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No. 9 Notre Dame beats Virginia, but loses Malik Zaire for season

Notre Dame wide receiver William Fuller catches the game-winning touchdown pass in front of Virginia cornerback Maurice Canady in the fourth quarter on Saturday.

Notre Dame wide receiver William Fuller catches the game-winning touchdown pass in front of Virginia cornerback Maurice Canady in the fourth quarter on Saturday.

(Patrick Smith / Getty Images)
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Associated Press

Notre Dame keeps winning games and losing players. Whether the ninth-ranked Fighting Irish can keep it up will depend on whether their replacements keep putting forth golden efforts.

Quarterback DeShone Kizer came in for the injured Malik Zaire and threw a 39-yard touchdown pass to Will Fuller with 12 seconds left Saturday as the Irish beat Virginia, 34-27.

The stunning victory was “bittersweet,” Notre Dame Coach Brian Kelly said. Zaire will be sidelined the rest of the season because of a fractured ankle, making it the second week in a row that a player expected to help carry the offense went down and his replacement stepped in and starred.

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“Now, DeShone has to run our football team and we feel good about it,” Kelly said, even as he acknowledged that Kizer lacks experience.

“He’s got great weapons around him and we saw that tonight,” Kelly said.

The Fighting Irish (2-0) lost top running back Tarean Folston to a knee injury last week against Texas, and found a strong backup in C.J. Prosise, who ran for 155 yards, including a 24-yard touchdown, against Virginia.

Notre Dame squandered a 26-14 lead and fell behind when Virginia (0-2) scored with 1:54 remaining. With Zaire out, Kizer came to the rescue on the final drive. He ran four yards for a first down on fourth-and-two from the Notre Dame 28, and later found the speedy Fuller behind Maurice Canady.

Fuller said he got Canady to bite on a double move, allowing him to run free.

“When I beat him and I saw the ball in the air, it was like it was up there for a million years,” Fuller said. The receiver also beat Demetrious Nicholson for a 59-yard touchdown in the second half and finished with five catches for 124 yards.

Nicholson said the final touchdown was difficult to watch.

“You always want to just try to freeze time and go back and rewind, but you can’t,” he said.

The game drew more than 58,000 to Scott Stadium, many of them in Fighting Irish green, and when the final gun sounded, the team gathered on the field for an impromptu celebration to the delight of the crowd.

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Those same fans had been silenced only minutes before as Matt Johns completed a 34-yard pass on third-and-15 to put the ball at the Irish one-yard line, and then Albert Reid took it in on the next play to give Virginia a 27-26 lead.

“What a tough way to lose a football game,” Virginia Coach Mike London said.

Johns threw for two touchdowns and ran for a third for Virginia, taking back momentum after Notre Dame opened a 26-14 lead. The Irish were seemingly one more score from putting the game away and sending fans for the exits, but instead, Johns led a six-play drive to his four-yard touchdown run.

Notre Dame started to take control in the third quarter, after Virginia drove to the Irish 15 and wound up settling for a 43-yard field goal try that missed. Following an exchange of punts, Zaire sent Will Fuller streaking down the right side and hit him with a perfectly thrown 59-yard scoring pass.

They made it 26-14 with a three-play, 45-yard drive capped by Prosise’s 24-yard run, but lost Zaire when he appeared to roll his ankle on a designed run that gained just three yards. Zaire was helped off the field and later taken to the locker room on a cart, and Kizer went the rest of the way.

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