- Final0
1TENN
FLA13
2313
23 - Final1
2TTU
TEX24
3424
34 - Final23USC
WASH13
1613
16 - Final3
4UNT
ALA7
537
53 - Final4
5TEM
PSU6
316
31 - Final5
5SELA
MISS6
526
52 - Final6
7FSU
BYU54
2854
28 - Final78CAL
MINN35
2135
21 - Final8
9ULL
LSU3
313
31 - Final911OSU
TOL38
038
0 - Final10
12TLSA
OKLA0
450
45 - Final1119
13NEB
VT15
1615
16 - Final12
15TXST
TCU21
5621
56 - Final13
16RICE
OKST24
4124
41 - Final1417CIN
ORST28
1828
18 - Final1518UTAH
ORE24
3124
31 - Final16
22DUKE
KU16
4416
44 - Final1723UGA
ARK52
4152
41 - Final18
24ECU
UNC17
3117
31 - Final19
25EMU
MICH17
4517
45 - Final2014
20GT
MIA17
3317
33 - Final2110BSU
FRES51
3451
34
Final

(19) Nebraska 15
(2-1, 0-1 away)

(13) Virginia Tech 16
(2-1, 2-1 home)
3:30 PM ET, September 19, 2009
Lane Stadium, BLACKSBURG, VA
Top Performers
Passing: T. Taylor (VT) - 192 YDS, 1 TD
Rushing: R. Helu Jr. (NEB) - 28 CAR, 169 YDS
Receiving: D. Coale (VT) - 2 REC, 89 YDS
BLACKSBURG, Va. -- With pressure coming and Virginia Tech desperate, Tyrod Taylor's eyes worked quickly from the left side of the field to the right, just fast enough.
Fast Facts
• Tyrod Taylor completed an 81-yard pass to Danny Coale and then an 11-yard TD pass to Dyrell Roberts with 21 seconds left as Virginia Tech rallied past Nebraska.
• Ryan Williams rushed for 107 yards and a score as the Hokies won their 32nd consecutive non-conference home game.
• All of Nebraska's scoring was on the leg of kicker Alex Henery, who had a career-high five field goals.
• The Cornhuskers fell to 0-17 in true road games vs. top 20 teams since end of the 1997 championship season.
-- ESPN Stats & Information
The Hokies quarterback found Danny Coale running all alone down the left sideline and hit him for an 80-yard completion, setting up Taylor's 11-yard touchdown pass to Dyrell Roberts three plays later and rescuing the 13th-ranked Hokies against No. 19 Nebraska for a 16-15 win Saturday.
"Once I saw that he was open, I just had to let it go," said Taylor, who was hit just after he released the ball.
Coale hauled it in cleanly, but was forced out of bounds at the 3 with 1:11 left.
"That's kind of what you play for, moments like that," he said.
But Taylor wasn't finished. Not by a long shot.
After being sacked on the first play from the 3 for an 8-yard loss and then rushed into throwing the ball away, Taylor scrambled around for what the school said was nine seconds before rifling the ball to Roberts on the right side of the end zone with 21 seconds left.
"I redeemed myself," said Roberts, who had dropped a third-down pass earlier.
"Every kid that plays football dreams of a game like this," he added.
Especially when you come out on top.
"That's the game," cornerback Rashad Carmichael said. "Sometimes you've got to pull something out of some body part."
Carmichael was on the bench listening to defensive coordinator Bud Foster talk about how the Hokies were going to score when he saw the ball floating toward Coale only feet away.
"Great ball. Great catch," he said.
And a great win for the Hokies (2-1), who had struggled all day against the Nebraska defense, managing just 195 yards in the first three quarters and only one real scoring drive.
Their touchdown came on the game's opening series, a 24-yard drive set up by Roberts' 76-yard return of the opening kickoff, and their second-quarter field goal came after a 58-yard drive on which Ryan Williams accounted for almost all of it with runs of 46 and six yards.
In the third quarter, they gained one yard while the Cornhuskers, behind the running of Roy Helu Jr. and quarterback Zac Lee's heady play, controlled the ball -- and the outcome.
