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Navy goes for it, rallies to beat Army on 4th-and-goal score

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Navy takes down Army to win Commander-in-Chief's Trophy (1:25)

Navy beats Army with late touchdown to win "America's Game" between longtime rivals. (1:25)

BALTIMORE -- Blake Horvath to Eli Heidenreich.

That's the connection that led Navy to such a memorable season, and the two players came through again on the biggest play of the biggest game.

Horvath threw an 8-yard touchdown pass to Heidenreich on fourth-and-goal with 6:32 remaining, and No. 22 Navy rallied to beat Army 17-16 on Saturday. Heidenreich, the career and single-season leader in yards receiving for the Midshipmen, caught six of Horvath's seven completions Saturday.

"Who wouldn't go to him?" Horvath said. "Talk about an all-time Navy legend. You're going to be talking about Eli Heidenreich for years and years and years."

Although it was clearly a passing situation and Heidenreich was Navy's top target, he was single-covered over the middle.

"Tried to bring some pressure on them," Army coach Jeff Monken said. "Good throw and good catch."

With President Donald Trump in attendance, Navy (10-2) got its second straight victory over Army (6-6), and the Midshipmen won the Commander-In-Chief's Trophy for a second straight season. The Black Knights have not beaten a Navy team that was ranked by the AP since 1955.

Horvath was fortunate to have the opportunity to throw that decisive touchdown pass. On second-and-goal from the 1, he lost the ball while attempting a tush push. Army linebacker Eric Ford had a chance to scoop it up, but Navy running back Alex Tecza lunged to prevent that, and Heidenreich eventually fell on the ball at the 8.

"That's probably the last thing you want to see on the 1-yard line is you turn around and the ball is just bouncing behind you," Heidenreich said. "I was blocking down. I thought he had pushed in, and kind of out of my peripheral I saw it going behind me."

On the next play, Horvath was nearly sacked, but he threw the ball toward Tecza as Horvath went down. The ball fell incomplete instead of being caught around the 15, which was just as well for Navy because it made going for it on fourth down more viable.

"I kind of felt like we had to," Navy coach Brian Newberry said. "The nature of what they do offensively, despite how well we played in the second half, you may not get the ball back."

Even after Heidenreich's touchdown and an Army punt, Navy still had to escape one more near-turnover. On third-and-3 from the Army 43, Horvath lost control of the ball on a rushing attempt, but he caught it out of the air. It came loose again and the Black Knights recovered, but after a review, Horvath was ruled down before the second fumble -- a yard short of the first down.

Tecza then ran for the first down that enabled Navy to kneel out the clock, and Horvath appeared to wave goodbye at the Army sideline. There was a bit of a ruckus near midfield after the final kneel-down before things eventually calmed down for the traditional singing of the alma maters.

"They want to talk all their crap during the game and act like they're so tough," Horvath said. "The excuse last year was that they played a conference championship game before us. This year, we'll see what it is."

The Black Knights were trying to turn the tables on Navy after a ranked Army team, which had just won the American Conference title, lost to the Midshipmen last year.

The teams traded touchdown drives to start the game, each lasting 13 plays, 75 yards and over seven minutes. Horvath had a 5-yard scoring run, and Army quarterback Cale Hellums answered with a 2-yarder. Army's first drive didn't end until five seconds into the second quarter.

Then, it was a while before anyone reached the end zone again. With Army up 10-7 late in the second quarter, the ball slipped out of Horvath's hand as he looked to pass. Army recovered the fumble at its 45 with 20 seconds to play and moved into range for a 45-yard field goal by Dawson Jones.

Navy's defense stepped up in the second half, but the Midshipmen still flirted with disaster. Horvath threw an interception in the third quarter that was initially returned to the end zone, but a replay showed Justin Weaver's knee was down when he picked off the pass at the Navy 32. The Black Knights settled for three when Dawson connected on a career-long 48-yard kick.

Navy's Wing-T offense has been explosive this season. The Midshipmen entered the day with an FBS-high 10 plays of at least 60 yards. Army mostly kept them contained, but Horvath slipped free for a 37-yard run that set up a third-quarter field goal that made it 16-10.

After Hellums' underthrown pass was intercepted by Phillip Hamilton, giving Navy the ball at the 50 with 11:19 to play, Tecza's 24-yard run made it first-and-goal from the 5.

Trump tossed the coin before the game at midfield, then returned at halftime to walk from the Navy sideline to the Army one.

Up next for Navy is a Jan. 2 game against Cincinnati in the Liberty Bowl. Army faces UConn in the Fenway Bowl on Dec. 27.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.