CINCINNATI — Ahmad Gardner returned an interception for a go-ahead touchdown and Cincinnati clamped down on freshman quarterback Dillon Gabriel and No. 18 UCF‘s high-scoring offense Friday night for a 27-24 victory that ended the Knights’ streak of 19 conference wins.
After getting blown out in their previous two matchups against the two-time defending American Athletic Conference champs, the Bearcats (4-1, 1-0) gave themselves an early edge in this season’s race. And it came by way of a defense that’s traditionally had trouble keeping up with UCF (4-2, 1-1).
In addition to Gardner’s 16-yard interception return, the Bearcats picked off Gabriel’s passes at the Cincinnati 2 and 6 as they took control and closed it out.
UCF’s Tre Nixon turned a short pass into a 45-yard touchdown that cut it to 27-24 with 3:11 to go, but the Bearcats ran out the clock, converting a fourth-and-1 at midfield in the closing seconds.
Gabriel came in leading the AAC in passing efficiency, but finished 25 of 46 for 297 yards with three decisive interceptions against a pressing defense that dared him to throw deep. The true freshman also botched a handoff at the USF 19 that set up the first of Desmond Ridder‘s two touchdown passes and got the crowd chanting “Overrated!”
The Knights had scored at least 30 points in each of their last 31 games, the longest such FBS streak since 1936.
Ridder was 17-of-31 for 149 yards. He also threw an interception that set up Greg McCrae‘s 1-yard touchdown run with 58 seconds left in the half that put USF ahead 16-10 lead.
Gardner changed the game by stepping in front of a sideline pass and returning an interception 16 yards untouched in the third quarter, and Gabriel couldn’t rally the Knights. Michael Warren II had a 61-yard run that set up Ridder’s second touchdown pass early in the fourth quarter for a 27-16 lead.
THE TAKEAWAY
UCF: The Knights’ lack of experience at quarterback cost them their long streaks of conference wins and 30-point games.
Cincinnati: After giving up 51 and 38 points in its last two losses to UCF, the Bearcats started preparing for their quick-snap offense during camp. After UCF opened the game with a field goal drive, the Bearcats’ defense settled in and took control.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
UCF’s second-straight road loss leaves the Knights in a tenuous spot. They were ranked No. 15 when they lost at Pittsburgh 35-34 on Sept. 21.
UP NEXT
UCF is off next week before hosting East Carolina on Oct. 19.
Cincinnati plays at Houston on Oct. 12.