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No. 3 Iowa Beats No. 4 Penn State 23-20 After Sean Clifford Leaves with Injury

Joseph Zucker@@JosephZuckerX.com LogoFeatured Columnist IVOctober 9, 2021

Iowa wide receiver Charlie Jones (16) celebrates his touchdown with receiver Keagan Johnson (6) and tight end Sam LaPorta (84) during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Penn State, Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021, in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Matthew Putney)
AP Photo/Matthew Putney

Iowa now has the inside track in the Big Ten to the College Football Playoff following a massive 23-20 victory over No. 4 Penn State on Saturday at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City, Iowa.

Spencer Petras hit a wide-open Nico Ragaini for a 44-yard touchdown pass with 6:26 left in the game to give Iowa its first lead since the opening frame.

FOX College Football @CFBONFOX

TOUCHDOWN HAWKEYES 🔥<br><br>Nico Ragaini comes up HUGE for <a href="https://twitter.com/HawkeyeFootball?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@HawkeyeFootball</a> <a href="https://t.co/COYqsyeR9T">pic.twitter.com/COYqsyeR9T</a>

With his team backed up on its own 8-yard line, James Franklin opted to go for it on fourth down. Ta'Quan Roberson threw his second interception with 2:13 remaining to effectively doom the Nittany Lions to a defeat.

Penn State was rolling along in the second quarter up 17-3. Then Sean Clifford exited with an undisclosed injury after going 15-of-25 for 146 yards and two interceptions. Despite playing less than a full half, he finished as the team's leading rusher (36 yards).

Clifford's injury turned the contest into a war of attrition as the two teams combined for 592 yards.

With the win, the No. 3 Hawkeyes are now one of three unbeaten teams left in the conference alongside No. 9 Michigan and No. 11 Michigan State.


Notable Performers

Ta'Quan Roberson, QB, Penn State: 7-of-21, 34 yards, two interceptions; 10 carries, 27 yards

KeAndre Lambert-Smith, WR, Penn State: five receptions, 61 yards

Spencer Petras, QB, Iowa: 17-of-31, 195 yards, two touchdowns, one interception

Tyler Goodson, RB, Iowa: 25 carries, 88 yards; two receptions, 16 yards

Nico Ragaini, WR, Iowa: four receptions, 73 yards, one touchdown


Iowa Survives

Iowa entered the game averaging the 12th-fewest yards (320) in FBS. The Hawkeyes were also 63rd in offensive drive efficiency and 48th in offensive points per drive, according to Football Outsiders.

An opportunistic defense can carry a team a long way, but Iowa's inability to move the ball consistently is going to be a problem sooner or later. Just not on Saturday.

The offense wasn't capitalizing on the excellent field position it often had thanks to the defense.

Adam Rittenberg @ESPNRittenberg

<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Iowa?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Iowa</a>'s defense hasn't been as dominant this half, but it provided the offense with three interceptions, which the offense converted into three points. <br><br>Not good.

Petras didn't have much luck targeting wide receivers on shorter throws after Penn State defensive coordinator Brent Pry and the Nittany Lions coaching staff drew up a game plan to remove that option.

Bill DiFilippo @billdifilippo

penn state just blew up crossing routes by dropping its defensive tackles into coverage brent pry you have my heart

Michael Felder @InTheBleachers

Penn State just moved Petras off the point on that 3rd down with a 2 man rush. Drop 9 and they were able to cover shallow crosses and have LBs under intermediate with safeties on top.

Because of that, life was almost more difficult for Iowa as it got closer and closer to the goal line. Midway through the fourth quarter, a 42-yard reception by Keagan Johnson set the Hawkeyes up with a 1st-and-goal from the Penn State 8-yard line. They had to settle for a 36-yard field goal by Caleb Shudak after Petras was sacked on third down.

Still, the Hawkeyes were only one big play away from taking control of the game because of how well its defense and special teams performed. Ragaini's pivotal catch was exactly that moment.


Clifford Injury Grounds Penn State Offense

Roberson had a shaky introduction to the game.

The redshirt sophomore fumbled his first snap, and Penn State was flagged for three straight false starts as it went three-and-out on his first possession. The Nittany Lions' next drive ended in an interception by Riley Moss on second down.

FOX College Football @CFBONFOX

ANOTHER <a href="https://twitter.com/HawkeyeFootball?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@HawkeyeFootball</a> INTERCEPTION! <a href="https://t.co/ZhesMIkCGD">pic.twitter.com/ZhesMIkCGD</a>

When Clifford was shown without his pads to open the second half—all but confirming he wouldn't return—the alarm bells started ringing for Penn State.

Pat Forde @ByPatForde

Sean Clifford looking like the most valuable player in America, given what Penn State has done offensively without him.

It didn't help that Hawkeyes punter Tory Taylor pinned the Nittany Lions deep into their own territory. Driving the length of the field would've been difficult enough with Clifford under center. The task became even more hard with Roberson.

Jason Mackey @JMackeyPG

Penn State has started drives at the 1-, 2- and 3-yard line today. Better chance of the Pirates winning 100 games in '22 than the Nittany Lions going 99 here with the way this offense has looked since Ta'Quan Roberson took over.

But Penn State was the equivalent of a weary boxer desperate to run out the clock late in a fight. The Nittany Lions were only able to dodge the knockout blow for so long.

Roberson was a 4-star recruit and the No. 8 dual-threat quarterback in 247Sports' composite rankings for 2019. The New Jersey native isn't without talent, and Saturday's circumstances were less than ideal for his first meaningful snaps.

But Penn State could be in real trouble if Clifford's injury is bad enough to knock him out for multiple games.


What's Next?

Iowa hosts Purdue on Oct. 16 at 3:30 p.m. ET, while Penn State has a week off before welcoming Illinois to Happy Valley on Oct. 23.