Texas 25, Ohio State 22

1234T
TEX (2-0)1033925
OSU (1-1)0166022

Final

8:00 PM ET, September 10, 2005
Ohio Stadium
COLUMBUS, OH

Late score lifts Texas to second straight Big Ten win

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Top 25 Overview
It was over when... David Thomas recovered Ohio State's onside kick with 15 seconds left to allow the Horns to walk out of The Horseshoe with a thrilling win.
Gameball goes to... Vince Young. The Heisman candidate passed for 270 yards and two TDs, including the game-winning 24-yarder to Limas Sweed with 2:37 left.
Stat of the game... 3, 9: Ohio State forced three turnovers in Texas territory, but the Longhorn defense held the Buckeyes to only a field goal each time.
The Fan Pick
63.9% of College Pick'em players picked Texas to win the game.
Team Stat Comparison
 
1st Downs1913
Total Yards382255
Passing270144
Rushing112111
Penalties4-308-78
3rd Down Conversions4-125-15
4th Down Conversions0-10-0
Turnovers31
Possession30:0929:51
Individual Leaders
Texas Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Young18/2927022
Ohio State Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Zwick9/156600
Smith5/117810
Texas Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Young2076032
Charles1026012
Young51104
Ohio State Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Pittman1775017
Smith1327011
Zwick511012
Texas Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Charles669036
Pittman5130163
Sweed346124
Taylor2305
Ohio State Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Holmes473136
Gonzalez233021
Hall219022
Hamby2905
Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTERTEXOSU
FG10:03DAVID PINO 42 YD FG
Drive info: 11 plays, 64 yards.
30
TD1:37BILLY PITTMAN 5 YD PASS FROM VINCE YOUNG (DAVID PINO KICK)
Drive info: 10 plays, 84 yards.
100
SECOND QUARTERTEXOSU
FG14:17JOSH HUSTON 45 YD FG
Drive info: 5 plays, 8 yards.
103
TD8:11SANTONIO HOLMES 36 YD PASS FROM TROY SMITH (JOSH HUSTON KICK)
Drive info: 9 plays, 80 yards.
1010
FG4:33JOSH HUSTON 36 YD FG
Drive info: 4 plays, -1 yards.
1013
FG0:35JOSH HUSTON 25 YD FG
Drive info: 9 plays, 22 yards.
1016
FG0:02DAVID PINO 37 YD FG
Drive info: 4 plays, 34 yards.
1316
THIRD QUARTERTEXOSU
FG11:46JOSH HUSTON 44 YD FG
Drive info: 6 plays, 11 yards.
1319
FG7:36DAVID PINO 25 YD FG
Drive info: 7 plays, 72 yards.
1619
FG5:12JOSH HUSTON 26 YD FG
Drive info: 7 plays, 45 yards.
1622
FOURTH QUARTERTEXOSU
TD2:37LIMAS SWEED 24 YD PASS FROM VINCE YOUNG (DAVID PINO KICK)
Drive info: 7 plays, 67 yards.
2322
S0:19TEAM SAFETY2522

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Vince Young did what star quarterbacks do, passing his team to a victory and making the Texas Longhorns look as if this could be the season they come up big in the biggest of games.

Best known for his highlight-reel runs, Young threw a 24-yard go-ahead touchdown to Limas Sweed with 2:37 left and No. 2 Texas defeated No. 4 Ohio State 25-22 on Saturday night in the much-anticipated first meeting between two of college football's most storied programs.

While it's a long way to the Rose Bowl, Texas validated itself as a prime contender to Southern California's crown. Ohio State, meanwhile, will have to win out to have a shot at a national title.

Young's floating TD pass over a defender capped a 67-yard drive that started with five minutes left after Josh Huston, who made school-record five field goals, missed a 50-yarder.

The biggest plays came on Young's passes, including a third-and-6 completion of 9 yards to Jamaal Charles. Young's second TD pass of the game made the score 23-22.

"Sweed came off the ball real good and I threw the ball to the outside so he could go out of bounds or make the great play and Sweed made a great play for us," said Young, who threw for 270 yards.

The Longhorns' defense, which time and time again held firm after turnovers and special teams gave Ohio State good field position, had the biggest takeaway of the game when Drew Kelson stripped a scrambling Justin Zwick and Brian Robison recovered and returned it inside the 20.

Ohio State (1-1) held the Longhorns (2-0) out of the end zone, but Larry Dibbles sacked Troy Smith for a safety and Texas coach Mack Brown had his second straight huge victory over a Big Ten team.

