The COUNTDOWN to 2015 ... Thursday, September 3rd

Here's that 1985 Michigan (#2) at Iowa (#1) game from CBS ... Brent and Ara on the call.

[video=youtube_share;OMGk5QKBmXo]https://youtu.be/OMGk5QKBmXo[/video]
 
27 days to go ...

The 1988 season had a familiar start as Florida State sat atop the preseason polls, something the 'Noles would do many times over the next decade. But it was Notre Dame that withstood the campaign, winning the school's last championship to date with a Fiesta Bowl win over West Virginia 27 seasons ago.

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This was a time where teams that were INDEPENDENT ruled the landscape with Florida State, Miami (FL), Notre Dame, West Virginia, Syracuse, Penn State, Pitt, South Carolina, Louisville, Army, Navy, Boston College, Virginia Tech and many others had no conference affiliation but played some of the best football in the nation.

In fact, the final poll in 1988 had 4 of the top-5 teams from the Independent listing with only Michigan at #4 under a conference banner.

Florida State
faced arch-rival Miami (FL) in the season-opener and the #1 v. #6 match-up was lopsided as an Orange Bowl crowd of more than 77,000 watched the Hurricanes shutout the Seminoles, 31-0.

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Florida State would not lose the rest of the year, finishing 11-1 with a 13-7 win over #7 Auburn in the Sugar Bowl, and posted huge road wins over #3 Clemson (24-21) and a 59-0 beatdown of #15 South Carolina at Williams-Brice Stadium. DB Deion Sanders would finish 8th in the Heisman voting.

Miami (FL) would get to 4-0, and was securely entrenched in the top spot of the rankings with wins at #15 Michigan (31-30) and two home blowout victories over Wisconsin and Missouri. Next up ... Catholics v. Convicts

The name "Catholics vs. Convicts" was seized on by the press after two Notre Dame students and friends --- Joe Frederick and Michael Caponigro --- created and sold t-shirts carrying the slogan prior to the legendary matchup between the two teams at Notre Dame Stadium. The two teams met on October 15, 1988 in South Bend, Indiana. Miami, the defending national champion, came in ranked #1 holding a 36-game regular season winning streak while the Irish were ranked #4. The game, which was preceded by a pregame fight between the two teams in the entrance tunnel, was named by USA Today as one of the greatest college football games of the period 1982–2002.

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After a closely contested game, Miami scored a touchdown with 45 seconds left in the game to pull within one point of Notre Dame, 31–30. Rather than kick the extra point and likely end the game in a tie, Miami head coach Jimmy Johnson decided to go for two, later reasoning that "We always play to win." However, Steve Walsh's pass was batted down by Pat Terrell, and Notre Dame won 31–30.


Miami fans still question the accuracy of a Cleveland Gary fumble on the 1-yard line, which they allege was an incorrect call.

With Miami trailing 31–24 and facing a critical fourth-and-7 from deep in Irish territory midway through the fourth quarter, Walsh connected with Gary streaking across the middle of the field at the Irish 11-yard line for an apparent first down. He caught, turned, was hit and dropped the football. Notre Dame inside linebacker Michael Stonebreaker recovered the football. The referees appeared to improperly rule the play as a turnover on downs, thinking it was fourth-and-goal rather than fourth-and-seven. In addition, many thought Gary had broken the goal line for a touchdown before losing possession of the ball.

[video=youtube_share;CcRNUFbwPiE]https://youtu.be/CcRNUFbwPiE[/video]

After the game, Johnson was adamant that Gary was down before the ball came loose and Miami should have retained possession with a first-and-goal at the Notre Dame 1 yard line. As the game was broadcast, Pat Haden and Brent Musburger seemed certain that the call was correct based on the replays. In its recap of the game, the Notre Dame student newspaper, The Observer, also agreed Gary appeared down before the fumble.

