Oklahoma State manhandles Colorado 38-8 in Alamo Bowl

Rudolph throws for 314 yards

SAN ANTONIO – Mason Rudolph threw for 314 yards and touchdowns to three different receivers as No. 10 Oklahoma State manhandled No. 12 Colorado 38-8 on Thursday in the Valero Alamo Bowl before a crowd of 59,815 in the Alamodome.

The Oklahoma State defense was just as important in this dominating win, limiting the normally potent Buffaloes' offense to 182 yards through the first three quarters while recording three sacks and nine tackles for a loss and knocked Colorado starting quarterback Tony Liufau out of the game for a quarter.

Rudolph (22-of-32 passing) connected with James Washington on a 5-yard scoring pass at the end of the second quarter. He hit Blake Jarwin with a TD throw from 6 yards out and added a 23-yard touchdown pass to Jhajuan Seales in the third quarter to give the Cowboys (10-3) a 31-0 lead.

Liufau (190 yards passing) scooted in for a 6-yard touchdown run to get the Buffaloes on the board with 5:28 to play. He then passed to Phillip Lindsay for a 2-point conversion but it was far too late for the Buffaloes (10-4).

Justice Hill roared up the middle untouched for a 37-yard TD in the waning minutes to push the score to 38-8.

Hill led the Cowboys with 100 yards on 19 carries. Washington had 171 yards receiving on nine catches for Oklahoma State before leaving the game with an injured finger in the third quarter.

Lindsay racked up 166 total yards (103 receiving on six catches and 63 on the ground on 14 carries) for Colorado. The Buffaloes were outscored 79-18 in their final two games.

Oklahoma State owned the first 19 minutes, forging a 10-0 lead on the strength of a 28-yard field goal by Ben Grogan on the Cowboys' opening possession and a 10-yard touchdown run by Chris Carson at the 11:15 mark of the second quarter.

The latter score came on the snap after a nifty throwback pass from Rudolph to Carson and back to Rudolph that gained 24 yards and allowed Oklahoma State to a short field at the Colorado 10-yard line.

In between Oklahoma State's two early scores, the Buffaloes produced one significant drive on offense, moving 65 yards in 14 plays to a missed 47-yard field goal attempt by Chris Graham.

The Cowboys pushed their lead to 17-0 with seven minutes to play in the second quarter on a 5-yard touchdown pass from Rudolph to Washington. The score culminated a seven-play, 66-yard drive for Oklahoma State and put the Cowboys firmly in control.

Oklahoma State enjoyed a 282-153 edge in total yards in the first half, with most of that advantage coming through the air (216-106). The Cowboys averaged 7.2 yards per play in the first half as compared with 4.9 yards per snap for Colorado.

NOTES: The 2016 Valero Alamo Bowl is the third consecutive top-15 matchup the bowl produced and marks the third year of a conference agreement to match the No. 1 Big 12 and No. 1 Pac-12 teams outside of the College Football Playoff selections or the Pac-12's Rose Bowl commitment. ... Colorado players, coaches and staff wore a "RS19" decal on its game shirts and helmets to honor Rashaan Salaam, its fallen 1994 Heisman Trophy winner who committed suicide Dec. 5. ... Oklahoma State is one of only seven schools to appear in every set of CFP rankings since 2015 (Alabama, Clemson, Florida State, Michigan, Ohio State and Utah). ... This is only the second time in school history that the Buffaloes have played 14 games in a season.