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Alex Gardner
Alex Gardner sets up the game-winning touchdown with five of his 102 yards.
10
Alcorn State ALCN 1-1
17
Winner FIU FIU 1-1
Alcorn State ALCN
1-1
10
Final
17
FIU FIU
1-1
Winner
Score By Quarters
Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th F
ALCN Alcorn State 0 7 0 3 10
FIU FIU 0 7 3 7 17

Game Recap: Football |

@FIUFootball Turns in 17-10 Win Over Alcorn; Get Butch Davis His First Win at FIU

Alex McGough throws for 328 yards, second best in his career

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (September 8, 2017) – With the arrival of Hurricane Irma looming and potentially making landfall in South Florida, and with the FIU football team's game being moved from its home field, Riccardo Silva Stadium, to Birmingham, Alabama, the Panthers finally had the opportunity to return to a bit of normalcy, albeit for just a few hours. FIU returned to the gridiron on Friday, for what should have been its home-opener on Saturday, and handed upset-minded Alcorn State University a hard-fought 17-10 loss at historic Legion Field. The win improves the Panthers to 1-1 on the year, while the Braves level at 1-1. The victory was also the first for Butch Davis as head coach at FIU.
 
Senior quarterback Alex McGough was 21-of-33, with no interceptions for 328 yards, his fourth 300-yard plus passing game of his career, and his second best, behind his 390-yard performance against Old Dominion on Oct. 24, 2015.
 
In what was an already impressive outing, McGough saved his best for last, leading the Panthers on a game-winning seven-play, 80-yard drive. After Alcorn tied the game at 10 apiece on a 49-yard field goal, the senior from Tampa, started the drive getting 40 of those yards on a connection to Julian Williams, who found a seam down the middle to the Alcorn 40-yard line. The Braves then got a healthy dose of Alex Gardner, who carried the ball four-straight times for a total of 27 yards, including the run that set up the game-winner from the one-yard line. McGough took the ball over the goal line on a quarterback sneak.
 
The game started out slowly for both teams, but after a scoreless first quarter, Gardner, the Panthers' all-time rushing leader, scored his first touchdown of the year, capping an 11-play, 72-yard drive with a three-yard run just one-minute into the second quarter. Gardner finished the game with 102 yards on 20 carries, his 10th 100-yard game of his career.
 
After a stop of Alcorn on the Braves next drive, the Panthers seemed poised to get in the end zone again, taking the ball 80 yards in seven plays and using better than nine minutes of the clock. However a 32-yard pass from McGough to Thomas Owens that got the ball to the two-yard line, was fumbled into the end zone by Owens for a touchback, giving the ball back to Alcorn at the 20-yard line.
 
The Braves proceeded to use their own 80-yard drive to level the score at seven-all when Lenorris Footman found Tavares Johnson Jr. with 3:04 left in the half. The score was set up by a 47-yard pass play, on the third play of the drive, from Footman to Norlando Veals getting the Braves to the FIU 30-yard line from their own 23. 
 
Despite the Panthers dominating the time of possession in the first half, holding the ball for almost 12 minutes and recording 239 yards, 210 coming through the air, FIU and Alcorn went into the locker room at the break tied at seven.
 
Neither team could get anything going for most of the third quarter, until the Panthers put together a 75-yard drive lasting 4:50 and ended by a 23-yard Jose Borregales field goal with 16 seconds left in the quarter, making the score 10-7 FIU. The Panthers, who had the drive extended on a 14-yard pass to Julian Williams on third-and-five, had a chance to get six points on a pass from McGough to Tony Gaiter IV, but the pass was dropped in the end zone.
 
On the night, the FIU finished the game with 465 total yards, 328 of which came through the air. Williams was the prime target for McGough recording a career night with 129 yards on five receptions. Gaiter IV also finished with a career-best 64 yards receiving on five catches.

The Panthers were cheered on by better than 100 fellow FIU student-athletes from eight sports programs that were also relocated to Birmingham due to Irma.
 
Up next for FIU is a trip to America's Heartland, Bloomington, Indiana, to face the Indiana Hoosiers on Saturday, Sept. 16 at 3:30 p.m. ET.
 
For FIU football ticket information, contact the University Credit Union Box Office at 305-FIU-GAME (348-4263).
 
For the latest information on Panthers football, follow us on Twitter, @FIUFootball, and check out Pete Pelegrin's in-depth coverage of FIU Athletics on his official blog, The Prowl, at www.FIUSports.com.
 
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About FIU Athletics: FIU Athletics is home to more than 400 student-athletes in 18 different sports. Athletic events are played in eight different venues on FIU's campuses (Modesto A. Maidique and Biscayne Bay), including FIU Arena and Riccardo Silva Stadium.
 
About FIU: Florida International University is classified by Carnegie as a "R1: Doctoral Universities - Highest Research Activity" and recognized as a Carnegie Community Engaged university. It is a public research university with colleges and schools that offers bachelor's, master's and doctoral programs in fields such as business, engineering, computer science, international relations, architecture, law and medicine. As one of South Florida's anchor institutions, FIU contributes almost $9 billion each year to the local economy and is ranked second in Florida in Forbes Magazine's "America's Best Employers" list. FIU graduates are consistently among the highest paid college graduates in Florida and are among the leaders of public and private organizations throughout South Florida. FIU is Worlds Ahead in finding solutions to the most challenging problems of our time. FIU emphasizes research as a major component of its mission with multiple state-of-the-art research facilities including the Wall of Wind Research and Testing Facility, FIU's Medina Aquarius Program and the Advanced Materials Engineering Research Institute.  FIU has awarded more than 220,000 degrees and enrolls more than 54,000 students in two campuses and centers including FIU Downtown on Brickell, FIU@I-75, the Miami Beach Urban Studios, and Tianjin, China. FIU also supports artistic and cultural engagement through its three museums: Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, the Wolfsonian-FIU, and the Jewish Museum of Florida-FIU. FIU is a member of Conference USA and more than 400 student-athletes participating in 18 sports. For more information about FIU, visit http://www.fiu.edu/.
 
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