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Appalachian State Mountaineers Beats Tough Akron Team on the Road 45-38

Jalin Moore rumbled for 257 yards on 39 carries en route to the Mountaineers pulling out a 45-38 win on Saturday at Akron. Courtesy: Allyson Lamb / App State Athletics
Jalin Moore rumbled for 257 yards on 39 carries en route to the Mountaineers pulling out a 45-38 win on Saturday at Akron. Courtesy: Allyson Lamb / App State Athletics

By David Coulson

AKRON, Ohio — Quarterback Taylor Lamb personally challenged himself this week to play at a higher level as Appalachian State faced a key road battle at Akron. And with his father Bobby watching from the stands, the heady junior directed the Mountaineers to a 45-38 victory over the explosive Zips before 15,381 spectators at InfoCision Stadium.

Lamb directed his offense to a season-high 587 yards, hitting 22-of-30 passes to nine different receivers for 280 yards and three touchdowns passing and added a one-yard scoring burst with one second left in the first half as App State (2-2) turned its 14-10 second-quarter deficit into a 31-14 lead.

“To be honest, I haven’t play well the first three games,” said Lamb. “Coming in here against a real good defense you just have to trust your guys and throw the ball.”

The Mountaineers held on in the second half as Akron QB Thomas Woodson (31-of-43, three TDs and two interceptions) led the Zips on their furious comeback. Akron (2-2) cut ASU’s advantage to one touchdown twice in the fourth quarter, but couldn’t get any closer.

“We knew coming in here that (Akron) could score points,” ASU coach Scott Satterfield said. “They are a high-powered offense and that quarterback is a dynamic player; they are very dynamic at wide receiver, and hard to defend. We knew offensively that we were going to have to make some plays, and I am really proud of the way guys stepped up.”

Appalachian sophomore tailback Jalin Moore, subbing for an injured Marcus Cox, also came up big with career highs in rushing yardage (257) and carries (39) and added two important touchdowns on runs of 49 and 32 yards in the second half to help polish off the win.

“I have been saying that he was going to have a breakout game here soon — you just don’t know when it’s going to happen,” Satterfield said. “It’s very reminiscent of last year when Marcus couldn’t go, and Jalin went for 244 yards rushing. Today he did better than that.”

Moore’s performance was the sixth-best rushing game in school history and he tied Damon Scott (1996 against Western Carolina) for the fourth-busiest ball-carrying day by a Mountaineer. Moore also hauled in three passes for 17 yards to give him 274 all-purpose yards.

“Everybody is for everybody, we know we have depth in the backfield,” said Moore. “When one of our brothers scores, we’re there on the sidelines to celebrate.”

It was a difficult day for defenders, as the two teams combined for 1,073 yards, 11 touchdowns and 83 points. But the Mountaineer defense had enough in the tank to stop two Akron drives with interceptions (by cornerbacks Clifton Duck and Mondo Williams) and force a field goal on one Zip possession in the red zone.

Duck a true freshman, also led ASU with 13 tackles — nine of them solo stops — and added a pass breakup to spark the defensive effort.

With App State clinging to a seven-point lead when it failed to convert on its third-and-three at the Akron 33 when a first down could have clinched the game, the Mountaineers’ beleaguered defense thwarted the Zips’ final possession in the last 2:12 of the contest.

After Appalachian’s only punt of the game sailed into the end zone to give Akron the ball at its own 20, defensive end Tee Sims sacked Woodson for a four-yard loss on first down and then Woodson misfired with an incompletion to receiver Jerome Lane.

Woodson’s third-down aerial to Anthony Lauro was completed at the sideline for just five yards to leave the Zips with one remaining play at the 21. It ended in disaster for Akron when Woodson lost his footing as he scrambled away from pressure, bumped into blitzing linebacker Dezmin Reed and fell to the ground for a loss of seven yards and ASU’s fourth sack of the game.

Appalachian ran two plays from victory formation to kill off the remaining 66 seconds and escaped with its hard-fought victory.

“We won’t be happy with our performance defensively, but we got the win,” said Satterfield. “It’s a team game.”

With its tough non-conference slate now complete, Appalachian will now pursue the one goal that evaded the team last season — winning the Sun Belt Conference title. That task begins next Saturday with a noon home game against Georgia State.

The improving Akron program, meanwhile, will turn its eyes towards winning a Mid-American Conference crown, but the loss to App State will sting for awhile.

“It’s a tough loss,” said Akron coach Terry Bowden. “I tried to tell them they played their hearts out, we didn’t play our best, but we played our hearts out. We played to the very end of the game. We put ourselves in the position to get the game tied up, and put ourselves in a position to win, but came up short.”

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