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OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Cal Murray ran for a pair of touchdowns, and Miami University's swarming defense forced three fumbles Tuesday night, setting up a 33-10
victory over No. 15 Bowling Green.
Miami (8-1, 5-0 Mid-American Conference) has won eight straight since an
opening drubbing at Iowa. The RedHawks are on the threshold of their first
national ranking since the end of the 1974 season.
Playing with its highest ranking in school history, Bowling Green (7-2, 4-1)
never got rolling on offense and couldn't overcome a three-fumble game by
quarterback Josh Harris.
The teams were facing their mirror image - Bowling Green tops the MAC in
offense and defense, and Miami is a close second in both categories. Miami's
Ben Roethlisberger made the two plays that made the difference.
His 49-yard completion early in the third quarter set up one touchdown, and
his 1-yard sneak put Miami ahead 24-7 midway through the quarter.
Roethlisberger was 19-of-28 for 230 yards.
The defenses controlled a wacky first half - five turnovers, a missed field
by Bowling Green and an unusual problem with the clock. During a timeout with
only 26 seconds showing before halftime, the officials realized it was off by a
minute - an electrical surge was blamed - and restored the time.
Harris threw a 24-yard touchdown pass to a diving Charles Sharon on the next
play, cutting Miami's lead to 10-7. The clock problem caused confusion, but
didn't figure in the outcome.
Instead, it came down to which of the two prolific quarterbacks made the
most mistakes.
Roethlisberger fumbled and threw an interception at the 1-yard line in the
first half, then settled down. Harris fumbled three times and was limited to
throwing mostly short, harmless passes as he went 20-of-35 for 160 yards.
Murray's 3-yard run put Miami ahead in the second quarter, and Janssen
Patton fumbled the kickoff, setting up Jared Parseghian's 27-yard field goal
for a 10-0 lead.
Roethlisberger's best play came on the opening drive of the second half,
when his nifty handoff fake allowed
Martin Nance to outrun the duped safety and
catch a 49-yard pass.
Mike Smith's 5-yard touchdown run on the next play made
it 17-7.
Nance had 169 yards on 10 catches, tying the school record with his fifth
100-yard game of the season.
Harris' second fumble of the game led to Roethlisberger's 1-yard sneak for a
24-7 lead midway through the third quarter. Harris' final fumble set up Miami's
clinching score, a 2-yard run by Murray with 3:45 left.