ECU defense rises to the occasion in badly needed win against BYU

The Pirates recovered from an ominous start to make their homecoming a happy one with a 33-17 victory

Oct 21, 2017; Greenville, NC, USA; East Carolina Pirates quarterback Thomas Sirk (10) celebrates his first quarter touchdown run against Brigham Young Cougars at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

GREENVILLE — As bad as things have been going for East Carolina’s defense this season, the last thing it needed was for its offense to put it in a bad spot right out of the gate Saturday.

But that’s what happened.

A fumble on the Pirates’ second play from scrimmage gave Brigham Young a short field with which to work and despite being the next-to-worst offense in the FBS, at least statistically, the Cougars turned the early break into a quick touchdown.

It was the kind of start that could demoralize a unit that came into the game ranked dead last nationally in both scoring and total defense. Instead, it became a rallying point.

Led by freshman Aaron Ramseur and senior Jordan Williams, who both notched double-digit tackles, ECU’s much-maligned defense rose to the occasion by shutting BYU down until long after the game was decided as the Pirates celebrated homecoming with a 33-17 victory at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium.

Kicker Jake Verity tied a school record by kicking four field goals and backup quarterback Gardner Minshew came off the bench for injured starter Thomas Sirk and threw two second half touchdown passes to lead ECU to its first win against anyone other than UConn since beating NC State in the second game of last season.

The badly needed win culminated a tumultuous week that began with athletic director Jeff Compher admonishing his school’s fans by telling them to “fight with us, not against us” in an open letter and ended with coach Scottie Montgomery and his players running joyously off the field for only the second time in eight games.

“It’s like a load off our shoulders just to give Pirate Nation a feeling of excitement and something to brag about,” sophomore cornerback Colby Gore said. “I always try to go to my teammates, no matter who it is or what happens, and say ‘let’s keep our head in the game.’”

For a change, that’s exactly what ECU did this time.

Learning from the mistakes made in a similar situation against Temple three weeks earlier, when they fell apart at the first sign of adversity by allowing 24 second quarter points, the Pirates tightened up to force punts on BYU’s next two possessions.

Although they allowed a field goal on the final play of the half to go into the break tied at 10, the three points represented something of a victory for them after keeping the Cougars out of the end zone on two plays from inside the 10.

Montgomery, feeling his team’s confidence growing, then issued it a challenge in the locker room before coming out to begin the second half.

“I said what we need to do is get points, get a stop and get points again and we will have command of the game,” Montgomery said. “That’s exactly what happened.”

The Pirates (2-6) actually scored on their first three possessions of the second half. Though they were hardly in command because instead of scoring touchdowns, all three of the scores were Verity field goals.

Then an ECU defense that has struggled all season stood firm. Not only did it hold the Cougars to a modest 421 total yards, it also produced two sacks, a goal line stand and an interception by linebacker Cannon Gibbs to lead the Pirates to the win.