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Orlando Sentinel
Orlando Sentinel
Sport
Matt Murschel

UCF offense stalls in 27-24 loss at Cincinnati

CINCINNATI _ The UCF offense woke up too late.

The No. 18 Knights struggled to move the ball against a bruising Cincinnati defense until the final five minutes of the game with UCF trailing by 11 points. The Knights scored a quick touchdown and added a two-point conversion, but they couldn't get the ball back and had to trudge out of Nippert Stadium with their second crushing loss of the season.

UCF saw a season full of promise that began with goals of a third consecutive American Athletic Conference championship and a possible spot in a New Year's Six Access Bowl evaporate Friday night.

Much like it had done against Pittsburgh two weeks earlier, No. 18 UCF (4-2, 1-1 AAC) struggled on offense early, with true freshman quarterback Dillon Gabriel turning the ball over four times, including a pick-six, as Cincinnati (4-1, 1-0 AAC) toppled the Knights 27-24 in front of a raucous home crowd.

The last time UCF lost two games in a season was in 2016.

The Knights' streak of 33 consecutive weeks being ranked in the Associated Press top 25 poll will most likely come to an end when the new poll is released Sunday.

UCF now finds itself chasing Cincinnati in the AAC East Division race, with the Bearcats now holding the division tie-breaker.

The Knights were in the red zone seven times but only managed three field goals and two touchdowns. UCF entered Friday evening's game ranked eighth in the conference after converting 78% of its red zone opportunities with 15 touchdowns and three field goals.

Greg McCrae scored on a one-yard run in the final minute of the first half to give UCF a 16-10 lead. It was the fifth rushing touchdown of the season for the junior, who entered the game leading the Knights in rushing yards and rushing touchdowns.

Tay Gowan secured the first takeaway for the Knights after intercepting Cincinnati quarterback Desmond Ridder three minutes into the second quarter. It was the second interception on the season for the junior cornerback and the third takeaway.

Big chunks of yards in the first half and timely defensive stops, however, didn't translate to UCF points.

As much as Gabriel and the Knights struggled to reach the end zone in the first half, the third quarter was worse. Penalties and turnovers were a big problem for the Knights.

During the third possession of the second half, Cincinnati's Ahmad Gardner stepped in front of a Gabriel pass and returned it 16 yards for a touchdown to give the Bearcats a 20-16 lead.

One of the bright spots for the UCF offense was receiver Gabe Davis, who finished with a team-high 13 catches for 170 yards. It was the junior's third straight 100-yard receiving game.

Just when the rest of the Knights' offense started heating up around Davis, the clock ran out on the Knights.

UCF has a bye week before hosting East Carolina on Oct. 19.

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