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  Wednesday, Dec. 29 4:00pm ET
Mungro's big day leads Orangemen
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- In the nick of time, Syracuse remembered how to win.

James Whalen
James Whalen hauls in a pass before leaving with a dislocated elbow.

James Mungro rushed 12 times for 162 yards and two fourth-quarter touchdowns as Syracuse rallied for a 20-13 victory over Kentucky in the Music City Bowl.

It was the first victory since Nov. 6 for Syracuse (7-5), which ended the season by losing its last two games and four of its last five. Coach Paul Pasqualoni, who listened to fans calling for his job the past month, felt vindicated.

"It's so satisfying and very, very special," said Pasqualoni, who also had lost his previous two bowl games after starting 4-0 in postseason play.

It didn't look good early as Kentucky (6-6) built a 10-0 lead in the first quarter. But the Wildcats lost All-American tight end James Whalen to a dislocated right elbow, and their offense stalled.

"All in all, we just persevered, and we just needed a win," linebacker Keith Bulluck said. "The thrill of victory -- we haven't had it in such a long time."

Syracuse still had trouble, even as Kentucky's offense struggled. Kentucky stopped two drives by blocking field goal attempts and was headed for its first bowl victory since the 1984 Hall of Fame game when Marc Samuel's 35-yard field goal made it 13-7 with 10:39 remaining.

The Orangemen responded with their best drive of the game, going 77 yards in four plays capped by Mungro's first TD, a 32-yarder up the middle and a 14-13 lead.

After Will Allen intercepted Dusty Bonner's pass with 6:38 left, Mungro padded the lead when Kentucky, anxious to regain possession inside the last two minutes, allowed him to score on a 20-yard run with 1:42 to play. Syracuse tried to make that strategy backfire by going for a 2-point conversion and a 9-point lead, but the attempt failed.

That still left Kentucky's "Air Raid" offense with plenty of time, but Bonner's last-gasp pass fell incomplete at the Syracuse 7.

Coach Hal Mumme said losing Whalen, the former walk-on who set a major-college record for receptions by a tight end with 90, took the wind out of the Wildcats. Bonner wound up passing for 308 yards but no touchdowns after tossing 26 during the regular season.

"We had to adjust our thinking totally in some of the things we wanted to do because he (Whalen) was off to a terrific start. He was going to have a great game," Mumme said. Whalen caught four passes for 79 yards.

Syracuse wound up with 404 yards compared to 365 for Kentucky.

Kentucky scored on its first two possessions and looked ready to rout Syracuse, jumping to a 10-0 lead.

Whalen was hurt at the end of a 6-yard reception, however, and the Wildcats settled for Samuel's 22-yard field goal.

Pasqualoni started Troy Nunes at quarterback but occasionally went with tailback Dee Brown for running plays. The Orangemen stopped themselves with two fumbles, and Kentucky's Dennis Johnson blocked a 26-yard field goal attempt by Nate Trout late in the second quarter.

Defense finally got Syracuse going. End Donald Dinkins dropped Anthony White for a 2-yard loss on second-and-goal and blocked a 20-yard field goal two plays later.

Mungro took the handoff and ran up the right sideline 86 yards, and only Willie Gray saved a touchdown by tripping him up at the Kentucky 3. Kyle Johnson scored on a 2-yard run at 1:56, making it 10-7 at halftime.

 


ALSO SEE
College Football Scoreboard

Syracuse Clubhouse

Kentucky Clubhouse

Whalen injury grounds Kentucky offense


AUDIO/VIDEO
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 James Mungro splits the defense for an 87-yard gain.
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 Mungro goes 32 yards for the score.
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 Syracuse gets a late score on Mungro's second touchdown.
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