The Longhorns defeated Michigan in the Rose Bowl, when Young launched his 2005 Heisman Trophy campaign with 192 yards rushing.

Young proved against the Buckeyes he can pass it when he needs to as well.

"Obviously he's a great runner," Ohio State linebacker A.J. Hawk said. "Tonight he showed us he's a great passer."

One Ohio State player had said the Buckeyes' goal was to put an end to Young's Heisman campaign. And while Bobby Carpenter and Ohio State's swift linebacking crew hemmed in Young after some good runs early, they couldn't stop his passing.

"When you have to play extra people in the box to stop his run it's going to leave you a bit vulnerable to the pass," Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. "I thought he played hard. He kept getting hit and beat up and kept coming back. And his team won."

Young had also made a couple those poor decisions and bad throws -- he was intercepted twice -- that have caused him to be labeled a tailback playing quarterback.

But he finished 18-for-29 and ran 20 times for 76 yards.

Tressel was true to his promise, playing both Zwick and Smith at quarterback. Neither distinguished himself, and it looks like the quarterback competition will resume for the Buckeyes.

Smith ran for 27 yards, threw a touchdown pass to Santonio Holmes and led Ohio State on five scoring drives.

Zwick was 9-for-15 for 66 yards and led Ohio State to one field goal.

Ohio State came up with three turnovers in Texas territory, but the Buckeyes could only manage three field goals against defensive end Tim Crowder and Co.

And when Ted Ginn Jr.'s 46-yard kickoff return got the Buckeyes to around midfield in the third quarter, they again drove inside the 20, only to stall when Ryan Hamby let a sure TD pass pop off his chest.

Huston knocked his final field goal of the game through to tie a record last accomplished by Mike Nugent, the All-American he replaced this season, and give Ohio State a 22-16 lead with 5:12 left in the third.

"I was walking down the sidelines telling the guys, 'We've been though this [before] play by play,'" Young said. "The defense is going to give us the ball and they did a great job."

Ginn, Ohio State's big play specialist, was only a factor on special teams. He caught two passes for 9 yards.

For Brown, the ballyhooed matchup was another opportunity to try to prove to critics that he can, indeed, win the big games.

It's a reputation mostly built on five straight losses to rival Oklahoma and no Big 12 titles, despite winning at least 10 games the past four seasons.

Brown took a step toward shedding that tag by beating Michigan in the Rose Bowl and another big one Saturday night.

"I don't think you ever silence critics," Brown said."They'll be critics in the morning, that's part of the deal."

Tressel dropped to 6-2 against opponents ranked in the top 10.

"Our goal was to win the national championship that's remote now," Buckeyes guard Rob Sims said.

Zwick got the start over Smith, who was returning from an NCAA suspension, and played the first two series as Texas built a 10-0 lead.

Smith, who's kind of a Young-lite, gave the Buckeyes a lift with his running, and tossed a 36-yard TD pass to Holmes that tied the game at 10.

Hawk then came up with an interception and fumble recovery on consecutive series to give Ohio State the ball deep in Texas territory.

Both times the Longhorns stiffened and made the Buckeyes settle for field goals of 37 and 25 yards by Huston.

Texas got a 37-yard field goal from David Pino with two seconds left in the first half to make it 16-13.

The most anticipated nonconference game played in Ohio Stadium in at least a decade -- and maybe ever -- started with flash bulbs popping and the Horseshoe-record crowd of 105,565 in a frenzy.

The raucous atmosphere left the Longhorns, who have won 22 of 23 on the road, unfazed. They calmly scored on their first two drives with Young running and passing like a pro.

The 230-pounder swept around left end for 32 yards to help set up a 42-yard field goal by Pino.

Young was 4-for-4 for 57 yards on Texas' next drive, including a 5-yard strike to a slanting Billy Pittman for a touchdown.

College Football Scores

Other Scores:

Saturday, September 10th
Notre Dame 17 Final
Michigan 10
Cincinnati 24 Final
Penn State 42
Temple 0 Final
Wisconsin 65
Akron 24 Final
Purdue 49
Colorado State 24 Final
Minnesota 56
San Jose State 19 Final
Illinois 40
Iowa 3 Final
Iowa State 23
Hawaii 14 Final
Michigan State 42
Northern Illinois 37 Final
Northwestern 38
Nicholls State 31 Final
Indiana 35
Texas 25 Final
Ohio State 22