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Miami Notches 3rd Straight Loss

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Miami couldn't stop Duke's running game. And once the Blue Devils started scoring, the 24th-ranked Hurricanes' offense couldn't keep up.

"There's enough blame to go around in this game," coach Al Golden said.

The Hurricanes' free-fall continued Saturday when Duke beat them 48-30.

Their third straight loss dropped them down the ACC Coastal Division standings — and probably out of the national rankings, too.

A win would have put Miami in control of the division — and set up a rematch with No. 2 Florida State in the league championship game.

Instead, it's the Blue Devils who have the inside track to Charlotte.

"It's really about executing, and we didn't do that well enough," Golden said. "Duke did."

Dallas Crawford rushed for 115 yards and Stephen Morris threw for 379 and two touchdowns but the Hurricanes (7-3, 3-3) lost their third straight since climbing to No. 7. They've allowed at least 41 points in each loss.

"Obviously, we're giving up too many points," Golden said. "That's changing the way we play the game on offense."

They could stop neither Brandon Connette nor the Blue Devils' ground game.

The Blue Devils rolled up 358 yards rushing — by far, the most by a David Cutcliffe-coached team at either Duke or Mississippi — against a Miami run defense that gives up an average of 152.

"Coach said we were going to call it and haul it," Snead said, "and that's what we did."

Connette rushed for a career-high four touchdowns and threw for a fifth for Duke. The change-of-pace quarterback had touchdown runs of 1, 2, 3 and 4 yards, and threw a 22-yard TD to Shaq Powell.

"This team is not just a fluke," center Dave Harding said.

Duke (8-2, 4-2) — for years, one of the nation's worst programs in a power conference — claimed its sixth straight win, and it ranks as one of the most significant in school history.

"I remember when I first got here, the team hadn't won a game in, like, three years," running back Josh Snead said. Cutcliffe told him: "'Just believe. Believe in the process.' We got a lot of guys that believe in this process, and we're here today."

Snead rushed for a career-high 138 yards and Powell added a backbreaking 33-yard touchdown run that put the Blue Devils in complete command of a wild game that featured 1,108 total yards and three lead changes.

Ross Martin gave Duke the lead for good late in the third quarter when he banked in a 48-yard field goal off the upright late to make it 31-30.

Two possessions later — and two plays after Snead burst 56 yards into the Miami red zone — Connette powered in from 4 yards out to put the Blue Devils up 38-30 with 11:37 left.

Powell then effectively iced the win on Duke's next possession when his 33-yard touchdown run on fourth-and-1 gave the Blue Devils a 45-30 lead with 6:50 left.

After Miami turned the ball over on downs, Martin added a 32-yard field goal with 1:04 left.

Morris finished 30 of 49 with touchdowns of 50 and 5 yards to Herb Waters. Stacy Coley returned a punt 79 yards for a touchdown and Matt Goudis added three field goals.

Connette, who often spells starter Anthony Boone in short-yardage situations, became the first Duke player to rush for four touchdowns since Justin Boyle did it against Vanderbilt in 2006.

"People look at this game and say, 'Well, Duke didn't throw the ball against Miami, but they ran it,'" Connette said. "No. We ran it so well, we didn't need to throw it."

The Blue Devils allowed the Hurricanes to score 10 quick points in a 54-second span of the first quarter, then fell behind 17-7 on Morris' short TD to Waters late in the first quarter.

But they outscored Miami 41-13 after Deondre Singleton's momentum-changing interception off a deflection early in the second.

Connette accounted for touchdowns on three of the four possessions after that.

"We started well. We just aren't doing a good enough job of answering on defense," Golden said. "When you get into this kind of game, you really need to be perfect on offense. We weren't. They were."

(©2013 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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