Washington, DC-
Greg McGhee accounted for all the Howard scoring, rushing for three touchdowns and passing for two more as the Bison defeated Morehouse, 35-17 in the AT&T Nation's Football Classic at RFK Stadium before 13,178. The 6-3, 208-pound senior from Pittsburgh, Pa, rushed 98 yards, scoring on runs of 1-yard twice, and a 17-yard scamper late that all but put the game away. He also completed 16 of 30 for 149 yards and TD passes to
Justin Chaney and
Robert Mercer. For his efforts, he was named the game MVP for the third time in four years.
Greg McGhee did a great job as far as throwing the football and putting us in position to score points," said Howard head coach Gary "Flea" Harrell. "He's a very solid guy. Every year he gets better and better [in the Classic]. He's played three years. I think he really set his goals to be the best player on the football field when we play this kind of game. He's very efficient. He didn't turn the ball over today. He did a great job understanding the game plan and knowing when to check out of a play."
The Maroon Tigers (1-1) got on the board first when Monqavious Johnson capped off an eight-play, 65-yard drive on a 16-yard strike to Lake McGuffie with a little over five minutes off the clock in the first quarter. Morehouse failed on the PAT kick, but led 6-0.
Johnson, a sophomore who accounted for 338 of his team's 392 yards, was a thorn in the side of the Bison's defense all day.
"Morehouse came out and showed they are a very tough team," noted Harrell. "We wanted to impose our will on that team but they would never quit."
Morehouse's score apparently woke up Howard (1-2) and their leader, McGhee began to take over the game. The four-year starter, took advantage of a short field and used five plays to get the Bison on board, scoring on a one-yard quarterback sneak to give his team the lead for good at 7-6.
Then early in the second quarter, McGhee drove his team 74 yards in eight plays, using short passes to running back
Aquanius Freeman to move the ball effectively. He finished off the drive with his first TD pass of the season, a four-yard toss to Chaney for his first career TD.
The Maroon Tigers would not go away and responded with a 14-play drive that ate up over eight minutes off the clock. But the Bison defense clamped down in the Red Zone and forced Morehouse to settle for a 27-yard field goal by Alexis Gonzales. The 14-9 score would stand at halftime.
In the second half, it was all McGhee. First he finished off a short drive with another one-yard plunge to make it, 21-9. He then capped off another drive, this time from 17 yards out to expand the lead to 28-9 with 1:50 left in the third quarter.
The last Bison score came courtesy of a play by the special teams. The Morehouse punt returner muffed a punt and gave Howard possession at Maroon Tiger 22-yard line. It took the southpaw four plays before he found Mercer from 17 yards for the score. For Mercer, a walk-on from the track team, it was his first career TD.
"It was a momentum swing," said Morehouse head coach Rich Freeman. "A key moment was when we had a bad snap on a punt and they were able to convert."
The Maroon Tigers closed out the scoring when Johnson dashed six yards with a little under nine minutes to go in the fourth quarter.
From there, the Howard defense put the game away and posted its first win of the season.
Freeman, a 5-10 red-shirt junior from New Orleans, missed most of last season with a high ankle sprain. But he played a huge role in the game plan, rushing for 72 yards on 12 carries while grabbing four passes for 43 yards.
"We have an offensive system with running-back-by-committee approach," said
Aquanius Freeman. "Whenever my number is called, I'm always going to be ready. Today, my number was called a lot so I felt the pressure to go out and execute. And I did that today."
He continued, "Our running backs have to be able to run, block and catch. Just catching the ball and doing what I've got to do-screen pass, whatever kind of pass. I've got to catch the ball and make things happen."
William Parker, who splits time at the running back position, proved to be a big contributor on special teams, returning three kickoffs for 100 yards to give his team excellent field position.
"Their kickoff return pretty much had a field day with our kickoff team," said Freeman. "The kicking game, we didn't coach well and we didn't play well."
Punter
John Fleck also had another solid day, averaging almost 42 yards per punt and knocking three of his attempts inside the 20-yard line.
The defense surrendered almost 400 yards of total offense, but it was able to come up with big stops when it needed to.
Godspower Offor,
Khari Brown and
Devin Rollins and their mates combined to effectively stop Morehouse runners and apply pressure on Johnson.
The Bison have a huge test next week when it plays its MEAC opener against a much-improved Morgan State team in the New York Urban League Classic at MetLife Stadium.