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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, December 6, 2009

FG lifts No. 3 Texas, 13-12


By Jaime Aron
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Texas kicker Hunter Lawrence (15) celebrates with holder Jordan Shipley (8) and Ahmard Howard (13) following his game winning field goal.

TONY GUTIERREZ | Associated Press

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ARLINGTON, Texas — For more than a year, the Texas Longhorns agonized over falling 1 second short of getting into the Big 12 and national championship games.

This season, they're conference champions and headed to the BCS title game because a video replay showed they still had 1 second left.

Given a chance for one last play, Hunter Lawrence nailed a 46-yard field goal as time expired for good, giving a roughed-up Colt McCoy and the third-ranked Longhorns a 13-12 victory over No. 21 Nebraska in the Big 12 championship last night and a spot in the BCS final against Alabama.

"We had so many things not go our way tonight," McCoy said, "but we found a way."

A loss to Texas Tech with 1 second left in 2008 kept the Longhorns out of the Big 12 and national championship games, letting in a team they'd beaten by 10 on a neutral field. That grueling memory helped convince McCoy to return for his senior season and it drove this club all year. In fact, back in July, Texas coach Mack Brown said: "Obviously, the only thing Colt wants is to be 1 second better."

The Cornhuskers rushed the field thinking they'd pulled off the upset when McCoy threw a pass out of bounds and the clock inside Cowboys Stadium showed all zeros. The victory would've given them a spot in a BCS bowl and revenge for a Texas upset in the 1996 title game that kept the Cornhuskers from playing for the national championship.

But officials immediately asked for a replay.

According to Walt Anderson, the Big 12 supervisor of officials, they were able to superimpose the clock over the replay of McCoy's pass, and they clearly saw 1 second left when the ball hit the railing of a luxury suite about 15 yards behind the sideline. The rules say the clock runs until the ball hits something.

"When I saw everyone rushing the field, I thought, 'No way. We have 1 or 2 seconds left,' " McCoy said. "I was just trying to get Hunter back in the middle."

Lawrence had never kicked a game-winner, but he remained calm, even when Nebraska called timeout to make him think about it more. McCoy, meanwhile, sat on one knee, head looking down and a hand over his eyes, overcome by what was at stake.

"I knew I had to make it," Lawrence said.