.
"When we were able to get the running
game going (in the last three games), everything flowed
better for the team," said Notre Dame quarterback Brady
Quinn, who was 18-for-34 for 199 yards and threw two interceptions.
"We didn't establish it today, and it hurt us throughout
the game."
Indeed. Jones finished with 54 yards on
20 carries, and the Irish gained only 62 yards on 36 attempts.
"I think we're the best defensive line
they faced," Ferrara said. "I'll take this over
anything in the world, going out with a win, a dominating
win, against a team like this."
AP NEWS
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