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SportsSeptember 19, 2010

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- T.J. Moe juked and scored on a 68-yard pass from Blaine Gabbert with 51 seconds left as Missouri beat upset-minded San Diego State 27-24 on Saturday night. Moe turned a short sideline pass into a touchdown with a stutter step that caused two Aztecs defenders to collide near midfield. Missouri (3-0) had fallen behind by four points after a 32-yard field goal for San Diego State (2-1) with just more than two minutes remaining...

By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER ~ The Associated Press
Missouri quarterback Blaine Gabbert celebrates an 11-yard touchdown run against San Diego State during the second quarter Saturday in Columbia, Mo. (L.G. PATTERSON ~ Associated Press)
Missouri quarterback Blaine Gabbert celebrates an 11-yard touchdown run against San Diego State during the second quarter Saturday in Columbia, Mo. (L.G. PATTERSON ~ Associated Press)

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- T.J. Moe juked and scored on a 68-yard pass from Blaine Gabbert with 51 seconds left as Missouri beat upset-minded San Diego State 27-24 on Saturday night.

Moe turned a short sideline pass into a touchdown with a stutter step that caused two Aztecs defenders to collide near midfield. Missouri (3-0) had fallen behind by four points after a 32-yard field goal for San Diego State (2-1) with just more than two minutes remaining.

The dramatic win offset a career day by San Diego State freshman Ronnie Hillman, who ran for 235 yards and touchdowns covering 75 and 93 yards.

He overshadowed his first-year counterpart Henry Josey, who had 44 yards on 10 carries for a Missouri team that totaled just 89 yards rushing.

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Gabbert ran for a first-half touchdown and was 28 of 51 for 351 yards with two interceptions, both in the final five minutes. Tight end Michael Egnew caught 13 passes for 145 yards, with Moe collecting seven for 119 yards.

A 15-point favorite entering the game, Missouri appeared to be in control after Kevin Rutland's goal-line interception following a Tigers fumble preserved a 20-14 lead early in the fourth quarter.

But the crowd grew quiet after Hillman's full-field burst gave the Aztecs a one-point lead just two minutes later. Hillman's first long TD run with 35 seconds remaining in the first half similarly silenced the home crowd, trimming what had been a 10-point Missouri lead to 17-14.

After the Aztecs running back's second long score, a smattering of boos could be heard when Gabbert was stopped on a first-down quarterback keeper for no gain with 8:25 left.

That changed after an electric score by Moe, who entered the game tied for the most catches in the country but was overshadowed for most of the night by his teammate Egnew.

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