TAMPA, Fla. – The South Florida Bulls hosted their ultimate rodeo in Raymond James Stadium on Thursday night as quarterback Byrum Brown complemented his efficient passing attack with 43 rushing yards and two touchdowns to lead the Bulls past No. 25 Boise State, 34-7.
“Byrum was accurate in the deep game; he was composed,” said Bulls head coach Alex Golesh. “He was asked to run the ball more, so he ran the ball more. A really gritty performance by him.”
Brown was the focal point of South Florida’s offense in 2023 when he passed for 3,292 yards and four touchdowns while rushing for 809 yards. However, he suffered a lower leg injury in the third game last season and had to work himself back into running the Bulls’ offense.
He gave the Bulls a 10-7 lead midway through the second quarter when he dropped back before running 24 yards for the score. As he crossed the goal line, he powered over Boise State safety Ty Benefield.
“An explosive play always changes momentum,” Brown commented. “So any time you hit an explosive play, it brings the juice to the sideline, and that brings juice to the field. That was a key in the game.”
He scored his second touchdown late in the third quarter when he faked the sweep to the right side and kept left for the score to bring USF’s lead to 24-7 with 1:44 to go in the third quarter.
Bulls’ Fake Punt Defines Intricate Touchdown: The turning point of the game happened when freshman backup quarterback Locklan Hewett set up as the Bulls’ punter on a 4th-and-6 at the Broncos’ 45-yard line.
Subsequently, he threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Keshaun Singleton on a fake punt, giving USF a 17-7 lead with 8:18 remaining in the third quarter.
This was Hewett’s first play in a college football game. It was so meaningful and it was so exotic that it was the No. 1 play on ESPN’s SportsCenter highlights.
“When we came out, I was hoping and praying they would call it,” exclaimed an elated Hewett. “When I came out, I looked at that corner and I noticed he was two-three yards off, so I was like ‘Oh yeah!” Touchdown!”
Defending The Yard: The Bulls’ defense displayed much more athleticism and aggression than Boise State by forcing three turnovers and stopping the Broncos four times on downs. It added up to South Florida’s first win over a Top 25 team since 2016.
“Defensively, our guys were really gritty,” said Golesh. “We forced three turnovers that were absolutely monumental. Four fourth-down stops were absolutely huge. That’s a team that doesn’t fumble. They only fumbled five times last year.”
Linebacker Jhalyn Shuler led the Bulls with 14 tackles, while cornerback De’Shawn Rucker had seven solo stops among his 11 overall tackles.
Linebacker Mac Harris was around the football all evening as he made some key solo stops on the ends and posted eight tackles with a quarterback hit and a forced fumble.
“I think we were really aggressive and very violent at the point of attack,” said Harris. “That’s not something that you scheme for. That’s a mentality, that’s who we are internally, and we have got to fight for each and every single game.”