Led by quarterback Troy Aikman, UCLA began the year at #5 and moved up to the top spot after the Hurricanes' loss at Notre Dame. The Bruins would hang on to the #1 ranking for 2 weeks before losing at home to lowly Washington State, 34-30, as Eric Ball, the 1986 Rose Bowl MVP had a crucial fumble in the game. U.C.L.A.'s best running play ended when Ball fumbled at the Bruin 37 after a gain of 17 yards. The fumble occurred midway through the third quarter, when U.C.L.A. led, 27-13. Five plays later, Washington State scored the second of four successive touchdowns. After rebounding with two Pac-10 wins, the rivalry game with Southern Cal went off as a #2 v. #6 match-up in the Rose Bowl.

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The game was one of the notable ones in the UCLA-USC rivalry in that it was for the Pac-10 championship, AND a possible Heisman Trophy for either Troy Aikman of UCLA or Rodney Peete of USC. It was also for the Rose Bowl berth. Rodney Peete was found to have measles in the days before the game. USC used a strong ground game and "bend but don't break" defense, in front of the largest Rose Bowl Stadium regular season crowd in history, to beat the Bruins 31-22.

UCLA wrapped up the season as the first team since 1949 to come from the West to the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. Aikman, who would go on to be the NFL's top pick by the local Dallas Cowboys, led the Bruins to a 17-3 win over #8 Arkansas, the Southwest Conference champs.

With the Miami (FL) game out of the way, and no letdown v. Air Force the following week (41-13), Notre Dame ascended to the top spot for the final 6 weeks of the regular season. It's last road block to the national title lay in Los Angles' Memorial Coliseum in the first ever #1 v. #2 matchup with rival Southern Cal.

In a controversial move, coach Lou Holtz took his 10-0 Irish squad to L.A. without stars Ricky Watters and Tony Brooks, who he suspended for disciplinary reasons. The USC Trojans were having a great season under head coach Larry Smith and standout quarterback Rodney Peete. The Irish came into the game as underdogs, but spectacular play of defensive end Frank Stams and cornerback Stan Smagala aided the Irish offense, led by Tony Rice, to an Irish victory. Notre Dame started out fast with Rice surprising the crowd by throwing deep to Raghib Ismail on the first play of scrimmage.

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On the very next play, Rice optioned left for a 65-yard touchdown. The Trojans were listless, committing four turnovers, including a back-breaking Peete interception to Smagala for another Notre Dame touchdown. In the second half, running back Mark Green added the final touchdown of the day (aided by a key 22-yard gain on a 3rd down screen play by Anthony Johnson) to help defeat the Trojans 27-10. The sellout crowd of 93,829 was the largest in this rivalry since 1955.

******* BOWL SEASON *******

Heisman Trophy winner Barry Sanders of Oklahoma State rushed for 2,628 yards during the season, nearly 1,000 yards more than his nearest competitor (1,692, Darren Lewis of Texas A&M), and led the Cowboys to a 62-14 Holiday Bowl win over Wyoming. Sanders scored 5 touchdowns and gained 222 yards rushing as Ok State erupted for 45 second-half points.

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LSU played a New Year's Day bowl game, losing 23-10 to Syracuse in the Hall of Fame Bowl, and it would be the last time the Tigers would be in action in January until the 2001 season. LSU would go through 4 head coaches during that span, including 6 losing seasons.

#9 Clemson defeated #10 Oklahoma in the Citrus Bowl, 13-6, capping off a 10-2 campaign for the Tigers. The Sooners would finish 9-3 and lost the Big 8 title to Nebraska at home, 7-3, in the regular-season finale.

The Huskers, ranked #6, entered the post-season with a chance for a 1-loss season, but the Orange Bowl was a disaster for them in a 23-3 loss to host Miami (FL).

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Being the late game on January 2 (no games played on Sunday, January 1st that year), the Hurricanes knew their fate was sealed and there would be no national title as #1 and #3 tangled out in the desert before their own kickoff.

For the 2nd time in 3 years, the Fiesta Bowl would play host to two Independents for the national championship. In 1987, #1 vs. #2 took place with Penn State getting a 14-10 win over Miami (FL). This time it would be #3 West Virginia against #1 Notre Dame.

