Penn State beats Wildcats to give Paterno win No. 400
Published 12:39 am Sunday, November 7, 2010
The Associated Press
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Joe Paterno became the first major college coach with 400 career wins as Penn State rallied from a three-touchdown deficit Saturday night to defeat Northwestern 35-21.
Backup quarterback Matt McGloin threw for four touchdowns and the Nittany Lions (6-3, 3-2 Big Ten) shut down Wildcats quarterback Dan Persa in the second half to get the 83-year-old Paterno his latest milestone.
Only two other coaches have more wins. Eddie Robinson had 408 with FCS school Grambling State, while John Gagliardi had 476 entering the weekend with Division III St. John’s, Minn.
Mobbed by his teammates, fans and wife Sue afterward, Penn State honored Paterno with a postgame ceremony as backup tailback Stephfon Green held a sign that read “400. The Paterno Way.”
“People ask me why I’ve stayed here so long, and you know what, look around, look around. Now that the celebration’s over, let’s go beat Ohio State,” he said as the crowd roared.
Persa ran for two scores and threw for another to build a 21-0 lead for Northwestern (6-3, 2-3).
But McGloin rallied Penn State and Silas Redd put Penn State ahead for good with a 4-yard touchdown run for a 28-21 lead in the third quarter.
Northwestern had a last gasp when Persa drove the offense to the Penn State 9 with 8:13 left but threw incomplete into the end zone on fourth down. Linebacker Michael Mauti led a furious second-half defensive charge to contain the dual-threat quarterback.
The 100,000-plus fans packed into Beaver Stadium began celebrating with anticipation, and chants of “Joe Paterno! Joe Paterno,” echoed through the stands with 6:30 left and Penn State up comfortably by two touchdowns.
Camera flashes lit up the stands and Paterno stood idly by on the sideline, hands in his gray Penn State parka, not paying much attention to all the ruckus.
As if enough history wasn’t being made at raucous Beaver Stadium, the win also matched the biggest come-from-behind win under Paterno, in 1994 when the Nittany Lions also rallied from 21 down to beat Illinois.