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Leonard passes for 3 TDs and No. 8 Notre Dame forces 5 turnovers in a 35-14 win over Virginia

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Leonard passes for 3 TDs and No. 8 Notre Dame forces 5 turnovers in a 35-14 win over Virginia
Sport

Sport

Leonard passes for 3 TDs and No. 8 Notre Dame forces 5 turnovers in a 35-14 win over Virginia

2024-11-17 09:25 Last Updated At:09:30

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — Riley Leonard passed for three touchdowns and Notre Dame's defense forced five turnovers as the No. 8 Fighting Irish beat Virginia 35-14 on Saturday.

Leonard was 22 for 33 for 214 yards as Notre Dame (9-1) raced to a 35-0 lead and won its eighth straight game.

Leonard's TD passes came in the first half. He found Jayden Harrison with an 8-yard strike, Cooper Flanagan with a 2-year flare and hit Mitchell Evans with a 16-yard pass.

Notre Dame forced the five turnovers in the first half and four led to touchdowns. Xavier Watts intercepted a pass and recovered a fumble. Adon Shuler and Leonard Moore also had interceptions, while Max Hurleman recovered a fumble. Rod Heard II forced a fumble.

Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman said the takeaways in the first half jump-started his team.

“When your defense is playing as well as we’re playing, it allows you to still be in the game and be in a position to win, maybe when you weren’t having the success you want offensively to start the game,” Freeman said. “And so the defense is doing a heck of a job, and offense is doing a good job, man.”

Freeman hopes that the Fighting Irish will have an opportunity to host a College Football Playoff game. Saturday's game was the final regular-season home contest for Notre Dame.

“Let’s go to work,” Freeman said. “Let’s give this program a chance to play in this stadium one more time.”

Notre Dame capitalized on a Virginia miscue on the opening kickoff, setting up its first score. Former Notre Dame team member Chris Tyree muffed his attempt to catch the opening kickoff, and the ball ricocheted off the turf into the hands of Hurleman, giving Notre Dame possession at the Cavaliers’ 25.

Five plays later, Jeremiyah Love finished off the drive with a 4-yard sprint into the end zone. Love also scored on a 76-yard run in the third quarter and finished with 137 yards on 16 carries.

“I just trusted my ‘O’ line," Love said of his spectacular 76-yard run that was Notre Dame's offensive highlight. "Once I saw a hole, I hit it. I have breakaway speed, so … track meet after that.”

Notre Dame had two possible touchdowns and 151 yards wiped out by penalties in a 10-second span. A Leonard-to-Harrison strike for 78 yards was called back due to a hands-to-the-face penalty against Pat Coogan. A play later, a fake punt in which Jordan Faison raced 73 yards for a score was negated by an illegal formation penalty.

Virginia (5-5) replaced quarterback Anthony Colandrea with Tony Muskett at the start of the second half. Muskett capped a five-play, 75-yard drive with an 18-yard touchdown run. He also scored on a 2-yard run with 18 seconds remaining in the game.

“They’re not going to quit,” Virginia coach Tony Elliott said of his players fighting back from the dismal first half. “They’re going to fight. That’s part of our DNA. You have to have the resilience to just keep battling regardless of circumstances. Proud of the effort to play all the way to the end. We have a lot of coaching to do, lot of teaching to do, lot of improving to do.”

Elliott said that he will make a decision later on whether Colandrea or Muskett will start against SMU. Colandrea, a sophomore, was 8 of 21 for 69 yards with three interceptions. Muskett, a graduate student, was 9 for 14 for 103 yards.

“We’re definitely going to have to go back and evaluate the game and see what gives us the best opportunity the next two weeks,” Elliott said. “We have two good quality quarterbacks that we believe both can give us a chance. No decision is made until we can sit down and evaluate all of the circumstances and the entire situation.”

Virginia's Malachi Fields caught four passes for 81 yards.

Jonas Sanker recovered a fumble and had a sack and another tackle for loss for Virginia, finishing with eight tackles from his safety position.

