No. 13 Hokies fall in Coastal Division road tilt at No. 9 MiamiNo. 13 Hokies fall in Coastal Division road tilt at No. 9 Miami
Football

No. 13 Hokies fall in Coastal Division road tilt at No. 9 Miami

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. – Miami quarterback Malik Rosier threw two touchdown passes and rushed for a score to lead the No. 9 Hurricanes to a 28-10 victory over No. 13 Virginia Tech in an ACC game played Saturday at Hard Rock Stadium.

The loss snapped the Hokies’ three-game winning streak, as Tech fell to 7-2 overall, 3-2 in the ACC. Miami extended its winning streak to 13 straight games dating back to last season and moved to 8-0 overall, 6-0 in the ACC.

Miami grabbed a 14-0 lead in the second quarter and never relinquished it. Rosier’s 8-yard pass to Braxton Berrios gave the ’Canes a 7-0 lead with 9:41 left in the first half, and Miami grabbed a two-touchdown bulge on Travis Homer’s 64-yard run less than three minutes later.

The Hokies used a Reggie Floyd interception to cut into the lead in the third quarter. Floyd’s pick of Rosier set up Josh Jackson’s 1-yard touchdown run to cut the lead to 14-10 with 11:39 left in the third quarter.

But Miami scored 14 unanswered to put the game away. Rosier accounted for 277 yards of Miami’s 429 yards of offense.

Jackson completed 20 of 32 for 197 yards, with two interceptions for the Hokies, who finished with a season-low 299 yards and turned the ball over a season-high four times.

GAME NOTES

• Tech offensive tackle Yosuah Nijman missed the game with an injury. His absence snapped a string of 22 consecutive starts. Redshirt senior Parker Osterloh made the first start of his career.

• Receiver Cam Phillips’ catch on the Hokies’ second drive enabled him to extend his streak of catching at least one pass in a game to 36 straight games.

• Miami became just the second Tech opponent this season to score off a Hokie turnover. The ’Canes scored once off Jackson’s interception. On Sept. 30, Clemson scored 14 points off three Tech turnovers.

• Virginia Tech kicker Joey Slye connected on a 50-yard field goal for the Hokies’ lone score of the first half. The 50-yarder marked the second of his career from 50-plus and also extended the Hokies scoring streak to 292 straight games.

• Speaking of that scoring streak, Tech’s streak is now the fifth-longest streak in FBS history and the third-longest active streak. The Hokies moved up after Air Force’s 306-game streak ended Saturday after a 21-0 loss to Army.

UP NEXT

Tech now gears up for another road contest, as the Hokies travel to Atlanta next week for a Saturday game against Georgia Tech. The Hokies have won five of the past seven meetings in the series, but have lost two of the past three.