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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Alabama holds off pesky Colorado


Alabama running back Glen Coffee is surrounded by Colorado defenders. Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Kelly P. Kissel Associated Press

SHREVEPORT, La. – John Parker Wilson completed 13 of his first 15 passes for 185 yards and three touchdowns and Alabama raced to a four-touchdown lead, then held off Colorado 30-24 in the Independence Bowl on Sunday night.

Colorado’s attempt at a multi-lateral play as time expired collapsed shy of midfield, ending the game.

Alabama (7-6) stopped a four-game losing streak and avoided consecutive losing seasons for the first time in 50 years. Colorado (6-7) finished below .500 for the second straight year, but was vastly improved from a 2-10 mark in 2006.

With the Tide up 27-0, Wilson was in firm control until being chased into an intentional grounding penalty with 5 minutes left in the first half. He threw an interception on his next attempt, leading to a Buffaloes score, and didn’t complete another throw in the half.

Colorado quarterback Cody Hawkins, meanwhile, recovered from an interception on the Buffaloes’ first play and finished the half 9 of 10 for 87 yards and two scores.

Hawkins’ 25-yard pass to Dusty Sprague with 4 seconds left in the half cut Alabama’s lead to 27-14. It came less than 2 minutes after Hawkins hit Tyson DeVree with a 4-yard scoring pass. Kevin Eberhart’s 39-yard field goal in the third period cut it to 27-17.

Alabama amassed 170 yards in the first quarter and had 285 by halftime, but added only 103 yards in the second half. Wilson had scoring passes of 15 yards to Keith Brown, 34 yards to Matt Caddell and 31 yards to Nikita Stover and was selected the game’s most valuable player on offense.

With Leigh Tiffin’s two field goals, Alabama led 27-0 3 minutes into the second quarter and appeared to have Colorado on the ropes. The Buffaloes, who scored 65 points against Nebraska in their previous game, had a first down on their second play from scrimmage but didn’t pick up another until 10 1/2 minutes before halftime.

Once Colorado rattled Wilson, though, the Buffaloes’ fortunes turned. Hawkins, the son of coach Dan Hawkins, was 8 of 8 on the last two drives of the half. Wilson was 6 of 17 after his hot start and finished the game 19 of 32 for 256 yards.

In the second half, having learned they couldn’t beat Alabama’s linebackers to the corner, Colorado running backs spread out the Tide defense and cut back against the grain to pick up 5 or 6 yards at a time.

Alabama’s new attention to the run opened up routes for Buffaloes receivers. Scotty McKnight, Josh Smith and Tyson DeVree caught passes of 11, 22 and 13 yards for key first downs as Colorado drove for a failed 48-yard field goal try on its first drive after halftime.