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Temple Wastes Chances In 28-6 Loss To No. 14 Irish

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — Temple couldn't overcome defensive lapses and squandered offensive opportunities against No. 14 Notre Dame.

The Fighting Irish jumped to a quick 14-0 lead on a pair of three-play touchdown drives in the opening five minutes, then answered Temple's lone touchdown with a touchdown of their own 18 seconds later on a 66-yard TD pass en route to a 28-6 victory Saturday. The loss dropped Temple to 2-76 all-time against ranked opponents.

"You can't play 65 great plays and five bad ones," first-year Temple coach Matt Rhule said.

Owls freshman kicker Jim Cooper Jr. missed field goals of 32 and 43 and Temple quarterback Connor Reilly threw an incomplete pass on fourth-and-6 on the opening drive of the second half, when the Owls had opportunities to make it a game.

"We left a lot of points on the field," Reilly said. "This team is young. That's where we can build. If we can put those points on the scoreboard, that game's a whole different game."

Temple running back Zaire Williams said he doesn't believe the score reflected how close the game was.

"If we didn't miss those opportunities, we could have been neck-and-neck at the end of the game," he said.

Notre Dame got off to a strong start to the new season and then received more good news after the game, announcing that coach Brian Kelly had signed a new five-year contract.

Kelly said he wasn't too worried that the Irish (1-0) couldn't quite seem to put the Owls (0-1) away, saying he had confidence in his defense.

"I was OK with the dink and dunk that they were going exhibit on offense," he said.

For Notre Dame, the victory was welcome after a turbulent offseason following an embarrassing 42-14 loss to Alabama in the national championship game.

The victory sets up a big game against Michigan next Saturday night.

"We're going to have to play better in all phases against Michigan next week, but we're going to enjoy this victory today," Kelly said.

The victory was the 200th career win for Kelly, improving his overall record to 200-68-2 and 29-11 at Notre Dame.

Rees, who regained the starting quarterback job when Everett Golson was suspended from school for the fall semester, was 16 of 23 for 346 yards, his fourth career 300-yard passing day.

"I saw some really good things, and some things that we're going to have to get better at," Kelly said.

One of the questions about Rees was whether he could beat opponents deep in the passing game.

But Rees threw a pair of long TD passes to Daniels, who didn't have a touchdown catch last season. Daniels beat Temple cornerback Anthony Robey on both TDs.

The first drive started with Amir Carlisle breaking a 45-yard run up the left sideline to the Temple 37. While the second was set up by a short pass to TJ Jones, who broke two tackles, for a 51-yard gain.

"One of the questions coming in was: 'Can we push the ball downfield?' I think we answered a lot of those questions right away with his ability to push the ball downfield. I think his patience was better and it will continue to get better," Kelly said.

Rees said he was pleased.

"There are some things out there that we have to fix as an offense, but I was pleased with how the entire offense played," he said.

There were some encouraging signs for Temple. First-time starter Reilly was solid, completing 23 of 46 passes for 228 yards, which was more than the Owls had in any game last season.

He also ran for 65 yards on 12 carries and Temple amassed 362 yards total offense. The only teams with more yards against Notre Dame last season were Oklahoma (403) and Alabama (529). The Irish didn't give up a rushing touchdown in going 12-0 in the regular season last year until the eighth game against Oklahoma. Cooper's PAT was blocked by Notre Dame defensive lineman Jarron Jones.

The Irish answered 18 seconds later when Rees hit Troy Niklas at midfield and he faked his way past twoTemple defenders and raced for a 66-yard touchdown.

Temple opened the second half with another strong drive, advancing to the Notre Dame 6.

Reilly threw four straight incomplete passes as Rhule decided to go for it on fourth-and-6 instead of trying another field goal.

The Irish responded quickly again with a 94-yard scoring drive, highlighted by a 33-yard pass from Rees to Chris Brown. George Atkinson scored on a 2-yard run to make it 28-6.

Although Temple was a heavy underdog, it was still a bit of a disappointing start for Rhule, because of missed chances.

"They proved that they can play with that team," Rhule said.

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

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