Kansas rallies for win
Kansas rallies for win
BY J. BRADY MCCOLLOUGH
The Wichita Eagle
AMES, Iowa - Mark Mangino didn't tell Jake Sharp last week about his change of heart. For all Sharp knew, he was destined for another frustrating Saturday.
Certainly nothing from the first half against Iowa State would have given Sharp any hope. Through one half of abysmal football, Sharp had one carry -- and the 16th-ranked Jayhawks had no points.
"Me and Jake talk a lot," KU wide receiver Kerry Meier said. "He just kept telling me he wanted a shot. Just one little shot."
Sharp, a junior from Salina Central, was supposed to be a key part of the offense this season. But, through four games, he had carried 26 times for 86 yards and found himself relegated to mop-up duty against Football Championship Subdivision opponent Sam Houston State.
Still,
Mangino's instincts had been telling him that Sharp was the guy. But for some reason, he couldn't pull the trigger. Had he waited any longer on Saturday at Trice Stadium, the Jayhawks might have lost a must-win game.
Instead, Sharp breathed life into KU's stagnant offense and escaped from his exile with 186 total yards and two touchdowns in the Jayhawks' 35-33 comeback victory over the Cyclones.
"Today was Jake's day," KU quarterback Todd Reesing said. "I'm proud of the kid."
Sharp wasn't the only player who had fallen from grace as the Jayhawks (4-1, 1-0 in the Big 12) struggled through nonconference play. Mangino questioned the effort of senior linebacker Mike Rivera, one of KU's most dependable players in 2007, and sat him against the Bearkats.
Yet, as the Jayhawks battled back from a 20-0 halftime deficit, there were Sharp and Rivera, right in the thick of it. They had helped elevate the KU program into national prominence, and they weren't going to let all the respect they had gained in 2007 vanish early in 2008. KU was not going to let itself lose to a rebuilding Iowa State program.
"We had to win," Sharp said. "That was the battle cry. We've got to win."
In the first 30 minutes, the Jayhawks looked like a team unprepared for battle. KU went three and out on its first three drives and allowed Iowa State quarterback Austen Arnaud to complete 15 of 19 passes for 126 yards. The Jayhawks were on their heels, retreating in front of the fast and furious Cyclones.
"It was atrocious," Reesing said. "Worst collective half of football since I've been here."
In the second half, KU went on the offensive -- on both sides of the ball. Sharp led the charge, catching a 67-yard touchdown pass from Reesing to help make the score 20-7. On KU's next play, Sharp took a shovel pass 42 yards. With 8 minutes, 14 seconds to play in the third quarter, Angus Quigley scored on a 1-yard run, and KU trailed just 20-14.
After another defensive stop -- the Jayhawks had made sure to pressure Arnaud by sending more blitzes -- KU embarked on a gutsy drive. The Jayhawks converted two fourth downs, including a fourth-and-7 pass from Reesing to Meier for a 23-yard touchdown.
The Jayhawks kept attacking. Leading 28-26 with 7 minutes remaining, KU pushed for more, going 80 yards in eight plays, building the lead to 35-26.
"In my career," Mangino said, "I've always noticed that when I have tried to sit on (leads), things blow up. When you have that go-get-'em mentality, the kids keep their edge."
Defensively, the Jayhawks would lose their edge in the final three minutes. KU let Arnaud drive the Cyclones for a touchdown in 2 minutes, 17 seconds. Then, Iowa State recovered its onside kick without a Jayhawk even coming close to the ball as it hung in the air.
"I'm not proud of that moment," Mangino said. "We should have been on the attack."
The game ended on four straight Arnaud incompletions -- two coming on bad drops from Iowa State wide receivers. After KU's narrow escape from Ames, the Jayhawks can still think big. A loss would have all but ruled out their pursuit of a Big 12 North title.
Now, the Jayhawks can push forward with the knowledge
that Sharp gives them the best chance to win. In addition to Sharp's two long receptions, he carried 19 times for 79 yards -- an average of 4.2 yards per attempt. It was easy for Sharp to describe what had changed.
"Confidence and rhythm," Sharp said.
"I actually got tired for once out there. It seems like when I get tired, things slow down."
Mangino seemed to think KU would do well with a tired Jake Sharp the rest of the way.
"He's a prideful guy," Mangino said. "He wants to prove that he can do the job. Everything he did today leads me to believe that he can
and he will."