Box Score
Postgame Notes
Quotes
STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Elijah Collins’ 17-yard, fourth-quarter touchdown run gave Oklahoma State breathing room and the Cowboys held on to beat Football Championship Subdivision foe Central Arkansas 27-13 on Saturday night in a season opener.
Korie Black blocked two Central Arkansas field-goal attempts for Oklahoma State, which won its 28th straight home opener at Boone Pickens Stadium. The Cowboys haven’t lost a season opener since 2014 and coach Mike Gundy now is 17-2 in opening games at his alma mater.
Oklahoma State used three quarterbacks, with Garret Rangel starting, followed by Michigan transfer Alan Bowman and Gunnar Gundy, the son of the coach. Rangel had the most yards passing, completing 10 of 15 attempts for 118 yards, while Gundy completed 7 of 9 passes for 106 yards and rushed for 16 yards.
But the Cowboys’ offense sputtered for long stretches and it remained a one-possession game until Collins’ score with 10:44 left made it 20-7. The Cowboys added an insurance score on a 2-yard touchdown run by Ollie Gordon with 5:54 left to make it 27-7. Gunnar Gundy led both those scoring drives, which covered 93 and 78 yards, respectively.
Will McElvain completed 24 of 37 passes for 268 yards and two touchdowns for Central Arkansas. The Bears twice had a touchdown called back on penalties during a first-quarter drive that ended with a blocked field goal and had another third-quarter field-goal try blocked. Still, they pulled within 13-7 with 4:37 left in that quarter on McElvain’s 1-yard pass to Kylin James.
Rangel capped the Cowboys’ only first-half touchdown drive with an 11-yard pass to Brennan Presley. Oklahoma State picked up field goals of 36 and 45 yards from Alex Hale in the second quarter, the latter as time expired following a late fumble by Central Arkansas.
Central Arkansas fell to 3-17 all-time against Football Bowl Subdivision teams.
THE TAKEAWAY
Central Arkansas: After a solid showing against what’s possibly their toughest opponent of the season behind them – there is a game at longtime FCS power North Dakota State looming – the Bears can look forward with confidence to their first season in the new United Athletic Conference, a FCS football-only league formed from a combination of programs in the Atlantic Sun and Western Athletic Conferences.
Oklahoma State: The final score against Central Arkansas really was immaterial, although the Cowboys surely would have liked the victory margin to be higher. What’s important for the Cowboys is they now have some game tape to review before next Saturday’s game at Arizona State, from which they can hope to gain clarity on position battles within the team – most notably at quarterback.