FOOTBALL: Gee-Gees comeback on
late drive to edge Mustangs, 20-19
OTTAWA - The Ottawa Gee-Gees
scored 10 unanswered points to
defeat the Western Mustangs 20-19 at
Frank Clair Stadium on Monday
afternoon in OUA football action in
front of a crowd of 6,274 fans.
Ottawa improves to 2-0 under rookie
head coach J.P. Asselin, while the
Mustangs fall to 1-1.
Next up, the No. 9 ranked Mustangs
host McMaster (2-0) on Sept. 11 at 1
p.m. at TD Waterhouse Stadium. The
Marauders won 26-24 over Wilfrid
Laurier.
Fifth-year receiver Steven Hughes of
Ottawa caught the game-winning
touchdown with 29 seconds left for
the Gee-Gees from senior quarterback
Brad Sinopoli of Peterborough, Ont.
Sinopoli, who was quiet in the first
half after being smothered by
Western's defence, finished the game
30-for-49 passing for 439 yards -
192 coming in the fourth quarter. He
also threw two touchdowns along with
a pair of interceptions.
His eight-play, 90-yard winning
drive was a sign of the experience
with Ottawa's offensive unit.
Fifth-year receiver Matthew Bolduc
of the Gee-Gees was effective with
11 catches for 183 yards.
"Good for Ottawa, they deserve
credit," said Mustangs head coach
Greg Marshall. "Their defensive line
did a really good job. Our running
game was not very effective. We knew
we had to run the ball for us to be
successful and we did not."
Sophomore kicker Lirim Hajrullahu of
St. Catharines, Ont., kicked four
field goals for Western, while
quarterback Donnie Marshall of
London, Ont., was 9-for-20 passing
with one touchdown and one
interception along with 210 yards.
He ran 13 times for 41 yards.
Western only rushed for 117 yards,
88 coming in the fourth quarter.
Leading the team with 10 tackles,
Craig Butler of London, Ont., had a
great game to lead the Western
defence, a unit which played
extremely well through three
quarters but could not contain
Ottawa's fourth-quarter surge.
John Surla of Niagara Falls, Ont.,
and Jason Kosec of Mississauga, Ont.
were great on defence - Kosec had a
pair of interceptions while Surla
was involved all over the field
rushing the quarterback and breaking
through the offensive line.
"Our defence did its job except for
one drive at the end," Marshall
said. "I hope we learn from this and
only can get better... it matters
which team is best in November and
we know we will have to be better."
The Mustangs opened the scoring on a
36-yard field goal from Hajrullahu
just over two minutes into the game.
He added three more field goals from
30 and 17 yards out in the first
half to give Western a 9-3 lead.
Ezra Millington scored the game's
first touchdown, pulling in a
12-yard Sinopoli pass with 4:18 left
in the second quarter to give Ottawa
a 10-9 lead.
But Mike Hegarty, a fifth-year
slotback, caught back-to-back
Marshall passes, including a 26-yard
touchdown, to give Western the 16-10
lead at the half. The Hegarty
catches, along with a 54-yard
Hipperson catch with Western
starting with the ball at their own
one-yard line, capped off a 109-yard
scoring drive.
The opening half was sloppy but
evenly played. A scoreless third
quarter, featuring both blunders and
strong defence, set the stage for a
dramatic finish in the fourth.
In the fourth, Hajrullahu kicked
another 17-yard field goal to
stretch Western's lead to 19-10.
Ottawa looked to have taken the lead
when Hughes dropped the ball in the
endzone, and the Gee-Gees had to
settle for a 12-yard Falvo field
goal with just over four minutes
remaining.
The kick made it a one-score game,
19-13 in favour of Western.
Western looked to have taken a 25-13
lead when rookie receiver Andrew
Thibaudeau caught a Marshall pass
and ran it into the endzone. But an
unnecessary roughness call - which
seemed to be away from the play -
brought the ball back inside
Gee-Gees territory and negated the
score. Western missed a 40-yard
field goal attempt to end the drive.
Hughes capped off a great closing
Gee-Gees drive, catching a 27-yard
Sinopoli pass for a touchdown, with
Falvo converting, with 29 seconds
left to seal the victory.
Hajrullahu tried to provide last
second heroics but missed a 56-yard
field goal attempt with time
expiring.