ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The Air Force Falcons scored on all four first half drives, taking advantage of a pair of Lobo fumbles as the Falcons took down UNM in its Mountain West opener, winning 38-10. The loss is UNM’s third straight and UNM is 2-3 overall and 0-1 in the Mountain West. Air Force improved to 1-1 in the league and 4-1 overall.
UNM had a miserable first half, gaining just 46 total yards and one first down. The Lobos opened with the ball but only picked up nine yards and punted the ball away. The Falcons took over and went 73 yards in 10 plays with Haaziq Daniels scoring from a yard out. UNM then picked up a first down but after a play in which Terry Wilson lost his helmet, Trae Hall stepped in at quarterback and was strip-sacked at his own 41-yard line. The Lobo defense held to a field goal, but disaster struck on the next play as Aaron Dumas fumbled on first down and Air Force recovered at the Lobo 33.
The Falcons got a touchdown on that drive, and the next to make it 24-0. At 17-0, UNM had a golden chance when the Falcons fumbled a pitch. Jerrick Reed was swooping in the scoop and score but another Lobo on the ground reached out and got a hand on the football and Air Force ended up recovering and eventually scoring.
UNM was down 31-0 in third when the Lobos finally got on the board. Terry Wilson drove UNM 80 yards, nearly all through the air, connecting to Luke Wysong, CJay Boone and Mannie Logan-Greene, all for first downs. With the ball at the 21-yard line, Wilson hit Trae Hall for a touchdown as Hall lined up at receiver. It marked Hall’s second career touchdown reception.
Down 38-7 after a long touchdown run, the Lobos inched closer in the fourth on a season-long 49-yard Andrew Shelley field goal, but that was all they could muster. UNM had a chance to score in the final three minutes, but after getting to the Air Force 21-yard line, UNM couldn’t get any closer, turning the ball over on a interception on fourth down as Wilson tried to make a play.
Overall UNM allowed 441 yards to 226 on offense, with 179 of that through the air. UNM ran just 43 plays to Air Force’s 75.