Leading up to the game, Lou Holtz insisted his team couldn't pass the ball and that Tony Rice wasn't a good thrower.

"I don't argue with Coach Holtz," Rice said, tongue in cheek after the game. "If he says we can't throw, we can't throw."

Instead, Rice outdueled West Virginia's Major Harris by completing 7-of-11 passes for 213 yards and two touchdowns.

"For a guy who wasn't supposed to be able to throw, he looked all right to me," said West Virginia coach Don Nehlen.

Harris had been the force behind the Mountaineers' surprise run at the national title. But on the third play of the game, Michael Stonebreaker and Jeff Alm separated his left shoulder with a harsh hit on an option play. It was his non-passing arm and did not force him to miss any time, but the sophomore quarterback was never the same.

"It definitely affected my scrambling," said Harris, who ran for only 11 yards and passed for 166. "I think on certain plays, I was thinking about my shoulder. Every time I landed on it, I could feel the pain."

While Harris battled his injury, Rice was moving Notre Dame up and down the field. Before the Mountaineers could muster a single first down, Rice had the Irish leading 16-0 on a Billy Hackett field goal and touchdown runs by Anthony Johnson and Rodney Culver more than five minutes into the second quarter.
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With two minutes remaining in the first half, Rice connected with Raghib "Rocket" Ismail for 29 yards and another score. Although WVU hit a field goal on the last play of the half, the Irish held a commanding 23-6 lead at the break.

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The lead was 26-6 when West Virginia mounted its final rally. Harris directed a 74-yard drive capped off by a 17-yard TD pass to Grantis Bell that cut the lead to 26-13 with 3:32 remaining in the third quarter. Harris then looked to capitalize on Rice's lone mistake of the day -- a pass intercepted by Willie Edwards -- that gave the Mountaineers the ball on the Irish 26.

The Notre Dame defense had a different agenda. On first down, Flash Gordon dropped Harris for a two-yard loss on an option play. On second down, Stan Smagala deflected a pass in the end zone. On third down, Frank Stams and Arnold Ale sacked Harris for a 12-yard loss that knocked West Virginia out of field goal range.

"Disaster," said Nehlen, whose offense was limited to 282 yards after averaging 482.7 yards and 42.9 points per game during the season. "That was the turning point. Had we put something on the board there, we're in business. That was a monster."

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Rice promptly delivered the final blow to West Virginia's national championship hopes. After he ran 15 yards on a QB draw, Rice hit flanker Ricky Watters with a 57-yard pass that set up a 3-yard TD toss to Frank Jacobs. After Rice ran in for the 2-point conversion, the Irish held an insurmountable 34-13 lead.

The Fiesta Bowl victory completed Holtz's masterpiece, and returned Notre Dame to where Holtz felt it should be -- on top.

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22 days to go ...

A game so large that ESPN took its College GameDay on the road for the first time as #1 played #2 in South Bend, Indiana, where Florida State lost 31-24 to Notre Dame but still managed to win the school's first national championship in one of the most controversial seasons of voting, polls, bowls and more. That was 22 years ago in 1993.

[video=youtube_share;EyeoHdSZN_0]https://youtu.be/EyeoHdSZN_0[/video]

In becoming the first team in 9 seasons to go wire-to-wire as the top-rated team, Florida State was part of one of the most bizarre months of college football during the 1993 season. The Seminoles began the campaign ranked #1 and started the year in the KICKOFF CLASSIC, a 42-0 pasting of Kansas, and would not allow more than 14 points to the opponent until their 9th game of the season.

HIGH RANKING, LOWER RESULT
Alabama, the defending national champs, began the year at #2 and were unblemished heading into the home stretch (only a 17-17 tie to Tennessee), but the Tide suffered losses in 3 of their final 5 games to finish at #18.

Miami (FL) was a top-5 program entering the season but took one on the chin against Florida State, lost a thriller to West Virginia and then were completely embarrassed by Arizona, 29-0, in the Fiesta Bowl as the Hurricanes wound up 15th in the final rankings.

