Auburn Tigers beat Northwestern Wildcats in overtime of Outback Bowl, 38-35
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Friday, January 1, 2010; 7:37 PM
TAMPA, Fla. -- Pat Fitzgerald reached into Northwestern's bag of tricks one more time, hoping to pull out the perfect play to give his team a dramatic victory over Auburn in the Outback Bowl.
"I've had it in my back pocket for four years, and people tell me I'm too conservative. So I said, `What the heck. We're here to win, so let's go,'" Fitzgerald said after a version of the old fumblerooskie failed in overtime, leaving the Wildcats with a 38-35 loss on Friday.
"And I'd do it again," the 35-year-old coach said. "Next time I'd score, though, and we'd be celebrating."
Wes Byrum kicked a 21-yard field goal in overtime, and Auburn (8-5) overcame several mistakes, including a costly pair of penalties, that gave Northwestern chances for their first bowl victory in 61 years.
On the game's final play, the Wildcats sent backup kicker Steve Flaherty onto the field seemingly to try to force a second overtime.
But with regular kicker Stefan Demos on the sideline after being injured earlier in the overtime, Fitzgerald had no intention of trying to tie the score.
"I just kind of felt like the stars were aligned there when we lost Stef," Fitzgerald said, adding the "modern-day fumblerooskie" was one of coach Randy Walker's favorite plays at Northwestern.
Walker died of an apparent heart attack in 2006, and Fitzgerald was promoted as his replacement.
"We played for the win," Fitzgerald said. "Unfortunately we ended up a little bit short."
Receiver Zeke Markshausen took a handoff between the legs from holder Dan Persa and circled right end to try to win the game. Auburn's Neiko Thorpe stopped him after a 3-yard gain to the 2.
"Circumstances were very unusual, but we found a way to win it," Auburn coach Gene Chizik said.
"When I saw where everyone was lined up I knew something was up," Thorpe said. "It was just so quick and I was afraid I was the only person who saw it. But on the replay you could see there were a lot of people pursuing the play."






