Kentucky quarterback Lynn Bowden, Jr., threw a touchdown pass to Josh Ali with 15 seconds left, and the Wildcats returned a fumble for a touchdown on the game’s final play to defeat Virginia Tech 37-30 in the 2019 Belk Bowl Tuesday afternoon at Bank of America Stadium.
With the loss, the Hokies closed the season with an 8-5 record. Kentucky also finished the season with an 8-5 mark.
Virginia Tech took a 30-24 lead on a 27-yard field goal by Brian Johnson with 12:47 remaining, but the Wildcats answered with their game-winning drive after taking possession following a Tech punt with 8:25 remaining. Kentucky marched 85 yards in 18 plays, converting twice on fourth down and scoring on Bowden’s 13-yard touchdown pass to Ali. The Wildcats made the extra point to take a 31-30 lead.
Kentucky’s Akeem Hayes returned a fumble 28 yards for a touchdown on the game’s final play to account for the final margin.
Tech tailback Deshawn McClease paced the Hokies, rushing for a career-high 126 yards and scoring on a 43-yard run in the third quarter. Hendon Hooker completed 12 of 22 passes for 110 yards and tossed touchdown passes of 18 yards to Damon Hazelton in the first quarter and 6 yards to Dalton Keene in the second quarter.
The Hokies finished with 329 yards of offense.
Bowden, the game’s MVP, rushed for 233 yards and two touchdowns on 34 carries to lead Kentucky, which rushed for 331 yards and finished with 404 total yards.
Arguably the biggest play of the game came when Kentucky faced fourth-and-7 from its own 43 in the final few minutes. The Hokies needed a stop to all but seal the game, but the Wildcats converted when Bowden completed a 9-yard pass to Ali, who made a difficult catch at the Tech 48 for the first down. The catch, which extended what would be the game-winning drive, was the first of two fourth-down situations that the Wildcats converted. The other was a fourth-and-1 from the Tech 26 with 1:01 remaining.
In the post-game press conference, Virginia Tech head coach Justin Fuente said in his opening statement, “I’m proud of our squad. I’m proud of everything they accomplished. I don’t know if there is a better term than we were left for dead early in the year, and then we battled back. The fact that we didn’t come through in this game doesn’t diminish my pride in them, my excitement for the direction of our program, and my belief in them. We’re awfully close on both sides of the ball – today – but ultimately, one play here or there on either side of the ball, and they ended up winning it.”
Asked about the defensive breakdowns on Kentucky’s final drive, the boss Hokie replied, “We were straining our tails off. We had guys all over the place in the game. We had been on the field – I don’t know what the numbers are – but a large portion of the fourth quarter. It kind of goes back to the field goal question. We just couldn’t get off the field in the end.
“It wasn’t like they were ripping off big chunk yardage plays,” Fuente said. “We’re in the situation of using timeouts or not using timeouts, but the ball never really got down there very close. In terms of clock management and what we’re trying to accomplish, you’re in no-man’s land the whole drive. There wasn’t an individual thing. They just executed a little better and continued to inch the ball down the field.”
Fuente was asked about what defensive coordinator Bud Foster has meant to the program. He said, “I wish I was eloquent enough. People are going to write books about it – several-hundred-page books. He’s just a fantastic football coach. He does a good job of relating and teaching. He and Coach Beamer have … I’m not sure people quite understand, and maybe I don’t fully understand the ramifications of how far this school has come not solely because of those two people, but they had a lot to do with it.
“The fact that we’re in the ACC, some of the things that have been developed, some of the exposure given to the school are immeasurable on top of the effects [Coach Foster has] had on countless people’s lives – the young men that have come through this program that he’s mentored and taught and been demanding of and ultimately helped them be better people. He’s a Hall of Fame football coach. That doesn’t mean because he knows when to blitz, but because he knows how to handle people, and he’s passionate about his work. He’s the best.”
Given his turn at the microphone Foster told the press, “I’ve been so fortunate and so blessed, and Justin’s been so good to me, so gracious. He’s got this program going in the right direction. I’m excited about the leadership we have there with him and our staff. I’m excited about our players. We’ve got one senior starter on defense. We’ve got a good group coming back. We had five seniors on this football team … so these guys, they’ve taken the steps that we want them to.
“Would we like to have finished a little better? Yeah, but we lost some really tight football games this year, with the exception of one football game (Duke), and that makes a statement about the direction we’re going.
”It kind of reminds me of that 1998 group. I’m not going to put the pressure on them and say they’re going to go play for the national championship, but it reminds me of that group of how close and competitive and what gut-wrenching losses we lost that year. That was such a learning experience and growing experience and you know you don’t want to get back in that situation. The only way to do that is to out-work and out-prepare and have a big-time offseason. And you’re every-day approach needs to be to push yourself to be the best. I think that is what this group is moving toward, and I’m excited about that.”
–VT Athletics