HARRISONBURG, Va. (Oct.
13, 2012) - The William and Mary football team was edged by No. 4/5 James
Madison, 27-26, in double overtime on Saturday afternoon at Bridgeforth
Stadium.
After W&M (2-5, 1-3) narrowed the gap to 27-26 with a
leaping 7-yard touchdown reception by sophomore wideout Tre McBride from
sophomore quarterback Raphael Ortiz in the back of the end zone, the Tribe's
two-point conversion attempt failed when another pass from Ortiz to McBride was broken
up in the back of the end zone.
While both teams kicked field goals in the first overtime
session - a 38-yard kick by W&M's Drake Kuhn and an 18-yard kick by JMU's
Cameron Starke - the Dukes (5-1, 3-0) took a 27-20 lead on a 3-yard touchdown
run by tailback Dae'Quan Scott to begin the second overtime frame.
Although the Tribe settled for a field goal in the first
overtime session, a 13-yard touchdown strike from Ortiz to McBride in the back
right corner of the end zone was negated by an offensive pass interference
penalty two plays before Kuhn's successful kick.
The College had an opportunity to win the game in
regulation, but a 31-yard field goal attempt by Kuhn from the left hash missed
wide to the left with just five seconds remaining.
Ortiz accounted for all three of W&M's touchdowns, as he
threw for a pair of scores and also rushed for a touchdown. McBride also came
up big with seven receptions for 79 yards with two touchdowns, while a trio of
players totaled at least 50 yards on the ground- sophomore Darnell Laws (61),
Ortiz (54) and redshirt freshman Mikal Abdul-Saboor.
Defensively, redshirt freshman linebacker Luke Rhodes led
the Tribe with 13 tackles, while junior safety Jerome Couplin III posted 10
stops and an interception.
The Tribe jumped out to an early 7-0 lead when Ortiz scored
on a 22-yard run. The touchdown punctuated the contest's opening drive, which
covered 78 yards on eight plays and was highlighted by a 27-yard pass from
Ortiz to sophomore wide receiver Sean Ballard along the JMU sideline.
W&M's Ivan Tagoe recovered the ensuing kickoff near
midfield after a muffed return by JMU, but the play was erased due to an
official's inadvertent whistle.
Both teams had long field goal attempts on the next two
drives but were unable to come away with any points. JMU placekicker Cameron
Starke missed a 48-yard field goal wide to the right, while sophomore John
Carpenter missed a 45-yard field goal wide to the right.
The Tribe had another scoring opportunity later in the opening
quarter, but Kuhn missed a 43-yard field goal attempt. The drive began at JMU's
27-yard line following a fumble by quarterback Justin Thorpe that was caused by
sophomore defensive lineman Stephen Sinnott and recovered by senior cornerback
B.W. Webb.
The College increased its lead to 14-0 with a 3-yard
touchdown pass from Ortiz to McBride in the back left corner of the end zone
with 10:49 remaining in the second quarter. The 10-play, 63-yard drive began
after Couplin intercepted Thorpe at W&M's 37-yard line.
James Madison cut the College's lead to 14-7 with an 11-yard
touchdown pass from Thorpe to wideout Arlandis Harvey with 4:08 remaining in
the second quarter.
JMU drove to the Tribe's 24-yard line in the waning second
of the second quarter, but the drive stalled with a holding penalty before the
clock expired on an incomplete pass from Thorpe.
The Dukes tied the score at 14-14 with a 7-yard touchdown
run by Scott midway through the third quarter. The score came just one play
after Sage Harold blocked a W&M punt to set up the favorable field
position.
A 40-yard field goal by Starke with 1:23 remaining in the
third quarter gave JMU its first lead at 17-14.
W&M tied the count at 17-17 on a 39-yard field goal by
Kuhn with 7:52 remaining. The scoring drive, which covered 52 yards on 11 plays
and lasted 5:16, was highlighted by a 20-yard completion by Ortiz to McBride
along the JMU sideline.
Ortiz was outstanding on W&M's final drive in regulation,
as he completed 4-of-4 passes for 68 yards en route to setting up the
game-winning field goal attempt. Three of his four completions during the drive
converted third-down situations.
Thorpe led JMU offensively with 110 rushing yards on 21
carries, while he also completed 14-of-20 passes for 157 yards with a touchdown
and an interception. Scott finished with two touchdown runs, while Harvey
totaled six catches for 113 yards with a touchdown.
The Tribe will have a bye next weekend before returning to
action when it hosts Maine for homecoming on Oct. 27.