DETROIT - On this night, Dan Enos was fine with letting the other coach make the game's most important decision.
"I don't know what I would have done," Enos said. "But I will never second-guess a coach for trying to win."
Enos and his Central Michigan Chippewas held on for a 24-21 victory over Western Kentucky on Wednesday night in the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, stopping the Hilltoppers on fourth-and-two in the final minute when a field goal could have sent the game to overtime.
Lance Guidry, coaching Western Kentucky on an interim basis with Bobby Petrino set to take over, went for the victory after his players made their feelings known on the matter.
"That was all the players. We were going to kick the field goal, but they told me that they were here to win the game," Guidry said. "I asked everyone and they wanted to go for it so we took the chance."
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It didn't work out. On fourth down from the 19-yard line with 51 seconds left, Kawaun Jakes threw incomplete.
Ryan Radcliff had thrown an 11-yard touchdown pass to Cody Wilson with 5:11 remaining to give Central Michigan the lead.
"I couldn't have scripted it any better than my last catch being the winning TD in a bowl game," said Wilson, a senior who had 10 catches for 101 yards on the night.
Western Kentucky (7-6) fell just short in its first bowl since joining college football's top tier in 2009.
Radcliff went 19 of 29 for 253 yards and three touchdowns, but Central Michigan (7-6) needed to rally late.
"We knew we left a lot on the table in the first half, but we made a lot of those plays in the second half," said Enos, who was coaching his first bowl as Central Michigan's coach.
Down 21-17, Zurlon Tipton appeared to have put the Chippewas ahead in the fourth quarter, but his fourth-down run was ruled short of the goal line after a review.
"When we didn't get the touchdown, we knew we had to stop them right there," linebacker Shamari Benton said. "We knew that we just needed to give the offense one more shot."
Central Michigan forced the Hilltoppers to punt from their end zone, and Avery Cunningham blocked it. Although the ball bounced around for a bit, the Chippewas finally secured it and took over with great field position inside the 30.
Radcliff found Wilson in the back left corner of the end zone for a 24-21 lead.
Western Kentucky's final drive ended when Jakes' pass intended for Jack Doyle fell incomplete.
Petrino, the Hilltoppers' coach-in-waiting, was expected to be at Ford Field watching his new team, but a snowstorm forced him to scrap those plans. Western Kentucky started aggressively.
Down 7-0, the Hilltoppers ran a flea-flicker on their first play from scrimmage, with Antonio Andrews running to his right, then tossing the ball back to Jakes, who found Rico Brown for a 70-yard gain.
Two plays later, Jakes scored on a 6-yard run to tie it.
Central Michigan answered with a 73-yard drive that ended with Andrew Flory's 29-yard touchdown reception, his second of the quarter.
The offenses settled down a bit for the rest of the quarter. Both teams were backed up by a pair of terrific punts. Hendrix Brakefield's 74-yarder pinned Central Michigan at its 5, but Richie Hogan flipped the field position with a punt that sailed past Andrews and bounced back to the Western Kentucky 12. The 82-yard effort was returned only 4 yards.
Military BOWL
• Who: Bowling Green (8-4) vs. San Jose State (10-2)
• When: 1 p.m. today on ESPN
• Where: Washington, D.C.
• Key matchup: San Jose State's high-scoring offense vs. Bowling Green's stingy defense. The Spartans averaged 35.3 points (26th among FBS schools), and the Falcons allowed 15.8 (ninth).
Belk BOWL
• Who: Cincinnati (9-3) vs. Duke (6-6)
• When: 4:30 p.m. today on ESPN
• Where: Charlotte, N.C.
• Key matchup: Cincinnati RB George Winn vs. Duke's porous run defense. Winn has emerged as a playmaker this season for the Bearcats, rushing for 1,204 yards and 12 TDs. Over the last four games, the Blue Devils have allowed 51 points and 294.5 yards rushing on average.
Holiday BOWL
• Who: (7-5) vs. UCLA (9-4)
• When: 7:45 p.m. today on ESPN
• Where: San Diego
• Key matchup: Baylor senior quarterback Nick Florence, who replaced Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III, against UCLA's defense. Florence leads the nation in total offense with 387.7 yards per game. UCLA's defense has allowed at least 27 points in each of its last four, including consecutive losses to Stanford.