Texas A&M rolled through the Southwest Conference in 1993 but an early 44-14 loss at Oklahoma cost the Aggies a shot at any major accolades and a loss to Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl left them 10-2 on the year.

But it was Michigan that left the worst taste in its fans mouths, starting the year ranked #3, only to lose to Notre Dame and then drop 3 of 4 in October in the Big Ten. The Wolverines fell completely out of the polls, but managed to work their way back as they won the final 4 games to finish 8-4.

LOW RANKING, AMAZING SEASON
Moving in the opposite direction from those 4 teams was Auburn, which would run the table in the SEC and post a perfect 11-0 record despite being on probation. The Tigers were not ranked until Week 5, but wins over #4 Florida and #11 Alabama allowed the team to finish #4 in the final rankings.

West Virginia began the campaign outside of the top 25, but a 35-3 win over Missouri, pushed the Mountaineers into the #25 spot. The team would not lose a game until the bowl season, and laid claim to a spot in the Bowl Coalition National Championship Game until the very end. The 'Neers squeaked by #17 Louisville, #4 Miami and #11 Boston College and with a perfect mark, hollered the loudest about the snub.

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NOVEMBER TO REMEMBER (from ESPN)
Over the span of four weeks, seven top-10 teams lost, including the No. 1 team twice. Florida State entered the month as No. 1, fell out of that spot and still ended the month atop the polls.

By the end of November, three teams would finish the regular season unbeaten (Nebraska, West Virginia and Auburn), but only two were eligible to play for the national title, and only one would wind up playing for it. The debate simmered for years.

Notre Dame fans were upset that Florida State was playing for the national title with one loss, since that one loss came against the Fighting Irish. West Virginia fans were also upset that FSU was playing for the national title with one loss, with the Mountaineers finishing the season undefeated.

In addition, WVU argued that it should be included in the national title game since it had a higher ranking in the coaches poll (No. 2) than Nebraska (No. 3). In the AP poll, Nebraska finished the regular season No. 2 and WVU No. 3. Meanwhile, Auburn fans claimed the Tigers were actually the best team in college football, finishing the season 11-0 and with a win over the eventual SEC champion Florida Gators. The Tigers, however, were on NCAA probation and ineligible for postseason play.

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Here's a look back at 20 things to remember from November 1993.
1. Florida State was the No. 1 team in the AP poll every week of the season prior to November. Entering the month, the Seminoles were 8-0 and had outscored their opponents by a combined total of 350-38.

2. Three of the teams that garnered a lot of attention in November were still not even ranked in the top 5 by the beginning of the month. Nebraska (8-0) was No. 6, Auburn (8-0) was No. 8 and West Virginia (7-0) was No. 11.


3. Ohio State also entered November 8-0, its best start since 1979. Two decades later, the Buckeyes enter November again undefeated.


4. The Miami-WVU game on Nov. 20, 1993, drew a crowd of 70,222 at Mountaineer Field (now called Milan Puskar Stadium). It’s still the largest home crowd in the history of the stadium, which opened in 1980. Capacity for that stadium at that time was 63,000, meaning it was 7,000 over capacity for that game.

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5. Notre Dame was ranked No. 7 in the preseason AP poll, the lowest preseason rank for the Irish since 1988, when they were ranked 13th and went on to win the national title.


6. No. 1 Florida State was a 6 1/2-point favorite for its Nov. 13 matchup at No. 2 Notre Dame on Nov. 13, 1993.


7. ESPN's College GameDay staged its first live remote show at the FSU-ND showdown in South Bend.


8. The “Game of the Century” matchup with Florida State was the ninth 1 versus 2 game in Notre Dame history, and the second for FSU. Overall, it was the 14th regular-season 1 versus 2 matchup in AP poll history.


9. The Irish beat the favored Seminoles 31-24 to improve to 10-0, the third time in the previous six seasons the Fighting Irish started a season 10-0 or better (1988, 1989).

