ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — For the first time in 14 tries over 16 years, New Mexico walked off the field against Colorado State a winner, grinding out a hard-fought 20-17 win that moved UNM into second place in the Mountain West. The Lobos did it with a stellar defensive effort and another patented fourth-quarter surge. The win snapped a 13-game losing streak in the series and sets UNM up for a shot at a Mountain West title-game berth with a bit of help.
The victory, New Mexico’s fourth straight, lifted the Lobos to 7–3 and 4–2 in league play, tying them for second place. UNM moved to 5-0 on the season at home, the first 5-0 start at home since 1962.
The game certainly showed off UNM’s resilience, as the Lobos won despite losing four fumbles, the first time UNM has ever won a game despite losing four fumbles in the Mountain West era. The Lobo defense was terrific, holding CSU to just 13 rushing yards and intercepting quarterback Darius Curry three times, two of them in the fourth quarter to set up UNM’s 10 fourth-quarter points.
After a scoreless first quarter, New Mexico got moving in the second. The Lobos mounted a 12-play, 77-yard march, leaning on running backs D.J. McKinney and Damon Bankston. McKinney finished the drive by slicing into the end zone from one yard out with 6:17 left. To end the half, quarterback Jack Layne moved the offense into field-goal range over eight plays and 52 yards, setting up Luke Drzewiecki for a 45-yard field goal that sent UNM into halftime up 10–0, and made Drzewiecki the all-time leading kick scorer in Lobo history.
Colorado State climbed back into the contest during a third quarter littered with Lobo mistakes, mainly three lost fumbles. After UNM fumbled but forced a punt that pushed UNM to its own 5-yard line, Scottre Humphrey fumbled, and CSU’s Andrew Laurich recovered for his third fumble recovery. CSU got into the end zone on fourth down and then added a field goal to make it 10-10.
Amazingly, UNM lost a third fumble in the quarter, and as the fourth quarter started, CSU moved to the Lobo 27. On third-and-9, Brett Karhu knocked a Darius Curry pass up in the air, and Austin Brawley snagged it for his second interception of the game, and he returned it to the Ram 21.
Jack Layne then gave UNM the lead with a terrific designed run on fourth-and-1 for a 12-yard touchdown, giving UNM a 17–10.