South Carolina State Beats Prairie View A&M In 4 OT Thriller To Claim Cricket Celebration Bowl
If you turned off the TV at halftime, you probably assumed Prairie View A&M was currently busy sizing rings and dousing Head Coach Tremaine Jackson in a cooler of Gatorade. You’d also be dead wrong.
Sports can be cruel. One minute you’re cruising down the highway with the top down, and the next, you’re on the side of the road with a flat tire in the pouring rain. On Saturday inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Prairie View lived that metaphor in the most excruciating way possible.
In a game that will be talked about for years, the Panthers blew a commanding 21-point lead and eventually fell to South Carolina State 40-38 in a four-overtime classic. It was the Celebration Bowl, the de facto national title game for HBCUs, and it delivered enough drama to fill a 30-for-30 documentary.
A Tale Of Two Halves For South Carolina State
For the first 30 minutes, Prairie View looked unstoppable. They were seeking their first national title in 61 years, and they played like a team tired of waiting. Quarterback Cameron Peters was dealing, tossing two touchdowns and running for another. The defense was suffocating. At 21-0, the writing wasn’t just on the wall; it was practically carved in stone.
But then, chaos arrived.
A botched reverse led to a fumble, giving South Carolina State a short field. They scored. Then they scored again. And again. In less than 10 minutes of game time, that comfortable 21-point cushion evaporated. It was the kind of momentum swing that makes you want to throw your remote through the screen.
Ryan Stubblefield, filling in for an injured starter, went from backup to hero, finding Jordan Smith repeatedly to claw the Bulldogs back into the fight.
Overtime Madness At the Celebration Bowl
Regulation wasn’t enough to settle this one. Neither was one overtime. Or two. Or three.
We went four rounds deep. By the time the fourth overtime hit, fans were watching through their fingers. The turning point, and the moment that will likely keep Prairie View fans awake at night, came down to a controversial call. Stubblefield hit Tyler Smith on a conversion try. To the naked eye, it looked like he was stopped short by Kamren Amao. The refs disagreed. After a replay review that felt longer than the actual game, the call stood. South Carolina State had the points.
Prairie View had one last shot to answer. Cameron Peters, who had been spectacular all day, tried to keep it himself on a run. He was stuffed. Game over.
The Agony of Defeat
For South Carolina State, it’s a seventh national championship and a celebration of resilience. For Prairie View, it’s a masterclass in heartbreak. They did everything right for two quarters, but football is a four-quarter game—and occasionally, a four-overtime nightmare.
The Panthers are heading home wondering “what if,” specifically looking back at a missed 38-yard field goal in the second overtime that would have won it. It’s a brutal end to a fantastic season, but that’s the beauty and the beast of college football.
