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Washington State falls short to BYU in 1st game since Rolovich fired

Borghi scores 3 TDs, but Cougars fail on two 2-point tries

By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS, Associated Press
Published: October 23, 2021, 4:39pm
10 Photos
BYU running back Tyler Allgeier, top center, reaches for a touchdown during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Washington State, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2021, in Pullman, Wash. BYU won 21-19.
BYU running back Tyler Allgeier, top center, reaches for a touchdown during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Washington State, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2021, in Pullman, Wash. BYU won 21-19. (AP Photo/Young Kwak) Photo Gallery

PULLMAN — Tyler Allgeier ran for 191 yards and two touchdowns and BYU beat Washington State 21-19 on Saturday in Washington State’s first game since head coach Nick Rolovich was fired for refusing to get a COVID-19 vaccination.

Rolovich and four assistants were fired Monday for not complying with the governor’s mandate that all state employees be vaccinated against the coronavirus. Rolovich had requested a religious exemption that was denied Monday, the state’s vaccination deadline.

He was replaced for the remainder of the season by Jake Dickert, the defensive coordinator who was elevated to acting head coach.

“Our guys had a lot of heart,” Dickert said, praising his team’s “effort and commitment.”

“I know it’s been a tough week,” Dickert, in his first college game ever as a head coach, said. “It’s a little bit learning on the fly. I felt it was really smooth. For the most part we operated as a staff.”

Asked what it was like to be a head coach, Dickert said he had to take a breath and remember to enjoy the experience.

“I’ll never forget it,” he said. “It was a dream come true.”

Washington State was were undone by several offensive holding penalties that wiped out good gains, and two failed conversion attempts after touchdowns.

“That put us behind the eight-ball,” Dickert said.

Max Borghi scored three touchdowns for Washington State (4-4), which saw its three-game winning streak end.

Jaren Hall threw for 143 yards for BYU (6-2), which fell out of the Top 25 this week after losing two straight games.

“A lot of credit to Washington State,” BYU coach Kalani Sitake said. “I know they are going through a lot of adversity and change.”

“Looking forward to building on this, and glad we got this win,” Sitake said. “We were coming off a slump.”

Borghi ran 11 yards up the middle for a Washington State touchdown on their first possession, capping a 75-yard drive. Lopini Katoa replied with a 3-yard touchdown run, also capping a 75-yard drive, for BYU to tie it at 7.

But the rest of the first half was scoreless.

BYU missed a field goal and also turned the ball over on downs while in WSU territory in the first half. Washington State quarterback Jayden de Laura, who leads the Pac-12 with 15 touchdown passes, was intercepted while throwing into the end zone to kill one first half drive.

BYU took the opening kickoff of the second half 75 yards in 11 plays. Allgeier scored on a 4-yard run for a 14-7 lead.

Washington State replied immediately, with Borghi scoring on a 1-yard run. But the conversion pass attempt failed and WSU trailed 14-13.

BYU got the ball on its 19 and marched down the field in 11 plays, with Allgeier scoring from the 2-yard line for a 21-13 lead with 14:57 left.

Borghi scored his third touchdown on a 1-yard run up the middle with 4:14 left. But a conversion pass by Lincoln Victor failed and Washington State trailed 21-19.

BYU ran out the clock.

LOW ATTENDANCE

Despite WSU quarterback Jayden de Laura calling on Cougars fans to fill Martin Stadium, only 22,500 fans attended the game in the 32,900-seat stadium.

FACTS & FIGURES

Jahad Woods had 16 tackles for Washington State … Borghi’s three touchdowns gave him 37 in his WSU career, tied for second most in program history.

THE TAKEAWAY

BYU is 4-0 against the Pac-12 this season, previously beating Arizona, Utah and Arizona State. The Cougars qualified for a bowl game with the win.

Washington State had trouble scoring after the loss of Rolovich, a master of its complicated run-and-shoot offense. But they showed heart in losing a close game.

UP NEXT

Washington State is at Arizona State on Saturday.

BYU 21, WASHINGTON STATE 19

BYU 7 0 7 7—21

WSU 7 0 6 6—19

First Quarter

WSU—Borghi 11 run (Janikowski kick), 9:36.

BYU—Katoa 3 run (Oldroyd kick), 6:04.

Third Quarter

BYU—Allgeier 4 run (Oldroyd kick), 9:48.

WSU—Borghi 1 run (kick failed), 5:08.

Fourth Quarter

BYU—Allgeier 2 run (Oldroyd kick), 14:57.

WSU—Borghi 1 run (pass failed), 4:14.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING—BYU, Allgeier 32-191, P.Nacua 2-26, Hall 8-17, Katoa 3-15, (Team) 2-(minus 4), Holker 1-(minus 7). Washington St., Borghi 18-83, de Laura 3-10, N.Watson 1-1, (Team) 1-(minus 1).

PASSING—BYU, Hall 15-20-0-143, Pau’u 1-1-0-4. Washington St., de Laura 26-37-1-257.

RECEIVING—BYU, Pau’u 6-70, Rex 3-46, Allgeier 2-3, Holker 1-10, S.Nacua 1-7, Katoa 1-5, Hall 1-4, Wake 1-2. Washington St., Harris 7-60, Ca.Jackson 4-52, Borghi 4-36, Victor 4-34, Stribling 3-28, Hobert 3-25, Ollie 1-22.

MISSED FIELD GOALS—BYU, Oldroyd 45.

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