FCS football: Tommies on wrong end of blowout at No. 1 NDSU

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FARGO, N.D. — The suspense for the North Dakota State football team was not on the field Saturday afternoon, not after 665 yards of total offense. It was a foregone conclusion that the University of St. Thomas was an undermanned Division I non-scholarship Pioneer Football League team that came to Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome a banged-up outfit.

No, the biggest mystery will be unraveled at 11 a.m. Sunday when the 24-team FCS playoff field will be revealed on ESPNU. The Bison, 12-0, are certain to be the No. 1 seed after their 62-7 victory before 15,278 fans.

“It will be exciting. (I) think we did a good shutting the door and handling our business,” Bison cornerback Anthony Chideme-Alfaro said. “Excited to see who we’re facing, so ready to get onto the next week and get ready.”

The rest of the seedings, and where NDSU stands in the bracket, will be the questions to be answered. But this is something the Bison have been part of for the past 15 seasons. They know the drill: Seeds 9 through 16 will host first-round games against the last eight at-large entrants.

NDSU will get a first-round bye and will have home-field advantage as long as it continues to advance.

“We shut the door today,” said NDSU defensive tackle Jaxon Duttenhefer. “I don’t think there’s any doubt for us or the nation where we’re supposed to be. I think there will be a little more interest to see who will be on our side of the bracket.”

The Bison beat St. Thomas with an offensive onslaught that for a while threatened to break the school record for total offense, 756 yards set in 1988 against Morningside College.

It was the fourth-most in the Division I era with the leader in that statistic being 700 yards against the University of South Dakota in 2019. That was with quarterback Trey Lance.

“Really good job coming out ready to go, regardless of the opponent it’s hard to do,” head coach Tim Polasek said. “The first-half performance, thought defensively we were flying around.”

This was accomplished with Trey’s younger brother Bryce Lance, who had three receptions for 106 yards and two touchdowns.

The Bison starters were sharp early against the Tommies, taking a quick 21-0 lead. NDSU had 320 yards of total offense in the first quarter alone, and with the difference in team speed, UST had no answer to any deep passes the Bison had to offer. Scoring passes in the first half covered 81, 47 and 43 yards.

Already an underdog, Tommies had to play without starting quarterback Andy Peters, out because of a concussion suffered against Presbyterian College (S.C.) last Saturday. That left the job to senior Amari Powell, who came in with 33 passing attempts on the season. St. Thomas also was missing a few other starters because of injuries.

NDSU found out during warmups.

“Whenever you don’t have a major starter, there’s always a lot of question marks because you’re not prepping for that player,” Duttenhefer said. “I think not having (Peters) in changed their mentality of what they were going to do a little bit.”

The Tommies, in their first year of being eligible for the FCS playoffs, had those hopes dashed last week in a loss to Presbyterian, which eliminated them from earning the Pioneer League’s automatic bid.

It didn’t take Bison running back Barika Kpeenu long to record a career-long touchdown run. On second-and-2, on NDSU’s second play of the game, Kpeenu took a handoff to the left side, saw little room, cut to the right and bolted 74 yards down the sideline for a quick 7-0 Bison lead.

Kpeenu’s previous long this season was 42 yards, and the stage was already set for the expected outcome.

A 40-yard pass to Chris Harris on NDSU’s next possession set up Kpeenu for a four-yard TD run, making it 14-0 before the game was six minutes old.

“They were playing some soft coverage, and we were still getting behind them,” Polasek said. “Really happy how many balls (were) getting pushed downfield.”

Interceptions on consecutive possessions by NDSU safeties Darius Givance and Taylen Eady halted St. Thomas drives, the last that resulting in an 81-yard pass from quarterback Cole Payton to Lance that made it 21-0. That was a career long on two fronts: the longest TD reception by Lance and the longest TD throw by Payton.

It was another showcase moment for Lance.

“That’s been the case 10 of the 12 weeks,” Polasek said. “Overall this year, Bryce continues to get open. He’s a pretty good player.”

It was also the ninth-longest touchdown passing play in NDSU school history. The Bison didn’t let up with the passing attack, either, and Kpeenu was the recipient this time. Payton found him wide open for a 47-yard touchdown play and it was 28-0.

It was 45-0 at halftime.

Kpeenu finished with 107 yards on 10 carries. Payton was 9 of 12 passing for 279 yards and three touchdowns.

“We were just ready to play,” Kpeenu said. “We came out right away willing to play for our brothers.”

 

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