Kiel hurt as Cincinnati beats South Florida 34-17

JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer

CINCINNATI (AP) — Gunner Kiel was headed for more X-rays on those tender ribs. Cincinnati coach Tommy Tuberville summoned his backup quarterback at halftime and put him in charge.

“He called me in front of the team and said this guy’s put in hard work, so we’re going to rally around him,” Munchie Legaux said.

Legaux ended up with a game ball and a win.

Kiel threw a touchdown pass and ran for another score before hurting his ribs again, and Legaux took it from there Friday night, scoring a notable touchdown of his own while Cincinnati pulled away to a 34-17 victory over South Florida.

“That was a lot of fun,” Tuberville said. “A lot of things happened. I enjoyed watching that.”

The Bearcats (4-3, 2-1 American Athletic) took advantage of the Bulls’ many mistakes and got their second straight lopsided win. They also came away with more worries at quarterback.

Kiel has played the last five games with bruised ribs. He aggravated the injury on a scramble in the closing seconds of the first half, which finished with the Bearcats up 20-3.

Legaux overcame a career-threatening knee injury early last season and had an emotional moment early in the fourth quarter. He ran 9 yards on his rebuilt left knee for his first touchdown since his comeback, slid on his knees at the back of the end zone and put his head on the ground, cradling the ball.

“There was a lot of emotion going through my mind on that play,” said Legaux, who was tearing up on the sideline.

Legaux was 14 of 15 for 121 yards and was presented with his touchdown ball in the locker room after the game.

Shaq Washington had a career-high 12 catches for 163 yards. He also had a 46-yard punt return — the longest by a Bearcat in five years — that set up a field goal in the first half. Freshman Mike Boone ran 19 times for 212 yards and a touchdown, the first 200-yard game by a Bearcats running back in four years.

The Bulls (3-5, 2-2) switched quarterbacks but couldn’t pull off a second straight comeback. They had the biggest comeback in school history a week earlier, rallying from a 27-7 halftime deficit to a 38-30 win over Tulsa.

South Florida’s Mike Wright had a rough time, going 11 of 19 for 92 yards with a pair of interceptions. He also lost two fumbles, the first of which set up a field goal.

Cincinnati’s Rod Moore fumbled on Cincinnati’s 12-yard line to open the second half, giving the Bulls a chance for a comeback. Wright fumbled the snap on the next play and was replaced by Steven Bench the next time the Bulls got the ball.

“Mike will start next week,” coach Willie Taggart said. “He practiced well this week. I thought he was ready until he made a couple mistakes. Then his head wasn’t in the game. He got down on himself. We had to make a change.”

Bench had touchdown passes of 67 yards to 38 yards, taking advantage of botched coverages. He was 9 of 14 for 147 yards.

“It was my job to be ready for something like that,” Bench said. “I will tell Mike to wake up tomorrow and get to work. Don’t let it beat you twice.”

Cincinnati went ahead to stay on its opening possession, when Kiel hit Johnny Holton in stride on a slant and the receiver went all the way across the field for a 38-yard touchdown. Kiel also scored on a 17-yard draw play.

A defense that had been shredded in three consecutive games — a 50-28 loss to Ohio State, 41-14 loss to Memphis and 55-34 loss to Miami — showed improvement for the second straight game. The Bearcats were coming off a 41-3 win at Southern Methodist.

South Florida cornerback Chris Dunkley was ejected for a high hit on Washington shortly before halftime. Andre Davis — the Bulls’ career receiving leader — was ejected for fighting midway through the fourth quarter.

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Follow Joe Kay on Twitter: http://twitter.com/apjoekay

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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