MIAMI -- After 1,013 yards, 100 passes and 51 points, Florida
State-Miami came down to Wide Right III.
Amazing.
When Matt Munyon's 49-yard field sailed wide right, No. 7 Miami completed
its 27-24 victory over No. 1 Florida State on Saturday and derailed the
Seminoles' national championship run.
"I watched it, I watched it," Miami receiver Reggie Wayne said, "The only
thing going through my mind was wide right one, wide right two, and I was
hoping there would be a wide right three."
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| Miami RB James Jackson gets gang-tackled by the Florida State defense. (AP) | |
There was, much to the dismay of Seminoles coach Bobby Bowden, who lived
through wide right field goals in 1991 and 1992 against Miami that probably
cost his teams a pair of national titles. The Hurricanes went on to win the
national crown in '91.
"Wouldn't you know it?" Bowden asked. "He's been wide left all year, and
then that happens. We had him out there pretty far, though."
Until the frantic final minutes, Miami (4-1) had an answer for everything
Florida State (5-1) tried. Four times in the first half, the Seminoles failed
score from inside the Hurricanes' 26-yard line. Twice, Weinke threw
interceptions on plays designed especially for this game. Two other times,
Florida State passed on easy field goals and came up empty -- once on a failed
fourth-down run from the 16; the other on an incomplete pass from the 13.
"We put some plays in that would have been touchdowns," Bowden said.
"They didn't fall for them. They ate them up. I should have kicked."
Miami was glad he didn't as the Hurricanes won their biggest game in Butch
Davis' six years as coach. Miami, playing before a crowd of 80,903 at the
Orange Bowl, finally showed it is back after five years of rebuilding from NCAA
sanctions that stripped the school of 31 scholarships.
"It's huge for the program," linebacker Dan Morgan said. "This is
definitely going to put us in national contention. There's no telling how good
this team can be."
A week after replacing Nebraska in the top spot of the AP poll, the
Seminoles fell behind 17-0 at the half, but staged a furious rally in the final
minutes behind Heisman Trophy contender Chris Weinke, who was 28-of-59 for 496
and three TDs -- the final one a 29-yarder to Atrews Bell with 1:37 left that
put the Seminoles ahead 24-20.
But Ken Dorsey answered for Miami, which took over on its own 32. Dorsey hit
6-of-7 passes, including hookups with Santana Moss for 13 yards, with Wayne for
17 yards and with Moss again for 19 yards to the FSU 8. A delay of game penalty
moved the ball back 5 yards, and then Dorsey hit backup tight end Jeremy
Shockey with a 13-yard scoring pass with 46 seconds to go.
Dorsey, who was 27-of-42 for 328 yards, said "every time he came back to
the huddle he told me he was open. This time I listened to him."
Now, Florida State will have to win out and hope for help if it wants to
defend its national title. Defensive end Roland Seymour walked around the
locker room telling his teammates "we're going to bounce back, don't even
worry about it."
Florida State, denied several national title shots during the heyday of this
rivalry from 1987-93, had its 17-game winning streak -- longest among major
colleges -- ended. The loss also ended the Seminoles' 26-game regular-season
winning streak.
Florida State became the first No. 1 team to lose in the regular season
since Ohio State was beaten by Michigan State 28-24 on Nov. 7, 1998.
The Seminoles had 565 yards, the Hurricanes 448.
Trailing 20-17, Florida State got a break when Miami's Najeh Davenport
fumbled and FSU linebacker Brian Allen made his second recovery of the game,
this one at the Canes 48. Four plays later, the Seminoles had their brief lead
on Weinke's TD pass to Bell.
Miami ended a five-game losing streak against Florida State, games it lost
by an average of 22.2 points. The last time these teams met when both were in
the Top 10 was 1996.
It's a great victory for our club," said Davis, 1-5 against Florida State.
"It was one we really worked for and wasn't an accident. We worked for it and
earned it."
Miami moved to a 17-0 halftime lead, marking the first time since 1988 the
Seminoles had been shut out in the first half. It was the Hurricanes who did
it, too, leading by the same score en route to a 31-0 win.
In the opening 30 minutes, Dorsey outplayed Weinke, who wore a hard plastic
covering to protect a sprained left foot. Dorsey threw a 22-yard touchdown pass
to Davenport, Williams scored from a yard out and Todd Sievers kicked a 31-yard
field goal.
Weinke, 26-2 as a starter, moved well despite the plastic and tape wrapped
around his ankle. But he threw two interceptions -- both at about the Miami 2 --
that stopped scoring drives, and had a pass broken up at the goal line.
Weinke came out strong in the third quarter, and led the Seminoles to a
field goal -- an 18-yarder by Munyon -- and then threw a 48-yard touchdown pass
to Anquan Boldin. And just like that -- with 8:03 left in the third quarter --
the Seminoles trailed 17-10.
Florida State blew a chance for more points. Two plays after Florida State's
TD, the Seminoles took over on the Miami 32 when Allen recovered a fumble by
Williams. But 20 yards worth of penalties pushed them back to their own 48 and
they were forced to punt.
Miami then increased its lead to 20-10 on a 37-yard field goal by Sievers,
with Dorsey hitting passes of 18 yards to Wayne, 13 to Williams and 14 to
Robert Williams.
The Seminoles cut it to 20-17 with 3:15 left in the game on Weinke's 2-yard
TD pass to Boldin, setting the stage for a new chapter in the series -- Wide
Right III.
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