SALEM, Va. — Brett Elliott's 10-yard touchdown pass to Riley Jenkins with 5:51 left in the game lifted Linfield to a 28-21 victory over Mary Hardin-Baylor in the 32nd Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl at Salem Stadium on Saturday afternoon. The victory in NCAA Division III's championship football game capped the Wildcats' perfect season at 13-0 and marked their first NCAA football title.
The Crusaders (13-2) drove 61 yards in the final minute before Linfield's Kelley Bertrand and Brandon Tom sacked quarterback Josh Welch on a fourth-and-4 at Linfield's 19-yard line with 16 seconds left. Mary Hardin-Baylor reached the title game with a 38-35 fourth-quarter comeback win at perennial Division III power Mount Union on Dec. 11.
"I think all week we knew it was going to come down to us (on defense)," Bertrand said. "Watching them on film they were one of the most physical, the best team we were going to face all season."
Linfield's Zach Fleming set up the winning score by jarring Mary Hardin-Baylor punter Hunter Hamrick and forcing Hamrick to fall on the loose ball at the Crusaders' 10-yard line. The Wildcats took over on downs. Jenkins made a reaching, one-handed grab of Elliott's short pass on the very next play and dove into the end zone for the go-ahead score. Chosen by media as the game's Most Outstanding Player, Jenkins scored two touchdowns and amassed 145 all-purpose yards, including a game-high 81 rushing yards on 18 carries.
"I overthrew him, I thought it was incomplete," Elliott said of his go-ahead touchdown toss. "I was thinking of the next play."
"It was a play where I check the (line)backer first, to see if he blitzes, and if he doesn't I can go ahead and go on my route," said Jenkins. "I tease Brett every day in practice, because I'm always open on that route. He just never wants to throw to the running backs."
"I'll stand there and I'll just hold my hands up at practice and wave to Brett. ... I'm happy that he chose this time to throw to the running backs.
"It happened so fast, I saw him lob it up there and I just kind of ran up under it."
After a scoreless third quarter, Mary Hardin-Baylor pulled to within two points on an 18-yard option run by Freddie Rollins. Rollins' two-point conversion tied the game at 21-21 with 9:01 remaining.
Linfield rolled up 334 of its 377 total offensive yards in the first half and grabbed a 21-13 halftime lead. Elliott completed a 39-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Hazenberg on the Wildcats' opening drive and scored on a 1-yard plunge with 27 seconds left in the half. He completed 20 of 34 passes for 282 yards and two touchdowns. He finished the season with an NCAA-record (all divisions) 61 touchdown passes.
Mary Hardin-Baylor junior receiver P.J. Williams caught eight passes for 160 yards and two touchdowns, all game highs, including a 55-yard catch on the Wildcats' final drive. Welch completed nine of 18 passes for 170 yards and two scores. Crusaders' fullback Chad Starnes rushed for a game-high 67 yards on 10 carries. Linfield limited the Crusaders' vaunted option attack to a season-low 155 rushing yards on 55 carries.
"The only thing different that we saw from the other teams (in the playoffs) is that they played the option really well," said senior fullback Chad Starnes. "It just wasn't in the cards for us."
Fleming made a game-high 11 tackles for Linfield. Eric Hillison added 10 solo stops, three behind the line of scrimmage, and made an interception. Josh Kubiak's eight tackles led the Crusaders, who held Linfield to its lowest scoring output of the season.
Both teams made their first Stagg Bowl appearance in today's game after joining the NCAA Division III ranks in 1998. Linfield won three NAIA Division II football titles (1982, 1984, 1986), while 1998 was Mary Hardin-Baylor's first season.
Jenkins, Elliott, late stand lift Linfield over UMHB
Dec 18, 2004