Houston responds to West Virginia comeback with tipped Hail Mary in bonkers finish
West Virginia put together one of the wildest comebacks of the season against Houston and its old coach, Dana Holgorsen, on Thursday.
Then Houston did something even more stunning.
The fun began with West Virginia down 35-24 with fewer than four minutes remaining in the game. The Mountaineers capped an 11-play drive with a 7-yard score to cut the lead to five, then pushed the margin to a field goal with a successful two-point conversion.
Greene with another TD! @WVUfootball 💪 pic.twitter.com/jVJsgckLmT
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) October 13, 2023
West Virginia kept Houston from ending the game on the next drive but only after burning 2:17 of game clock, leaving 1:17 for them to score a touchdown and take the lead or kick a field goal to tie it.
The Mountaineers reached the end zone in 1:05 to go up 39-35. But those 12 seconds left ended up being pretty important.
WITH 22 SECONDS TO GO, @WVUfootball GETS THE TOUCHDOWN TO TAKE THE LEAD! 🔥 😤 pic.twitter.com/PjtjSmnHSu
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) October 13, 2023
An unsportsmanlike conduct penalty pushed back the ensuing kickoff, giving Houston the ball on its own 43-yard line with seven seconds left.
Houston quarterback Donovan Smith completed an 8-yard pass to Dalton Carnes to reach midfield, then uncorked a Hail Mary into the end zone as time expired. The ball was batted away from running back Jaylen Anderson ... into the arms of Stephon Johnson.
Ballgame, Houston. Cue the field rush.
THE HAIL MARY FOR THE WIN!! @UHCOUGARFB GET THE GAME WINNER WITH SECONDS LEFT!!! 🙌 😎 pic.twitter.com/4jE0xAxO94
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) October 13, 2023
That's the wildest college football comeback since, well, last week and a pretty fun way to get your first conference win as a member of the Big 12.
Smith finished the game 21-of-27 passing for 253 yards and four touchdowns. Of those yards, 57 came on the final two plays. Johnson had four catches for 96 receiving yards and two touchdowns.