Denver, CO
Colorado Mines back in D-II football semifinals after running over Central Washington
The Colorado School of Mines football program is two wins from a national championship — again.
And this time, the Orediggers had to grind it out.
Riding a rushing attack that racked up 255 yards, Mines scored 24 unanswered points in the second half to beat Central Washington, 38-14, at Marv Kay Stadium on Saturday afternoon and claim its third straight regional title.
With the win, the Orediggers moved to 13-0 for the first time in program history and locked up a third consecutive NCAA D-II semifinal trip as the No. 1 overall national seed.
Next up is Kutztown (12-2), which beat Slippery Rock 28-16 in its regional final, next Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in Golden. The game will be streamed on ESPN+. The other semifinal will pit Harding (13-0) against Lenoir-Rhyne (13-1). Get through that gauntlet, and the Orediggers will win their first national title.
Saturday did not produce a vintage John Matocha game through the air (225 yards, one interception on 16-of-25 passing), but the Orediggers more than made up for it by gobbling up chunks of turf on the ground.
Noah Roper and Landon Walker each ran in a pair of touchdowns, and Matocha added one of his own. Matocha (15 carries, 104 yards) and Roper (21-105) both crossed the century mark rushing as the Orediggers outgained CWU, 480-214.
The Mines defense also rose to the occasion, shutting out Central Washington (9-4) with three takeaways and allowing just seven yards total on the ground.
While Central Washington never led the game, the Wildcats did manage to tie it at 14-all going into halftime on quarterback Kennedy McGill’s 13-yard strike to Darius Morrison. McGill finished the game with 207 yards, two TDs and a pick on 16-of-33 passing.
After stopping CWU on a three-and-out to start the third quarter, Mines marched 65 yards for the go-ahead touchdown: a fourth-and-goal Walker score from the 1-yard line off a Wildcat formation.
Zach Hester stripped CWU’s Tyler Flanagan soon after, which the Orediggers cashed in for a 27-yard Hunter Pearson field goal. Jackson Zimmermann followed with a fourth-down pass break-up to set up Mines’ next score: a 1-yard Matocha run that gave Mines a 31-14 lead early in the fourth quarter. Roper’s second and final touchdown with 46 seconds to go was just icing on the cake.
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