After the fourth, they were left thinking about missed opportunities, like the five drives that stalled in Hokies territory, all leading to field goals by Alex Henery, and one drive that should have, but didn't.
Leading 12-10, Nebraska had a first-and-goal at the 6 after Lee ran for 17 yards on third-and-3. Two holding calls, two false starts and an incomplete pass later, Nebraska faced second-and-goal from the 36 and later wound up punting it away -- into the end zone.
"We didn't have penalties the entire game until that series," wide receiver Niles Paul said. "It came at a point where we really needed the points. That hurt us."
Coach Bo Pelini thought it could have been the turning point.
"If we scored there, I though we were in pretty good shape," he said.
The Cornhuskers (2-1) fell to 1-21 in their last 22 games against teams in the top 20, and Virginia Tech extended to 32 its string of nonconference home wins.
For much of the game, it seems like both trends would be bucked.
Helu ran for 169 yards, almost all of it after the Cornhuskers were held to zero yards in the first quarter, and Lee finished 11 for 30 for 136 yards, but his completions all seemed critical.
They just never got Nebraska into the end zone.
"Our defense gave us the ball a lot and put us in the position to score a lot of points," Paul said. "We left a lot of points out there on the field. ... It's really frustrating when your defense is playing the way they were."
Virginia Tech's Ryan Williams finished with 107 yards and a 1-yard touchdown run after Roberts' big early return, but gained only 13 yards on six carries after halftime.
Taylor, known more for his running than passing, continued to frustrate Hokies fans with his apparent unwillingness to run. He lost 22 yards on nine carries, repeatedly passing up space in the open field when flushed from the pocket.
He did that on the winning touchdown, too.
SPONSORED HEADLINES
Top 25 Overview
It was over when... QB Tyrod Taylor connected with Dyrell Roberts on an 11-yard TD pass with 21 seconds left to play.
Gameball goes to... Virginia Tech's defense, which kept Nebraska out of the end zone and limited the Huskers to field goals.
Stat of the game... 5. All of Nebraska's scoring was thanks to kicker Alex Henery, who booted five field goals.
Team Stat Comparison
| NEB | VT | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Downs | 18 | 11 |
| Total Yards | 343 | 278 |
| Passing | 136 | 192 |
| Rushing | 207 | 86 |
| Penalties | 9-60 | 7-53 |
| 3rd Down Conversions | 6-17 | 8-18 |
| 4th Down Conversions | 0-0 | 0-1 |
| Turnovers | 2 | 0 |
| Possession | 29:46 | 30:14 |
Scoring Summary
| FIRST QUARTER | NEB | VT | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | TD | 11:15 | Ryan Williams 1 Yd Run (Matt Waldron Kick) | 0 | 7 |
![]() | FG | 00:56 | Alex Henery 40 Yd | 3 | 7 |
| SECOND QUARTER | NEB | VT | |||
![]() | FG | 12:49 | Alex Henery 27 Yd | 6 | 7 |
![]() | FG | 05:23 | Alex Henery 19 Yd | 9 | 7 |
![]() | FG | 02:30 | Matt Waldron 39 Yd | 9 | 10 |
![]() | FG | 00:18 | Alex Henery 38 Yd | 12 | 10 |
| FOURTH QUARTER | NEB | VT | |||
![]() | FG | 04:33 | Alex Henery 38 Yd | 15 | 10 |
![]() | TD | 00:21 | Dyrell Roberts 11 Yd Pass From Tyrod Taylor (Two-Point Conversion Failed) | 15 | 16 |


After almost four quarters of nearly no offense, Virginia Tech put two game-changing plays together that will keep the Hokies among the nation's top teams, writes Heather Dinich. 

