Cardinals Crush The Orange, Syracuse is 5-5

After a series of late collapses led to frustrating losses, Louisville finally played the complete game it has long sought.

No doubt, the presence of a Heisman Trophy winner in the house provided some inspiration

Malik Cunningham threw for four of his five first-half touchdowns, and Louisville's defense stifled Syracuse throughout a 41-3 rout on Saturday that snapped a two-game losing streak.

On a special day in which Louisville retired the No. 8 jersey of 2016 Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson at halftime, the game featured Cunningham showing the same dynamic play of his famous predecessor. The junior quarterback provided all the scoring for the Cardinals (5-5, 3-4 Atlantic Coast Conference) before the ceremony with a 6-yard run on their first possession before tossing a series of TD passes.

Cunningham's first was a perfect 33-yard toss to Tyler Harrell— one of two Cardinals wearing No. 8 for the time being — before he followed with a 6-yarder to Ahmari Huggins-Bruce, the first of two he caught. Jordan Watkins pulled in a 41-yarder in the back of the end zone before Huggins-Bruce took in another from 17 yards just before the break.

The Cardinals needed this kind of performance after losing four of five contests they led in the fourth quarter, including 30-24 last week to Clemson. They're now within a win of bowl eligibility, a goal that appeared to be slipping from their grasp with each disappointing defeat.

"It's a good feeling in the locker room, knowing that (winning) one more game, one of the next two we're sure in a bowl game," said Cunningham, who finished 13 of 18 passing for 209 yards before exiting early in the fourth quarter.

Meanwhile, Louisville's defense bottled up Syracuse (5-5, 2-4) and its high-powered offensive tandem of Sean Tucker, the nation's second-leading rusher, and quarterback Garrett Shrader. Tucker entered the game averaging nearly 141 yards per contest and gained 95 yards on 19 carries. Shrader was sacked four times in completing 10 of 18 passes for just 46 yards.

"I was proud of our team with the resiliency they showed this week and how they came out today," Louisville coach Scott Satterfield said. "We knew they were a good football team. Our defense came out and really shut down their offense, which is a tremendous feat itself because the running back was No. 2 in the country in rushing and that quarterback is really good as well. And our defense did a great job with holding him out."

Louisville outgained Syracuse 382-184.The Orange have another chance for a 6th win on the season Saturday at NC State. Kickoff is at 4:00 PM


Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content