Pitt loses quarterback Eli Holstein to a leg injury before losing the game to Louisville

There aren’t many moments in a football game worse than losing your starting quarterback in the first 10 minutes.

But after Eli Holstein left the field at L&N Stadium on a cart with a serious injury — his left leg in a boot, his day ended — Pitt found more ways to multiply its misery in a 37-9 loss to Louisville on Saturday. The result was the Panthers’ fourth straight loss as they fell to 7-4 overall and 3-4 in the ACC. Louisville improved to 7-4, 5-3.

Here is a selection from the first half:

• Down only 3-0, Holstein got his leg caught under him while being sacked. Just days earlier, Holstein had been cleared by Pitt doctors after suffering two head injuries. He returned to the field several minutes later on crutches.

• Backups Derrick Davis, Zion Fowler-El and Juelz Goff dropped passes.

• Center Terrence Moore, replacing injured starter Lyndon Cooper, was caught holding, snuffing out a 28-yard run by Desmond Reid.

• Holstein and his backup Nate Yarnell each threw an interception before halftime. Linebacker Stanquan Clark’s second pick preceded running back Isaac Brown’s 15-yard touchdown run that extended the Cardinals’ lead to 24-0. Almost as unfortunate, the interception occurred after Pitt’s defense had forced Louisville to turn the ball over on downs at the Panthers’ 1.

• Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi also gave the football back to Louisville on two failed fourth-and-short plays at midfield.

“You have to take those chances to be down early,” Narduzzi said. “I don’t second guess those decisions at all. We have to have a farm.”

At halftime, Pitt trailed 27-0 and Louisville had amassed 308 yards of offense. By the end of the game, Louisville quarterback Tyler Shough completed 17 of 28 passes for 293 of Louisville’s 505 total yards.

In the end, Pitt made the type of history it would hope to avoid. The Panthers are the only team in ACC history to start the season with seven wins and then lose the next four, according to the ESPN2 broadcast.

Even before the injury, the game did not start well for Holstein, who was intercepted by Clark on the goal line. The most disappointing thing about that opening drive was that Holstein completed three of his first four passes for 51 yards, ran for 9 more and had moved Pitt to first-and-goal at the 7.

Shough, who threw for 202 yards in the first half, responded by completing six of seven passes for 64 yards. Pitt’s defense stiffened and forced Louisville to settle for Brock Travelstead’s 41-yard field goal — his first of three — and a 3-0 lead at 6:36.

Yarnell’s first series ended in a punt, but his teammates did him no favors.

After Reid carried three times for 14, 14 and 28 yards, the final run was called back by Moore’s team penalty. On the next play, Davis dropped a pass and the drive ended three plays later.

Before the end of the first quarter, Brown scored on a 1-yard run, set up by his own 47-yard run.

Narduzzi’s first gamble came on the first play of the second quarter on fourth-and-1 at midfield. Davis was stopped for no gain, while Reid, who averaged more than 5 yards per carry. carry in the first quarter, was not on the field.

That made it easier for Louisville to extend its lead to 17-0 at the 12:33 mark of the second quarter. Shough threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Ja’Corey Brooks, which was flagged after a miscommunication between cornerback Rashad Battle and safety Cruce Brookins.

Pitt’s misfortune continued on the third play of the second half when cornerback Ryland Gandy tried to push Louisville wide receiver Chris Bell out of bounds after a 2-yard catch. Gandy didn’t use enough force and Bell kept running for a 68-yard touchdown.

“Missed tackle out there,” said Narduzzi, who was otherwise pleased with his team’s second-half effort. “We have to make a play. I thought we had a good call. We have to make a tackle.”

Yarnell, whose practice time was limited before the game after struggling last week against Clemson, completed 11 of 23 passes for 96 yards. He threw an 8-yard touchdown pass to Konata Mumpfield in the third quarter before being replaced by walk-on quarterback David Lynch, who threw Pitt’s third interception of the game.

Pitt recorded a safety in the fourth quarter when Louisville running back Donald Chaney was tackled in the end zone.

Jerry DiPaola is a TribLive reporter who has covered Pitt athletics since 2011. A native of Pittsburgh, he joined the Trib in 1993, first as a copy editor and page designer in the sports department and later as a Pittsburgh Steelers reporter from 1994-2004. He can be contacted at [email protected].