MIAMI -- No. 5 Miami used the first half to prepare for Washington and
the second half to prepare for the future.
The Hurricanes appear ready for both.
Ken Dorsey threw three touchdown passes and Santana Moss gained 204
all-purpose yards as Miami beat Division I-AA McNeese State 61-14 on Thursday
night.
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| Miami's Santana Moss runs back a punt return for a 77-yard touchdown.(AP) | |
The Hurricanes totaled 628 yards, most of them coming in the first half.
Dorsey, Moss and many other starters sat out much of the second half while
their backups picked up playing time. In all, Miami used 69 players.
"The playmakers on offense, they just kept making big plays," said Miami
coach Butch Davis, whose team plays at No. 14 Washington next Saturday. "Kenny
played well, very poised. Sixty percent of his plays were audibles. And
Santana, he did what we've come to expect from him."
It was a good start to what should be Miami's most productive season in
recent years.
In Davis' five seasons at Miami, the Hurricanes have as many losses (19) as
they had in the 12 years before he arrived. They also won four national
championships in that span.
After enduring NCAA sanctions and 31 lost scholarships between 1995 and
1997, the program has been rebuilt and reloaded with talent at every position.
It showed, especially against the overmatched Cowboys.
"They have great talent. Their No. 2s and 3s have as much talent as their
first team," Cowboys cornerback Jerod Jones said. They're big kids - fast and
physical."
Miami scored on six of eight first-half possessions, including five
touchdowns.
Dorsey, a sophomore, hit Reggie Wayne on a pair of perfectly thrown fade
passes in the same corner of the end zone in the first quarter. Dorsey also hit
Daryl Jones on a 23-yard pass in the second to give Miami a 34-7 lead.
Dorsey completed 17 of 29 passes for 248 yards, winning for the fourth time
in as many starts. In his four starts, Dorsey is 81-for-120 for 966 yards with
12 TD passes and just one interception.
"You could really tell it was my first game," Dorsey said. "I missed a
couple of reads here and there. I made a few more mistakes than the coaches
wanted. But all in all, not bad.
"They were trying to stop the run and it opened up the pass. We really
thought they would try to take away one or the other, it just so happened to be
the run and it really opened up the outside guys."
Moss opened up holes everywhere.
The speedy 5-foot-10 receiver returned a punt 77 yards late in the first
quarter, putting the 'Canes ahead 20-7. He picked up the bouncing kick at the
23, cut right toward the sideline, turned upfield and sprinted untouched into
the end zone. He got two key blocks on the play, one from Andre King and
another from Al Blades.
Moss added a 75-yard run on an end around, skirting outside the defense and
cutting back across the field for the score. Moss finished with 35 yards
receiving, 75 yards rushing and 94 return yards.
He sat out the second half with a sore right foot.
"I feel I showed something tonight," Moss said. "But we still have a lot
to prove."
The Cowboys answered Miami's opening-drive score with a nine play, 65-yard
drive that they kept alive by converting a fourth-and-3 play at the Hurricanes'
36. Jessie Burton scored two plays later, breaking three tackles en route to
21-yard run.
McNeese State added a late touchdown, converting a Miami turnover into a
27-yard scoring pass from Slade Nagle to Jermaine Martin. The Cowboys tallied
409 yards.
But they just couldn't stop Miami.
The 'Canes added two late touchdowns. Ethnic Sands connected with Andre
Johnson on a 32-yard pass play, and Clinton Portis outran the defense 82 yards
for the final score.
"They have so many weapons, and you saw them tonight," McNeese State coach
Tommy Tate said. "The offense is so good. They're talented and deep. It was a
challenge for our team to make a first down, but we did sustain some drives and
made some plays, but they were few and far between."
AP NEWS
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