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SportsSeptember 8, 2013

The Tigers had only a one-point lead in the third quarter

By R.B. FALLSTROM ~ Associated Press
Missouri quarterback James Franklin runs past Toledo’s Christian Smith as he scrambles out of the pocket during the first quarter Saturday in Columbia, Mo. (L.G. Patterson ~ Associated Press)
Missouri quarterback James Franklin runs past Toledo’s Christian Smith as he scrambles out of the pocket during the first quarter Saturday in Columbia, Mo. (L.G. Patterson ~ Associated Press)

~ The Tigers had only a one-point lead in the third quarter

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Defying the game plan, James Franklin led the way with his legs. Out the window went Missouri's aim to keep the quarterback healthy by staying in the pocket and being a distributor.

Franklin made crucial plays on consecutive scoring drives in the second half, lowering his shoulder more than once while pulling the Tigers out of danger in a 38-23 victory over Toledo on Saturday. After finishing with a team-leading 77 yards on 17 carries, his most yards since the 2011 Independence Bowl, Franklin said he was supposed to run just a little.

"I don't know if people ever called him out for his toughness," guard Max Copeland said. "But if they were, they're probably eating their words now.

"Because that's one tough dude."

Missouri (2-0) led 24-23 after Toledo (0-2) scored its first two touchdowns of the year but Franklin's 21-yard keeper set up Henry Josey's second 1-yard touchdown run of the game to end the third quarter.

On the next possession, Franklin had four carries in a span of five plays including a 6-yard carry on fourth-and-3 and an 11-yard gain on third-and-9 to set up Marcus Murphy's 8-yard run to conclude the scoring with 10:29 to go.

Franklin said he liked throwing more than running and was 16 of 25 for 212 yards and a touchdown, but added, "I think we always go out looking for an answer."

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It was an emotional matchup for Missouri coach Gary Pinkel, a Hall of Famer and the career wins leader at Toledo, after his 92nd win put him one behind Dan Devine for No. 2 with the Tigers.

After a 58-14 rout over Murray State in the opener, Pinkel had anticipated a challenge. Toledo pushed another SEC school, Florida, in a 24-6 opening loss.

"Everything I said after the Florida game was true, and obviously it was a battle," Pinkel said. "We did the things necessary to pull away."

Toledos' David Fluellen had 111 yards on 14 carries and 10 catches for 100 yards.

"Jeez, man, he's special," Toledo coach Matt Campbell said. "He's got a chance to have a really special year."

A couple goof-ups helped Missouri fend off a two-touchdown underdog.

"I don't know," Toledo coach Matt Campbell said. "I thought we probably shot ourselves in the foot a couple times."

Markus Golden got a gift 70-yard interception return in the third quarter when the ball squirted out of Toledo quarterback Terrance Owens' hands and right into his arms. Jeremiah Detmer hit three field goals in the first half, connecting from 24, 46 and 41 yards, but punted a low line drive into the back of a Toledo lineman, a 9-yard net to the Rockets' 44 that gave Missouri a short field on the Murphy score.

Owens scored on a 4-yard keeper and hit Alonzo Russell for a 41-yard score, most of it on a sideline sprint that capitalized on blown coverage, in a span of 5 1/2 minutes in the third quarter to shave the deficit to one.

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