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Virginia upsets No. 21 Louisville, 23-21

Louisville wide receiver Eli Rogers, left, and Virginia safety Anthony Harris dive for the ball during the Cavaliers' 23-21 upset of the No. 21 Cardinals on Saturday.
(Steve Helber / Associated Press)
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CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Henry Coley thought he had cost Virginia an upset of No. 21 Louisville.

And then, the Cavaliers got another chance.

“It was magical,” Coley said of a fumbled punt by Louisville that Kelvin Rainey recovered at the Louisville 25. Four plays later, Ian Frye’s 42-yard field goal with 3:42 left lifted the Cavaliers to a 23-21 victory over the Cardinals.

Virginia (2-1, 1-0), which gave UCLA a tough time in a 28-20 loss to open the season, ended an 11-game Atlantic Coast Conference losing streak and a 10-game skid against FBS-level competition. The Cardinals (2-1, 1-1) had won seven consecutive road games.

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“This is one of the most emotional games I’ve ever had,” said Coley, a senior linebacker. “I’m in the locker room crying after the game. … I’ve never cried over a football game. It was emotional because it was something big lifted off my shoulders.”

Twice in the fourth quarter, penalties against Coley kept Louisville drives alive, and each finished with a touchdown, helping the Cardinals erase a 20-7 deficit. The second touchdown came with 6:59 to play, and Virginia got one first down on the ensuing possession, and then punted.

As James Quick settled under it for the Cardinals, a teammate bumped him and the ball came loose.

“It’s about time it happens to somebody else,” Virginia Coach Mike London said.

Louisville Coach Bobby Petrino said the fumbled punt didn’t cost his team the game.

“When you lose a game like this, we will watch the video and there will be 15 plays, individually, that if we would have made that play, we had a chance to win the game,” Petrino said. “We just didn’t make enough plays to win the game.”

Before the fourth quarter, the Cavaliers controlled the game. Greyson Lambert threw for a touchdown and ran for another score, and Frye had two earlier field goals before Louisville put starting quarterback Will Gardner back in the game.

Gardner, lifted in favor of more mobile freshman Reggie Bonnafon, led consecutive touchdown drives. He hit Keith Towbridge for 28 yards on one third-down play, and got help from a pass-interference call on Coley to convert a third-and-eight play. Dominique Brown ran it in from the 6 three plays later to make it 20-14.

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After a three-and-out for Virginia, the Cardinals drove again with a huge assist from the Cavaliers.

On third-and-goal from the 9, Gardner had Coley and defensive end Eli Harold converging on him when he threw the ball right into the arms of linebacker Max Valles for an interception. But Coley and Harold both gave Gardner a shove after he got rid of the ball, and Coley was called for roughing the passer.

Gardner then found James Quick for a four-yard touchdown pass on the next play for a 21-20 lead, quieting the crowd at Scott Stadium until the punt, the scrum and the emergence of Rainey with the ball, already in Frye’s field-goal range.

“We’re figuring out how to win again,” Coley said.

It was Virginia’s first victory against a ranked team since a 14-13 win at Florida State on Nov. 19, 2011.

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