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10. In a wild month, the following Saturday (Nov. 20) was easily the biggest day. Consider what occurred:


  • No. 1 Notre Dame was upset at home by No. 17 Boston College, 41-39, on a last-second 41-yard field goal by David Gordon.
  • No. 9 West Virginia upset No. 4 Miami, 17-14, keeping WVU's undefeated season alive.
  • No. 5 Ohio State suffered its first loss of the season at the hands of its rival, Michigan, losing 28-0.
  • No. 6 Auburn won the Iron Bowl, beating No. 11 Alabama 22-14 and completing a perfect regular season.

11. That Boston College could come in and beat a No. 1 Notre Dame team was surprising enough -- especially considering the Irish had won that matchup by 47 the year before. But it was more of a shocker when you consider the Eagles started the 1993 season 0-2, including a loss at Northwestern, a team that finished just 2-9.


12. A lot was made about how West Virginia did not deserve to play for the national championship over Florida State or Nebraska, because the Mountaineers played a weaker schedule. Mountaineer fans did not want to hear it, but the numbers appear to back up that argument. FSU’s opponents finished 81-61 (.570), Nebraska’s 59-54-1 (.522) and WVU’s 59-64-2 (.480).


13. West Virginia's argument about deserving a shot at the national championship was always the following: WVU beat the team (Boston College, in the regular-season finale) that beat the team (Notre Dame) that beat the team (Florida State).


14. To understand how wacky the month of November was, look at how the AP poll played out since the middle of October:


  • Oct. 18 poll: FSU received all 62 first-place votes
  • Oct. 25: FSU received all 62 first-place votes
  • Nov. 1: FSU received all 62 first-place votes
  • Nov. 8: FSU received all 62 first-place votes
  • Nov. 15: Notre Dame received all 62 first-place votes
  • Nov. 22: Five different teams received at least one first-place vote
  • Nov. 29: Three different teams received at least one first-place vote
  • Dec. 6: Five different teams received at least one first-place vote.

15. Prior to the Bowl Championship Series, college football's championship game matchups were determined by an organization called the Bowl Coalition. It was made up of five conferences: Big East, ACC, SEC, Big 8 and Southwest -- and Notre Dame. The group had six bowl tie-ins: Orange, Fiesta, Cotton, Sugar, Gator and John Hancock (now Sun Bowl). But it did not include the Pac-10 and Big Ten, because those teams had the tie-in to the Rose Bowl. After the wackiness of November, the top five heading the bowls was:

1. Florida State
2. Nebraska
3. West Virginia
4. Auburn
5. Notre Dame

16. West Virginia was actually invited to play No. 7 Texas A&M in the Cotton Bowl, but instead decided to play in the more lucrative Sugar Bowl against No. 8 Florida. The Sugar Bowl was worth approximately $1.1 million more than the Cotton, which elected to invite Notre Dame instead (which beat the Aggies 24-21). The move obviously backfired on the Mountaineers, as they were soundly beaten by the Gators in the Sugar Bowl, 41-7.

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</article>17. After losing to Miami on missed field goals in the final seconds in 1991 and 1992, Florida State recruited the top high school kicking prospect, Scott Bentley. Bentley struggled early in his FSU career (seven missed extra-point attempts in the first five games), but eventually was a difference-maker in the Seminoles' run to the national title, kicking the game-winning field goal in a 18-16 Orange Bowl victory against No. 2 Nebraska and giving Bobby Bowden his first national title (and denying Tom Osborne his).

[video]http://dai.ly/x1cpr05[/video] *** This link opens the 1994 Orange Bowl highlights where you can see Nebraska take a 16-15 lead, kick the ball out of bounds so Florida State and the Heisman Trophy winner start at the 35, two dump passes to Warrick Dunn where the last one also has a 15-yard late hit penalty tacked on, a big 4ht-and-1 running play by FSU that barely gets the first, then a PI on the Huskers in the end zone, and then Bentley ends it.

