Tampa, Florida - In a game that demanded composure more than flash, grit more than margin, South Florida proved it belongs on college football’s biggest stage.
Behind a punishing ground attack, clutch special teams, and just enough late-game nerve to survive a furious rally, No. 7 USF held off No. 10 Louisville, 23–21, on Saturday afternoon at Raymond James Stadium, earning the first College Football Playoff victory in program history.
It wasn’t clean. It wasn’t comfortable. But it was earned, possession by possession, kick by kick, stop by stop.
Louisville wasted no time testing USF’s playoff resolve, opening the game with a 12-play, 75-yard drive that ended with Johann Cardenas powering in from a yard out for an early 7–0 lead. The Cardinals looked sharp and physical, exactly as advertised, but the Bulls responded with calm rather than panic.
After an early stall that included two incompletions to Jordyn Bridgewater, USF settled for a long Dom Bragg field goal to get on the board. The next Louisville possession went nowhere, derailed by a sack from Kevin Wynn, and that defensive stop flipped the tone of the afternoon.
USF leaned into its identity on the ensuing drive. Run after run softened the Cardinals’ front, forcing safeties closer to the line. When Louisville finally crept up, Locklan Hewlett struck, hitting Bridgewater over the top for a wide-open 38-yard touchdown that sent the stadium into a roar and put the Bulls ahead 10–7.
From there, the Bulls controlled the rhythm of the first half. Louisville punted twice more, while USF added another Bragg field goal after a drive stalled on three straight incompletions. Even when the offense wasn’t clicking through the air, the Bulls stayed patient, heading into halftime with a 13–7 lead and full control of the game’s tempo.
The third quarter turned into a grind. Louisville struggled to generate consistent movement, and USF continued to play the field-position game. Bragg drilled a 44-yard field goal midway through the quarter to extend the lead to 16–7, capping another possession where points mattered more than style.
Louisville had a chance to swing momentum when it reached the USF 20, but a missed field goal from the hash kept the Cardinals chasing. USF couldn’t capitalize on the next possession and punted, but the Bulls never lost their composure.
The fourth quarter brought the chaos expected of a playoff game. Louisville finally broke through with a nine-yard touchdown pass from Bryce Baker to Alex Sanchez, cutting the lead to 16–14 and injecting life into the Cardinal sideline.
USF answered with its defining drive of the season. Facing fourth-and-2 near midfield, Hewlett delivered a strike to Jeremiah Stoneburner for 16 yards, a play that may stand as one of the biggest conversions in program history. From there, the Bulls leaned on their backfield. George Shembo and Steven Snead chipped away at the defense before Shembo finished the drive with a one-yard touchdown plunge, pushing the lead to 23–14 with just under three minutes remaining.
Louisville wasn’t finished. Baker, who was sharp all afternoon, led a nine-play touchdown drive highlighted by precision throws, finishing it with a 13-yard score to Bart Brownlee. With 1:25 left, the margin was down to two, and tension filled Raymond James Stadium.
The decisive moment came on the ensuing kickoff. Louisville attempted an onside kick, but USF recovered. Shembo ripped off a 10-yard run for a first down at the Louisville 35, and the Bulls drained the final seconds off the clock, sealing the moment.
Statistically, the game reflected how tight it was. USF finished with 360 yards of offense to Louisville’s 322, dominated the ground game with 203 rushing yards at 6.3 yards per carry, and played a clean game with zero turnovers. Louisville countered with 257 passing yards from Baker, but couldn’t consistently finish drives early or recover from missed opportunities.
The difference came down to execution in critical moments, a fourth-down conversion, three perfect field goals from freshman kicker Dom Bragg, and the ability to close out the game when it mattered most.
This wasn’t a blowout statement. It was something better. It was proof that USF can survive discomfort, absorb pressure, and win when the margin for error disappears. The Bulls didn’t overwhelm Louisville, they outlasted them.
Battle-tested teams don’t always look dominant. Sometimes they just keep standing.
On Saturday in Tampa, USF did exactly that and with the program’s first CFP win secured, the Bulls move forward to face playoff perennial Oregon with belief that feels very real.
