Already having a great conversation regarding this weekend’s visit to Wake Forest on this entry on the blog and in this thread on the message boards.
Additionally, we thought that you would like find some value in this entry from the great Dr. Saturday. His work looks at the weekend of three of the Wolfpack’s upcoming opponents, including two of our next three as he dug into Wake’s visit to Boston College this past weekend.
The Eagles gained more yards on their first possession Saturday (57) than in the entirety of the previous week’s weather-delayed debacle at Clemson (49), so B.C. fans have to be breathing a sigh of relief that ex-minor leaguer David Shinskie looks like a viable quarterback and the team may not be automatically destined for the cellar despite a fractious offseason and a harrowing conference debut. In fact, B.C. controlled the vast majority of this game, moving ahead 24-10 early in the fourth quarter.
The Deacons could have been there, though, if not for a few of the usual blown opportunities, specifically a fumble in Eagle territory and a missed field goal in the first half. With its back against the wall, Wake drove for two long touchdowns in the fourth quarter to tie, using a grand total of three minutes to go 67 and 80 yards, respectively, to put the game into overtime on a Riley Skinner throw into the end zone with 11 seconds left; from there, following a B.C. field goal on its turn with the ball, the Deacons proceeded to move to the Eagle three-yard line with a chance to score for the win. Cue crushing fumble on first-and-goal, an Eagle recovery and a hard ending to one of the best comeback efforts of the day.
The desperately-needed B.C. win takes a lot of sting out of the Eagles’ late defensive collapse, which couldn’t get a stop at the end of regulation (and nearly failed in overtime, too) and gave up five passes longer than 20 yards, most in the second half.