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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Beavers’ pittance enough to top Pitt

By Tim Korte Associated Press

EL PASO, Texas – Three points, 20 punts and 10 sacks. Go ahead and say it was unsightly, but Oregon State coach Mike Riley saw nothing short of a masterpiece.

In the lowest-scoring major bowl game in a half-century, the 24th-ranked Beavers shut down No. 18 Pittsburgh 3-0 Wednesday in the Sun Bowl on Justin Kahut’s 44-yard field goal.

“That’s the game we were in,” Riley said. “We played that game. We ended up winning it. Some people will call it ugly, but I can’t.”

The defensive struggle went on all day. Pitt kicker Connor Lee tried a 58-yard field goal in the closing minutes but the ball, helped by a steady wind, dropped just short of the crossbar.

“I had more confidence in a 58-yard field-goal try than going for it on fourth-and-8,” Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt said. “I wanted to give our team a chance. I really thought he could kick it.”

Not since Air Force and TCU played to 0-0 standoff in the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 1, 1959, had a bowl produced so few points. It was also the lowest-scoring Sun Bowl since a scoreless tie in 1940 between Catholic and Arizona State.

“We were three downs and out way too much,” Riley said. “We put a terrific burden on our defense and we put a lot of burden on the punt team. They came through.”

The Beavers (9-4) improved to 5-0 in bowls since Riley began his second stint as their coach in 2003. Kahut provided the only points with his kick shortly before halftime.

Riley liked the way his team rebounded from a 65-38 loss to rival Oregon that denied Oregon State a Rose Bowl berth.

“Guys sulked for a bit,” Beavers defensive end Victor Butler said. “But in the end you’ve got to get your head in the game. You’ve got to go play football because the other team wants to play and win just as much as you do.”

Riley stood at the interview table and added: “That is well said.”

Pitt (9-4), making its first bowl appearance since the 2004 season and the first under Wannstedt, led the Big East in scoring this season, averaging 29.3 points per game. The Panthers managed just 178 total yards.

“We couldn’t get anything on offense started at all,” standout tailback LeSean McCoy said. “We played horribly.”

There was no sign of offense, not with McCoy held to 85 yards rushing after averaging 116.9 yards per game this season. Pitt’s Bill Stull was 7 for 24 for 52 yards with one interception.

“When you talk about our defense, that was a beautiful performance against a running back that some said was one of the best in the country,” Riley said.

The Beavers also won without their spectacular brothers, tailback Jacquizz Rodgers and receiver James Rodgers, both out with shoulder injuries.

“We have a lot of athletes who can step in,” OSU quarterback Lyle Moevao said. “Without those guys, it was definitely a big loss but we were still able to manage the game.”

Reserve tailback Jeremy Francis had 76 yards rushing and Moevao was 21 for 42 for 193 yards passing with two interceptions. The Beavers finished with 273 total yards.

The Panthers finally got a spark early in the fourth quarter when T.J. Porter returned a punt 36 yards to OSU’s 42.

But three plays later, the big return was wasted because Butler, who had four sacks, stripped Stull and recovered the fumble.

“It’s an understatement to say how much he impacted this game,” Riley said.

Kahut connected on his field goal with 2:18 left before half.