Mercer dominated the stats - led by a freshman quarterback in starting debut - yet still had to sweat out Wofford's visit

By Michael A. Lough
The Sports Report
centralgasports@gmail.com
Mike Jacobsâ second season as head coach at Mercer is turning into one of suspense.
Whatâs next?
The season-opener was ruled no contest just short of the midway point of the fourth quarter.
In the second game, at home, Mercer lost to a non-scholarship team it had beaten by 53 a year earlier.
Things got sillier in Mercerâs third game.
Mercer dominated the stat sheet from start to finish, at one point having a 16-1 advantage on first downs.
And almost lost.
But a sack and strip by Andrew Zock on fourth down knocked the ball loose to finally seal Mercerâs 22-21 win Saturday night over Wofford at Five Star Stadium, a gritty win after a week off following a surprising home loss.
âThe coach in me says, âYeah, Iâd like to earn every single thing,ââ Jacobs said. âMy blood pressure would indicate otherwise. I would like it to be a little less contested, but thatâs some of the youth on our football team.
âI know itâs really hard to win college football games.â
That Mercer had to sweat it out so much belied the Bearsâ dominance â almost absurd, in some cases â of the stat sheet.
Mercer had almost four times as many first downs, 27-7.
Mercer ran 36 more plays from scrimmage. Had the ball 65 percent of the time (38:54 to 21:06). Reached the red zone six more times than the Terriers.
Freshman quarterback Braden Atkinson had quite the debut, throwing for 25 more yards than Wofford gained all night, 316-291.
âThere were definitely a couple of nerves before the game, but I feel like I stayed calm,â he said after completing 26 of 37. âI kind of pride myself on not getting to high or too low.â
And yet there sat Mercer, suddenly down by eight less than two minutes into the third quarter after taking only a 13-7 lead to the locker room.
Despite having a staggering 16-1 advantage on first downs.
Despite a 21:58-8:02 margin in time of possession.
Despite having run 28 more plays and gaining 129 more yards.
Despite Atkinson having completed one less pass than Wofford had in total plays.
The sudden eight-point deficit may have stunned most of those who filled almost half of Five Star Stadium, but the Bears stayed calm. The first touchdown was a 51-yard pass, and Mercer answered the second touchdown â a 7-yard pass that followed a 53-yard interception return â with a 44-yard field goal from Reice Griffith with 6:56 left in the third.
Tight end Sawyer Burt was stripped during a catch inside the 5. Mercer started after a three and out on the Terriersâ 33, and took the lead on Atkinsonâs 16-yard TD pass to CJ Miller 57 seconds into the fourth quarter.
Fittingly, the conversion try was an off-kilter event. The pass to Brayden Smith was good, but he was ruled to have stepped out of bounds on the end line during his crossing pattern, and the Bears were also called for holding. The illegal touching is a loss-of-down penalty, so that was that, no play-it-over.
Drew Clare led a charge for a fourth and 2 stop of Jayden Whitaker, Woffordâs second quarterback of the day.
The punt by John McConnell less than 80 seconds later was a magical one, clearly headed out of bounds until it took a variety of football bounces and stopped at the 2.
Wofford, unafraid to go deep under any circumstances and from anywhere, got 43 yards on a perfect pass and catch on the first play. The Bears bowed up, and Zock finished things off with a bull rush from the left side, flattening Whitaker and knocking the ball loose 11 yards behind the line of scrimmage with 1:54 left.
âWe had a little timeout right before,â Zock said. âIâm sitting there with my coach kind of telling him I have a moveâ Zock said. âI see the quarterback holding the ball like this, and thereâs nobody else in my way.â
Wofford wasted little time in the third quarter, Ethan Drumm, a freshman from Jacksonville, faded to his right in the pocket and hit a wide open Isaiah Scott for an easy 51-yard touchdown on the third play. Eli Campbell picked off Atkinson four plays later and took it 53 yards to the 7, setting up another touchdown pass.
And amazingly, the Terriers had a 21-13 lead with 10:46 left in the third, something few wouldâve expected a few hours earlier.
Atkinson completed 17 of 24 for 201 yards in the first half, with no touchdowns and a late interception on a miscommunication.
Mercer had some red-zone issues, settling for a 19-yard field goal to end an impressive first drive. Miller soon went in from the 3 for a 10-0 lead with 4:47 left in the first.
Woffordâs Ihson Jackson-Anderson busted through some weak tackling efforts and broke off a long run, but lost the ball a half-step before the goal line for a stunning touchback. Mercer fell into a rut and missed a field goal, Wofford then getting on board when Ivory Aikens cruised down the left side and pulled in Ethan Drummâs pass for an 80-yard touchdown, pulling Wofford within 10-7 at the 3:31 mark of the second quarter.
Drumm was only 6 of 16 for the night, but covered 168 yards, and half of the completions were touchdowns.
Atkinson, whose family was on hand from Rolesville, N.C., had the yards and completions, though only one touchdown. He led the rally.
âJust staying even keeled, just going out there,â he said. âItâs not really worrying about the score as much as just going out and playing our ball.