Northwestern takes aim at CMU in GameAbove Sports Bowl

Northwestern coach David Braun said watching Central Michigan is like gazing into a mirror, and the numbers back that up.

The Wildcats rank top-35 in FBS in scoring defense at 20.9 points allowed per game; the Chippewas are close behind at 22.7. They’re almost identical in rushing offense — 169.5 yards per game for Central Michigan, 167.1 for Northwestern. And both sides feature a fifth-year quarterback who would like to go out with a win.

Those similarities and more should make for an intriguing matchup in the GameAbove Sports Bowl on Friday afternoon in Detroit.

The Wildcats (6-6) were picked second-to-last in the Big Ten preseason media poll, only to start the season 5-2 and ultimately earn their second bowl trip in three years under Braun.

After four seasons at SMU, Preston Stone took a graduate transfer to Evanston and passed for 2,174 yards and 14 touchdowns with 12 interceptions. The Wildcats’ multi-pronged ground attack was led by Caleb Komolafe (886 yards, 10 TDs).

But Northwestern has shone brightest on defense, with a 22-21 win over Penn State, a shutout of Purdue and a close 24-22 loss to Michigan on its ledger. Standouts included Aidan Hubbard (4.5 sacks) and Mac Uihlein (second-leading tackler with 92, team-high four interceptions).

In a joint press conference following the bowl announcement, Braun explained why Central Michigan reminded him of his own team.

“A team that plays really hard, is committed to running the football, plays great defense,” he said. “You can tell that this group is well-coached, plays the game the right way. They play for one another, with great fundamentals and great technique, with a great deal of physicality.”

First-year Central Michigan coach Matt Drinkall returned the compliment.

“You knew exactly when you drew them in the bowl game, you’re like, ‘Oh man, I already know what this film is going to look like before I turn it on.’ Then you turn it on and it reaffirms everything,” Drinkall said. “All the things that a disciplined, really good football team does show up.”

The Chippewas (7-5) won four of their last six games to lock in an above-.500 record. And they are shouldering one of the most intriguing quarterback situations of the bowl season.

Central Michigan spent most of the season using a two-quarterback system, with redshirt senior Joe Labas doing the throwing and Angel Flores guiding the run game. Flores was hurt Oct. 25 and it’s been all Labas since, but Drinkall revealed last week that Flores would be able to play in the GameAbove Sports Bowl.

“We’re figuring out in the process of bowl prep what and how much he’s going to be able to do,” Drinkall said. “But he’s been pretty much cleared and doing everything just fine.”

Labas threw for 1,676 yards and 12 TDs with six interceptions. Flores had 519 rushing yards and a team-high eight touchdowns over eight games.

The game formerly known as the Quick Lane Bowl saw some history made last year. Toledo beat Pitt 48-46 in six overtimes, breaking the record set two days earlier at the Hawaii Bowl for the most overtime periods in an FBS bowl.

–Field Level Media

Toledo Rockets quarterback Tucker Gleason (4) runs for the first down, during the first half of the 2024 GameAbove Sports Bowl at Ford Field in Detroit, Thursday, Dec. 26, 2024.

Toledo outlasts Pitt in six OTs in GameAbove Sports Bowl

Tucker Gleason threw for two touchdowns and capped a career-best 336-yard performance with a game-winning two-point conversion pass to Junior Vandeross III to propel the Toledo Rockets to a 48-46 six-overtime victory over the Pittsburgh Panthers in the GameAbove Sports Bowl Thursday in Detroit.

Vandeross also had a career day, posting personal bests of 12 passes for 194 yards for the Rockets (8-5), who, with the win over the Panthers (7-6), beat two power conference opponents in the same season for just the second time in school history. Toledo needed to come back from a 10-point deficit early in the fourth quarter to force overtime and then had two earlier stops in the extra sessions nullified by a penalty and a replay reversal.

It appeared Toledo would have the game in hand in the first half. Gleason and Vandeross connected on a 67-yard touchdown pass to give the Rockets a 13-12 lead midway through the second quarter. Then, just 14 seconds later, cornerback Braden Awls picked off a David Lynch pass on Pitt’s first play and returned it 42 yards to extend the lead to eight points.

The loss overshadowed the debut of Pitt freshman Julian Dugger, who replaced fellow freshman David Lynch in the third quarter. The Pittsburgh native completed 7 of 13 passes for 72 yards and two scores to help the Panthers take a 30-20 early in the fourth quarter. He also ran 21 times for 88 yards and a touchdown in the first extra period but his throw for Kenny Johnson was incomplete in the sixth OT as the Rockets prevailed.

However, he also threw an interception that Darius Alexander returned 58 yards for a touchdown that cut the Panthers lead to 30-27 with 7:49 left in regulation. Dylan Cunanan tied the game with 1:45 left on a 51-yard field goal.

Desmond Reid, an all-purpose All-American, ran for a season-high 165 yards on 32 carries, also a season-high, for the Panthers, who collected 301 of their 438 yards on the ground.

The Panthers finished the season losing six straight thanks to injuries decimating the roster. That included Eli Holstein, a freshman quarterback who threw for 2,228 yards but was unable to play in the bowl due to an ankle injury he suffered at Louisville on Nov. 23. Lynch, a walk-on freshman quarterback who threw just nine passes in the regular season, got the start.

–Field Level Media