AP: Armstrong's late TD helps Huskers past No. 22 Ducks, 35-32

Monday, September 19, 2016
Nebraska Sr Quarterback Tommy Armstrong Jr. scores from 34 Yards out in the 4th Quarter on Saturday. The Huskers topped the Ducks in Lincoln 35-32. Steve Towery/McCook Gazette.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -- Tommy Armstrong Jr.'s legs were so cramped up that when Nebraska's defense was on the field he would drink pickle juice, Gatorade, water and anything else he could find on the sideline. He even was given fluids intravenously early in the fourth quarter.

It turned out he had one more run left in him.

With legs that he said felt like Jello, Armstrong took off on a quarterback draw, made two tacklers miss and scored a 34-yard touchdown with 2:29 left Saturday, lifting Nebraska to a 35-32 victory over No. 22 Oregon.

"My legs hurt," he said, "but they feel better when you're in the end zone."

Armstrong wouldn't have been in position to score if he hadn't converted a fourth-and-9 with a pass to roommate Jordan Westerkamp two plays earlier.

Nebraska (3-0) came back from a 20-7 deficit late in the second quarter to give second-year coach Mike Riley a long-awaited win over Oregon (2-1). Riley was 0-7 against Ducks from 2008-14, his last seven years as Oregon State's coach, and as he walked off the field he wiped his eyes.

During his postgame news conference he downplayed the personal satisfaction he got from beating his old nemesis.

"What it means right this moment is a lot. We're 3-0 going into the Big Ten," Riley said. "What this team is doing, I love the fight, just the fact we kept our poise so well to come back and make the plays to win."

The Ducks, playing without star running back Royce Freeman , made it to midfield on their last possession, failing to convert on fourth down. Freeman left with what appeared to be a right leg injury during the Ducks' second series. Coach Mark Helfrich had no update on Freeman's status after the game.

Oregon had more to overcome than Freeman's absence. The Ducks were penalized 13 times for 126 yards, and for the second straight week their defense wore down in the second half. Nebraska had 166 of its 228 rushing yards after half.

"We need to manage situations better," Helfrich said. "Obviously, the penalties killed us. It's a tough one to swallow. This could have been a gritty comeback, but we let it get away at the end."

INSIDE THE NUMBERS

NEBRASKA: Armstrong, who was 17 of 33 for 200 yards and three touchdowns, increased his career passing total to a school-record 7,376 yards. The previous record was 7,258 yards by Taylor Martinez.

OREGON: The Ducks' streak of 82 straight games with a touchdown pass ended.

UP NEXT

The Huskers play their Big Ten opener on the road against Northwestern, which beat them 30-28 in Lincoln last year.

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