Notre Dame: A punishing defense set up the offense and helped Notre Dame pile up style points as the window to impress the College Football Playoffs committee narrows.

Virginia: Turnovers sabotaged the Cavaliers' hopes of securing another road upset of a Top 25 team and earning a bowl berth. Virginia, which beat then-No. 23 Pitt 24-19 a week ago, now must beat either No. 14 SMU at home or archrival Virginia Tech on the road to become bowl eligible.

Notre Dame: The Fighting Irish solidified their hold on a Top 10 ranking with an impressive victory.

No. 8 Notre Dame plays No. 16 Army at Yankee Stadium on Saturday.

Virginia hosts No. 14 SMU on Saturday.

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Notre Dame tight end Mitchell Evans (88) dives into the end zone as Virginia safety Jonas Sanker (20) pushes him during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Michael Caterina)

Notre Dame tight end Mitchell Evans (88) dives into the end zone as Virginia safety Jonas Sanker (20) pushes him during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Michael Caterina)

BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — Syracuse picked off a pair of Fernando Mendoza passes and completely stifled California's offense while mounting a surprising ground attack to lift the Orange to a decisive 33-25 win on Saturday.

Kyle McCord, who leads the nation in completions, was 29 for 46 for 323 yards. LeQuint Allen ran for 109 yards and two touchdowns while Jackson Kennedy converted all four attempted field goals to remain perfect on the season.

“To start fast and get them early, that was big, and I think both sides of the ball did that," McCord said. “The defense created some takeaways, and then the offense putting up 27 first-half points was big.”

Syracuse led by as many as three scores after Mendoza threw two early interceptions.

"The sideline said ‘Ball’, and I looked — and I high-pointed it,” said Davien Kerr, who had the second Syracuse pick.

Spearheaded by McCord, the Orange boast one of the best passing offenses in the country but stayed on the ground to disarm Cal’s defensive line, running for 103 yards and two touchdowns in the first half after amassing just 39 total rushing yards against Boston College a week ago.

“We haven’t done anything good on defense,” Cal head coach Justin Wilcox said as his team entered the locker room at half.

Despite a 75-yard run to the end zone by Jaivian Thomas in the second quarter and Mendoza touchdown to Jonathan Brady with a minute left, Cal was flimsy on offense. The Bears managed only two red zone attempts against the Orange and have struggled from inside the 20 all season, completing 21 of 40 red zone pass attempts.

“Mendoza, he’s very crafty,” said Syracuse head coach Fran Brown. “He’s got a strong arm and a quick trigger finger, so we knew we had to switch the picture up a lot for him.”

McCord and the Orange did not surrender a turnover despite Cal leading the country in interceptions with 54.

California: Mendoza, the steady pulse of Cal's offense, looked uncharacteristically frantic under center. After throwing for a season-high 385 yards to earn the Bears their sole ACC win last weekend, Mendoza threw two picks and only mustered 8 total minutes of offense for California in the first half, which doesn't bode well for a Bears team that has key offensive components like Jaydn Ott limited with injuries.

Syracuse: The Orange rallied for arguably their most complete performance all season, with the oft-injured offensive line finally contributing an impressive showing. McCord helped keep the offense at a healthy tempo, aided by a career-best 11 receptions from receiver Trebor Pena.

Syracuse: The Orange will take on UConn on Saturday in a non-conference matchup at home.

California: The Bears will host Stanford on Saturday in their first Big Game matchup as ACC foes.

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Syracuse wide receiver Trebor Pena (2) fumbles the ball while being tackled by California linebacker Teddye Buchanan (10) during the first quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024, at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley, Calif. Syracuse recovered the fumble.(Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group via AP)

Syracuse wide receiver Trebor Pena (2) fumbles the ball while being tackled by California linebacker Teddye Buchanan (10) during the first quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024, at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley, Calif. Syracuse recovered the fumble.(Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group via AP)

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