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Penn State Beats No. 18 Michigan 43-40 In 4OT

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — Bill Belton ran for a 2-yard touchdown in the fourth overtime to lift Penn State past No. 18 Michigan 43-40 in maybe the biggest win in coach Bill O'Brien's two seasons with the Nittany Lions.

Penn State's Christian Hackenberg was sensational in regulation on the tying drive, completing passes of 29 yards to Brandon Felder and 33 yards to Allen Robinson to bring the ball to the 1 with 29 seconds left.

The freshman quarterback sneaked in for the first rushing TD against Michigan this season, tying the game at 34-all.

Brendan Gibbons kicked two field goals and missed two — one was blocked — in OT for the Wolverines (5-1, 1-1). Sam Ficken kicked two, but passed on even trying another on the last possession. Instead, Penn State went on fourth-and-1 from the 16 and Belton dove ahead for 3 yards. Three plays later, he was in the end zone, and the party was on.

The Nittany Lions (4-2, 1-1 Big Ten) stormed the field in wild celebration, sending more than 100,000 fans into a frenzy.

"Nothing should amaze you," O'Brien said. "There's going to be twists and turns. These are tough kids. They love Penn State. They love playing for each other. The locker room is such a great scene right now because these kids really believe in each other."

Still recovering from scandal, the Nittany Lions gave 107,884 fans at Beaver Stadium at long last a milestone celebration in Happy Valley. The Nittany Lions mobbed O'Brien, and he led the charge toward the students in the stands to sing the fight song. Penn State's victory bell rang long after the players had stunned the unbeaten Wolverines.

Hackenberg made it possible with plenty of help from his receivers on the final drive of the fourth.

Only a freshman, the 18-year-old Hackenberg played with the poise of a veteran, never more evident than in the final quarter.

Robinson expanded his 6-foot-3 frame about another 4 inches on a fantastic, outstretched leap in the corner that sent him crashing down a yard from the goal line. Lined up against a stout rushing defense, O'Brien called for the sneak, and Hackenberg plowed through for one sweet yard.

"He's just a fun guy to coach," O'Brien said.

Hackenberg threw three touchdown passes in the first half to stake Penn State to a 21-10 lead.

After throwing two interceptions and losing a fumble in the first half, Devin Gardner put the Wolverines ahead with touchdown passes in the third and fourth quarters.

Helped by a pass interference call on third down that kept the drive alive, Gardner connected with Jeremy Gallon for a 16-yard TD pass for a 27-24 lead with 28 seconds left in the third.

Hackenberg overthrew a pair of open receivers on the deep ball and Ficken's tying 47-yard attempt was wide left early in the fourth.

Gardner needed only five plays to hit Devin Funchess in the back of the end zone for a 37-yard TD and a 34-24 lead.

Ficken hit a 43-yarder with 6:35 left to make it 34-27, keeping Hackenberg and the Nittany Lions alive for one thrilling finish.

This was a scene in Happy Valley straight out of the Joe Paterno era — not like the late Hall of Fame coach has ever been forgotten. His picture is still on billboards that line the road to the stadium and T-shirts with his image or name were still a popular choice for fans.

But make no mistake. This program firmly belongs to O'Brien.

O'Brien hasn't backed down from a challenge since he took over the scandal-ridden program, and the Wolverines were the latest speed bump he flattened in his path.

Penn State running back Zach Zwinak fumbled on the first play of the half, the ball was scooped by defensive end Frank Clark and returned for the easy score, cutting it to 21-17.

Hackenberg threw an interception, and Michigan turned the turnover into a field goal, making it 21-20. He steadied the offense and used a series of short passes to set up Ficken's 45-yard field goal for a 24-20 lead late in the quarter.

Michigan did get a boost with the return of linebacker Jake Ryan. Ryan, an All-Big Ten second team player, had yet to play this season after he suffered a torn anterior cruciate ligament in the spring.

Michigan offensive lineman Taylor Lewan, an All-American who decided to pass on the NFL and return for his senior season, sat out the second half with an undisclosed injury.

(© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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