Early in the first quarter Fresno State put together a long drive, going 54 yards in 15 plays. All but two of these plays were rushes, and none of the plays went for more than 8 yards. On the last play of the drive Fresno State faced 4th and 2 on Tulsa's 10-yard line but failed to convert, coming up empty-handed after eight minutes and 27 seconds. Tulsa was unable to capitalize on the stop and punted the ball away. Starting now from their own 46, Fresno State again drove 54 yards, this time with six plays in just under three minutes. Wendell Mathis ran the ball four times, finally scoring a touchdown on a 6-yard run putting Fresno State up 7-0.[4]
Tulsa came right back after Fresno State's score, moving the ball 74 yards in 3:20. The centerpiece of the drive was 22-yard touchdown run by Uril Parrish, tying the score at 7 early in the second quarter. Tulsa scored again at 8:15 on a 64-yard run by Tarrion Adams, which tied his season high against Memphis and put Tulsa up 14-7.[5] Fresno State responded with another of its long drives, a 14-play 79-yarder capped by a 22-yard touchdown run by Bryson Sumlin, which tied the game at 14 with 1:13 left in the half. Tulsa, starting from its own 19, quickly moved the ball to Fresno State's 23-yard line, setting up a 41-yard field goal by Brad DeVault to end the half.[6]
Fresno State started the third quarter with a 36-yard kickoff return by Adam Jennings followed by a 24-yard run by Mathis placing them at Tulsa's 35-yard line. Quarterback Paul Pinegar completed a 20-yard pass to Jaron Fairman, putting them on Tulsa's 15. After this strong start, however, Fresno State could not convert and settled for a 27-yard field goal by Kyle Zimmerman, rather than risk the possibility of turning it over on downs as they had in the opening drive of the first quarter. The field goal tied the game at 17. The remainder of the third quarter was marked by missed opportunities and miscues. Fresno State kicker Zimmerman missed a 26-yard field goal. Tulsa QB Smith completed a 25-yard pass to Davis deep inside Fresno State territory, but Davis fumbled the ball. Fresno State took over, but QB Pinegar fumbled and recovered the ball on a 9-yard sack. The quarter ended at a 17-17 tie.[7]
To begin the fourth quarter Fresno State continued the drive which had begun on the Tulsa turnover, and scored less than a minute in on a 21-yard touchdown pass from Pinegar to Joe Fernandez, putting Fresno State up 24-17. After two inconclusive drives Tulsa scored on a 54-yard touchdown pass from Smith to Davis, tying the game at 24. Tulsa scored again late in the quarter on a 4-yard run by Smith, putting them up 31-24, while Fresno State's efforts were frustrated by two interceptions thrown by Pinegar, the second coming on Tulsa's 32-yard line with two minutes left in the game. Taking possession, Tulsa was able to run out the clock, winning 31-24.[8]
| Scoring summary |
| Quarter |
Time |
Drive |
Team |
Scoring information |
Score |
| Plays |
Yards |
TOP |
FRES |
TLSA |
| 1 |
1:00 |
|
54 |
2:44 |
FRES |
Wendell Mathis 6-yard touchdown run, Kyle Zimmerman kick good |
7 |
0 |
| 2 |
12:33 |
|
74 |
3:20 |
TLSA |
Uril Parrish 22-yard touchdown run, Brad DeVault kick good |
7 |
7 |
| 2 |
8:15 |
|
79 |
2:07 |
TLSA |
Tarrion Adams 63-yard touchdown run, Devault kick good |
14 |
7 |
| 2 |
1:13 |
|
79 |
6:56 |
FRES |
Bryson Sumlin 25-yard touchdown run, Zimmerman kick good |
14 |
14 |
| 2 |
0:00 |
|
59 |
1:08 |
TLSA |
41-yard field goal by DeVault |
14 |
17 |
| 3 |
11:51 |
|
49 |
3:03 |
FRES |
27-yard field goal by Zimmerman |
17 |
17 |
| 4 |
14:12 |
|
72 |
5:30 |
FRES |
Joe Fernandez 21-yard touchdown reception from Paul Pinegar, Zimmerman kick good |
24 |
17 |
| 4 |
10:35 |
|
67 |
0:30 |
TLSA |
Ashlan Davis 54-yard touchdown reception from Paul Smith, DeVault kick good |
24 |
24 |
| 4 |
2:55 |
|
52 |
4:01 |
TLSA |
Smith 4-yard touchdown run, DeVault kick good |
24 |
31 |
| "TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. |
24 |
31 |
|