Scoring Summary
First Quarter
LOU – Johann Cardenas 1-yard run (Nick Robbins kick), 2:50
Second Quarter
USF – Dom Bragg 41-yard field goal, 8:47
USF – Jordyn Bridgewater 38-yard pass from Locklan Hewlett (Dom Bragg kick), 4:50
USF – Dom Bragg 45-yard field goal, 1:18
Third Quarter
USF – Dom Bragg 44-yard field goal, 5:30
Fourth Quarter
LOU – Alex Sanchez 9-yard pass from Bryce Baker (Nick Robbins kick), 6:05
USF – George Shembo 1-yard run (Dom Bragg kick), 2:46
LOU – Bart Brownlee 13-yard pass from Bryce Baker (Nick Robbins kick), 1:25
USF Stat Leaders
Passing
L. Hewlett – 16/25, 157 Yds, 1 TD, 0 INT, 64.0%, 6.2 YPA
Rushing
C. Suggs – 12 Car, 111 Yds, 9.2 Avg
S. Snead – 9 Car, 46 Yds, 5.1 Avg
G. Shembo – 8 Car, 38 Yds, 4.7 Avg, 1 TD
N. Daniel – 1 Car, 15 Yds, 15.0 Avg
Receiving
J. Bridgewater – 6 Rec, 77 Yds, 12.8 Avg, 1 TD
J. Stoneburner – 4 Rec, 43 Yds, 10.7 Avg
D. Sahara – 2 Rec, 19 Yds, 9.5 Avg
S. Snead – 2 Rec, 8 Yds, 4.0 Avg
Defense
E. Rance – 9 Tkl (5 Solo, 4 Ast)
G. Jenkins – 6 Tkl, 2 TFL
T. Bennett – 6 Tkl
K. Wynn – 3 Tkl, 1.0 Sack
I. Singleton – 3 Tkl, 1 TFL
Special Teams
D. Bragg – 3/3 FG (Long 45), 2/2 XP
D. McSurdy – 2 Punts, 104 Yds, 52.0 Avg
E. York – 2 PR, 11 Yds
L. Dragos – 1 KR, 20 Yds
Louisville Stat Leaders
Passing
B. Baker – 23/28, 257 Yds, 2 TD, 0 INT, 82.1%, 9.1 YPA
Rushing
J. Cardenas – 16 Car, 63 Yds, 3.9 Avg, 1 TD
B. Baker – 5 Car, 4 Yds, 0.8 Avg
J. O’Shea – 1 Car, -2 Yds, -2.0 Avg
Receiving
G. Houser – 8 Rec, 93 Yds, 11.6 Avg
A. Sanchez – 5 Rec, 73 Yds, 14.6 Avg, 1 TD
B. Brownlee – 3 Rec, 46 Yds, 15.3 Avg, 1 TD
J. Paylor – 3 Rec, 30 Yds, 10.0 Avg
J. Cardenas – 3 Rec, 13 Yds, 4.3 Avg
Defense
M. Rice – 11 Tkl (3 Solo, 8 Ast)
T. Carter – 9 Tkl (3 Solo, 6 Ast)
J. Blount – 8 Tkl (5 Solo, 3 Ast), 2 TFL
M. Davis – 7 Tkl (5 Solo, 2 Ast)
J. Butler – 6 Tkl (0 Solo, 6 Ast)
D. Smith – 4 Tkl (1 Solo, 3 Ast), 1.0 Sack
Special Teams
N. Robbins – 3/3 XP
T. Kuhn – 3 Punts, 107 Yds, 35.6 Avg, 31.3 Net
D. Dixon – 3 KR, 83 Yds, 27.6 Avg
| Category | USF | Louisville |
| Score | 23 | 21 |
| First Downs | 20 | 21 |
| Total Offense | 360 | 322 |
| Total Plays | 57 | 50 |
| Yards Per Play | 6.3 | 6.4 |
| Rush | Yards | TD | 32 | 203 | 1 | 22 | 65 | 1 |
| Yards Per Rush | 6.3 | 3.0 |
| Comp | Att | TD | 16 | 25 | 1 | 23 | 28 | 2 |
| Yards Per Pass | 6.3 | 9.2 |
| Passing Yards | 157 | 257 |
| 3rd Down Conv. | 5 | 12 (41%) | 4 | 8 (50%) |
| 4th Down Conv. | 1 | 1 (100%) | 0 | 0 (0%) |
| 2 Pt Conv. | 0 | 0 (0%) | 0 | 0 (0%) |
| Red Zone TD | FG | % | 1 | 0 | 50% | 3 | 0 | 75% |
| Turnovers | 0 | 0 |
| Fumbles Lost | 0 | 0 |
| Interceptions | 0 | 0 |
| PR Yards | 11 | 9 |
| KR Yards | 57 | 83 |
| Total Yards | 428 | 414 |
| Punts (Avg) | 2 (52.0) | 3 (35.7) |
| Penalties | 2 | 10 | 0 | 0 |