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St. Cloud State’s Marvin Matthews (32) drags down Minnesota State’s Chris Nowlin during the first quarter Saturday.
Photo courtesy of Jason Wachter / St. Cloud Times


Minnesota State quarterback Steve Pachan (17) hands the ball off to tailback Jake Aberg (7) during the first quarter Saturday at Husky Stadium in St. Cloud.
Photo courtesy of Jason Wachter / St. Cloud Times


Published November 08, 2009 12:24 am - Minnesota State lost a perfect season at St. Cloud State Saturday, but more importantly, the Mavericks likely have lost a first-round bye in the Division II playoffs.

MSU unbeaten no more in football


By Shane Frederick
Free Press Staff Writer

ST. CLOUD

Looking to complete a perfect the season, the fourth-ranked Minnesota State football team hardly played a perfect game Saturday afternoon at Husky Stadium.

In a stunning, 26-21 loss to arch-rival St. Cloud State — their first defeat of the season — the Mavericks committed four turnovers, gave up four sacks and allowed a 95-yard, game-winning touchdown drive over the final five minutes.

“We beat ourselves; that’s the way I look at it,” said freshman running back Jake Aberg, who was the game’s top rusher with 148 yards and a touchdown on 22 carries. “We turned over the ball in the red zone. We couldn’t get going when we needed to. St. Cloud played us fantastic.”

Minnesota State, which finished the regular season with a 10-1 record (9-1 in NSIC) not only lost the Traveling Training Kit, which goes to the winner of the Mavericks-Huskies game each season, but lost a share of the NSIC title and, quite likely, a first-round bye in the NCAA tournament, which begins next weekend.

“This will be very humbling,” MSU coach Todd Hoffner said. “We have to regroup and play hard.”

Postseason brackets will be unveiled today, and, according to Hoffner, the Mavericks likely will play a first-round game at home on Saturday.

“This shows that we’re not invincible,” said running back Julian Phipps, who had 100 yards and two touchdowns on 14 carries. “Coach tells us that all the time, but we got it served to us on a platter today.”

The Mavericks trailed for much of the first half and the third quarter before an Aberg 7-yard touchdown run and a Sam Brockshus extra-point kick gave them a 21-20 lead on the second play of the fourth quarter.

But they couldn’t close the game or the unbeaten season.

Aberg fumbled on the Mavericks’ next possession, and, later, a 10-play drive stalled at the 29-yard line after quarterback Steve Pachan left the game with a leg injury. A pooch punt was downed at the 5-yard-line with 5:15 to play.

St. Cloud, which gained just three second-half first downs until that point, constructed a 10-play, 95-yard drive that ended with a 3-yard touchdown run by Dante Steward, who started his career at Minnesota State, with 57 seconds remaining.

“It’s a coincidence that I scored the game winning touchdown,” said Steward, who spent two seasons at MSU. “Punching it in right there was special.”

The Huskies’ final drive included a 41-yard pass from Derek Stripling to Tyler Allery.

“That was a killer,” Hoffner said. “That was a great drive by the Huskies. Obviously, with that kind of drive, late in the game, you deserve to win.”

Working with a short field for much of the first half, thanks to four sacks of Pachan and a long kick return by Fred Williams, the Huskies scored touchdowns on their first three possessions to take a 20-7 lead early in the second quarter.



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