Miami edges Duke for share of Coastal title

DURHAM, N.C. -- Freshman Duke Johnson rushed for season highs of
176 yards and three touchdowns, Stephen Morris had three passing scores
and Miami held on to beat Duke 52-45 on Saturday and claim a share of
the ACC's Coastal Division title.

In a wild affair in which the
teams combined for 1,229 total yards, Morris finished 15 of 25 for 369
yards for the Hurricanes (7-5, 5-3) -- who never trailed but could never
really breathe easy, either.

Sean Renfree threw for a
career-high 432 yards and a career-high-tying four touchdowns in his
final home game for Duke (6-6, 3-5), which trailed by 21 late. Brandon
Connette's second touchdown run of the day pulled the Blue Devils within
seven points with 2:32 left.

After Ross Martin's onside kick
went out of bounds, Miami ran out the clock to seal its first share of a
division title since joining the ACC in 2004.

Morris' touchdown
passes covered 11 yards to Clive Walford, 72 yards to Mike James and 65
yards to Herb Waters. James also had a 1-yard scoring plunge late in the
first half.

Johnson scored on runs of 18, 6 and 65 yards. He
finished his freshman year with 947 yards rushing, easily surpassing
Clinton Portis' 13-year-old school freshman rushing record of 838 yards.

Johnson
nearly threw a touchdown pass, too, but replay officials determined
that his late 1-yard jump pass to Walford on fourth-and-goal bounced off
the end zone turf before he could pull it in.

On Duke's next
snap, Renfree hit Jamison Crowder for a 99-yard touchdown pass -- the
longest play in school history -- with 11:45 left. That pulled Duke
within 45-31. Renfree, who was 36 of 59, added scoring passes of 23
yards to Crowder and 10 and 6 yards to Conner Vernon.

Connette
had an early 4-yard touchdown run. Crowder finished with eight catches
for 203 yards while Vernon added 11 receptions for 109 yards for the
Blue Devils, who will enter their first bowl game since 1994 on a
four-game losing streak.

The Hurricanes were playing their first
game since announcing earlier in the week that they would stay home from
the postseason for the second straight year because of an NCAA
investigation that is expected to eventually lead to stiff sanctions
against them.

With Georgia Tech -- which Miami beat two months
ago -- headed to Charlotte for next weekend's title game, some fans in
the Hurricanes' corner of Wallace Wade Stadium proudly held posters
bearing anti-NCAA messages.

Miami scored on four of its first six
first-half possessions and led 31-10 early in the second half. James'
scoring dive with 8 seconds left in the half made it 28-10 at the break,
and Jake Wieclaw made it a 21-point game on Miami's opening drive of
the half.