University of Kansas

No. 5 TCU rallies to beat Kansas 34-30, denying Jayhawks a historic upset

Kansas wide receiver Justin McCay (19) lands out of bounds while covered by TCU cornerback Ranthony Texada (11) during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Lawrence, Kan., Saturday, Nov. 15, 2014.
Kansas wide receiver Justin McCay (19) lands out of bounds while covered by TCU cornerback Ranthony Texada (11) during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Lawrence, Kan., Saturday, Nov. 15, 2014. AP

The distance between history and one more loss was measured by 89 yards of green turf, an expanse stretching from the line of scrimmage to the south end zone at Memorial Stadium.

It was the final minutes in Saturday’s game, and Kansas quarterback Michael Cummings broke the huddle and surveyed the defense. The Jayhawks trailed No. 5 TCU by four points with more than 4 minutes remaining. The ball was sitting at the 11-yard line. It was first down.

“We needed to score,” KU junior receiver Nigel King said.

On a dreary and freezing day on Mount Oread, in front of a crowd that swelled and expanded as the prospect of an upset increased, the Jayhawks needed one more scoring drive to finish a miracle. In a game that had broken off the rails and bordered on insanity, KU interim coach Clint Bowen needed just 89 yards to finish off the most unlikely Kansas victory in decades.

“A play or two away,” Bowen would say.

The moment never came. The Jayhawks went three-and-out. TCU ran out the clock. The storybook was slammed shut in Kansas’ 34-30 loss to TCU on senior day in Lawrence.

“It was just a great effort,” KU senior linebacker Ben Heeney said. “Everyone laid it out on the line for us.”

A moment later, he couldn’t hide the frustration. The Jayhawks, 3-7 overall and 1-6 in the Big 12, had produced their best performance in years, leading the No. 5 team in the country 27-17 with more than 8 minutes left in the third quarter, and they had still lost.

“This one (stinks),” Heeney said.

On Saturday afternoon, the distance between history and another loss was one play here or there. It was a third-and-20 play that TCU converted in the third quarter, when it still trailed by 10 and was pinned deep in its own territory. It was a pick-six that was called back in the first half after Kansas was caught trying to substitute and had 12 men on the field. The Jayhawks could have led 20-7.

“We thought we had a chance to substitute,” Bowen said.

For Kansas, the difference was a 69-yard punt return for a touchdown from TCU’s Cameron Echols-Luper, a play that gave the Horned Frogs a 31-27 advantage with 2:38 left in the third quarter.

“We knew he was dangerous back there,” Bowen said. “(Punter Trevor Pardula) gets a hold of one probably too much, too much field to cover with his speed — with an athlete in space. That’s what happens.”

TCU, 9-1 overall and 6-1 in the Big 12, tacked on a field goal early in the fourth quarter. The Jayhawks cut the lead to 34-30 with a field goal. Bowen believed Kansas would have another chance to score — and it did — but the Jayhawks ended up one touchdown short of their first victory over a top-five team since the 2008 Orange Bowl, when they took down Virginia Tech.

Instead, they settled for more progress under Bowen, who has burnished his credentials to be Kansas’ next head coach. After last week’s 34-14 victory over lowly Iowa State, the Jayhawks generated an inspired performance. Last week, TCU dumped Kansas State 41-20 in Fort Worth, Texas. This week, the stout KU defense held the Horned Frogs to 11 points fewer than their season average.

Standing outside Bowen’s postgame news conference, KU athletic director Sheahon Zenger said the last two weeks would certainly be taken into consideration during the school’s coaching search. But for now, the search is moving forward.

“These have been very strong performances, obviously,” Zenger said. “You have to do your due diligence, for the University of Kansas and for (Bowen).”

For Zenger, it was a measured approach on an otherwise inexplicable day at Memorial Stadium.

The Jayhawks scored their first touchdown on a 17-play drive that included a roughing-the-kicker penalty from TCU, a botched field-goal attempt that turned into successful fake and a tipped ball that resulted in a first down inside the 5-yard line.

Later, the Jayhawks took a 27-17 lead when Cummings zipped a pass to King along the sideline. King, a Maryland transfer, tipped the ball up into the air while he tight-roped the sideline. After tipping the ball three different times, he finally hauled in the ball and sprinted to daylight for a 78-yard touchdown.

“I pictured myself making a big play,” said King, who finished with five catches for 128 yards.

Cummings finished with 332 yards passing, and the Jayhawks finished with 418 total yards, just 62 short of TCU’s yardage total. The Jayhawks forced two fumbles and added another interception, finishing plus-two in turnover ratio.

During his time in charge, Bowen has often talked about a blueprint for Kansas football. On Saturday, the blueprint was there, but the plan was just a possession short.

“We never put limitations on our players,” Bowen said. “That’s the expectation.”

To reach Rustin Dodd, call 816-234-4937 or send email to rdodd@kcstar.com. Follow him on Twitter: @rustindodd.

This story was originally published November 15, 2014 at 3:59 PM with the headline "No. 5 TCU rallies to beat Kansas 34-30, denying Jayhawks a historic upset."

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