North Dakota State tops QB DiNucci, James Madison for FCS national championship



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FRISCO, Texas — Now this was a perfect ending for North Dakota State, with its redshirt freshman quarterback and the senior safety in his final game after first wanting to be a Bison quarterback.
Trey Lance ran for 166 yards, with a clutch 44-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter, and James Hendricks had a game-clinching interception after an earlier TD run on a fake field goal as the Bison beat James Madison 28-20 on Saturday for their eighth FCS national championship, and the first 16-win season in any division since Yale in 1894.
“To go out on top as a senior is an incredible feeling,” said Hendricks, who was a third-string quarterback before moving to defense a sophomore in 2017. “That’s what I’ll remember. … I just feel so fortunate.”
The Bison (16-0) stretched their FCS-record winning streak to 37 in a row while winning their record eighth championship in the division — all in the past nine seasons. They also won five NCAA Division II titles from 1983-90.
After stopping Lance short on a fourth-and-2 at its 36 with 2:51 left, James Madison (14-2) drove to the 3 before Hendricks picked off the pass by Ben DiNucci, a Pine-Richland graduate and Pitt transfer, at the goal line.
Hendricks said it was a play the Bison expected so, “I just left my guy and knew that they were going to throw it, and trusted that he was going to throw to the flat, and not the guy that I’m supposed to cover.”
Lance’s 44-yard scramble TD came on a third-and-23 play to open the fourth quarter and put the Bison up 28-13.
Riley Stapleton’s 5-yard TD catch with 7 minutes left was his second of the game.
While Lance was only 6 of 10 passing for 72 yards, he has now attempted 289 passes for the Bison without ever throwing an interception. He ran a season-high 30 times in the finale.
Lance succeeded Easton Stick, whose 49 wins at NDSU made him the winningest FCS quarterback, while also setting school records for total yards, passing yards and total touchdowns. Stick had followed Carson Wentz.
Before Hendricks’ 20-yard TD run after lining up as the holder for a field goal gave NDSU a 21-10 halftime lead, North Dakota State also scored in the second quarter when receiver Phoenix Sproles swept around and faked a reverse handoff on way to a 38-yard touchdown run.
“Honestly, I don’t really think they won that game. Honestly, I think we lost it,” said DiNucci, who finished 22-of-33 passing for 204 yards. “Trick plays, they’ll probably tell you we out-physicaled them.”