18. Florida State became the first preseason AP No. 1 team to go on to win the national title since Oklahoma in 1985.


19. Auburn's win streak, which began in 1993 as the lone unbeaten, would eventually reach 20 straight before a tie against Georgia on the next-to-last game of the 1994 season. The Tigers lost the following game to Alabama in the Iron Bowl.


20. The matchup that many Mountaineers fans wanted (WVU versus Nebraska) eventually took place … in 1994. The Cornhuskers slammed the Mountaineers in the 1994 Kickoff Classic in the Meadowlands, 31-0.


BOWL GAME RESULTS

 
20 days to go ... [aka INSIDE OF 3 WEEKS]

Eddie George won the Heisman, Gary Barnett was Coach of the Year, some kid name Maxwell from Nevada was the year's most prolific passer, Troy Davis ran for 2,000 yards, I witnessed one of the greatest games ever at Jones Stadium in Lubbock, and both Jonathan Ogden and Orlando Pace were consensus all-America picks. The year? 1995, 20 seasons ago.

[video=youtube_share;_zKZd2aE3C0]https://youtu.be/_zKZd2aE3C0[/video]

TEXAS TECH 14, #8 TEXAS A&M 7 --- A Trip Down Memory Lane For The Judge
This was a game that meant something to Zach Thomas. For the senior linebacker, it was his last chance. The final opportunity to make the mark he always wanted to, in the rivalry game that he spent three years watching slip out of his hands.

Twice in College Station he came close, but two losses by a combined eight points sent Thomas and the Red Raiders home empty both times.

And there was the 31-6 blowout at home in 1993. Painfully, it separated both trips to Texas A&M, and only intensified his desire to end the losing streak to the Aggies.

In 1995, Texas A&M entered Lubbock with a No. 8 national ranking and riding a 29-game winning streak in Southwest Conference play.

"They were the top," Thomas said. "They had dominated the conference."

Still, that season, something felt different. Not only was it his final time to play Texas A&M, but it was, as he felt, their best chance to beat the Aggies.

Doing so would snap a losing streak that dated back to 1989.

"I knew we had a good team," Thomas said. "Going into that game I felt like we had a good enough of a team to play with anybody."

Even the Aggies.
Perhaps what Thomas didn't know however, was that he would end the game--and the losing streak--with one of the most memorable plays in program history. It came late in the fourth quarter in front of a crowd of 51,205 at Jones AT&T Stadium. With the score tied 7-7, Texas A&M was driving down the field for one last shot at the end zone. NOTE: The attendance was 51,204 + 1 young, hip Judge Smails, who used his connections to get free tickets and then partied all night after the game while his Aggie friend kept drinking to cure the pain.

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With just 30 seconds on the clock, quarterback Corey Pullig dropped back to pass and Thomas, who was showing blitz before the snap, dropped back into coverage.

"His eyes were just staring down his receiver." Thomas said.

Still, Pullig let the pass go, and Thomas stepped into the lane, pulled it out of the air at the 25-yard line, and began running the opposite direction down the sideline and towards the end zone.

"He practically threw it right to me," Thomas added. "And there it was, it was a race to the end zone."

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The Judge is a mere 16 rows up, at the 20 yard line, and I'm not angry that I was not in this photo. The delirium that day was unseen again until Crabtree broke that tackle on 4th down and scored after the white kid dropped the INT on 3rd down in 2008.

Thomas won that race. Really, nobody was going to stop him. Nobody was going to take this moment, this victory out of his hands.

Not this time.

That race to the end zone put an end to the five-year losing streak, and as Thomas so desperately wanted, gave him his first and only win over Texas A&M with a 14-7 victory.

THE REST OF THE 1995 FOOTBALL SEASON

  • The first year of overtime, which occurred during bowl games (Toledo v. Nevada, Las Vegas Bowl)
  • Last tie in college football (3-3, Wisconsin v. Illinois, 11-25-95)
  • The end of the Southwest Conference (4 teams join Big 8, the others move into oblivion)
  • LSU gets permission to wear white jeresy any damn time it pleases
  • Miami (FL) and Alabama, participants in national title game 3 years earlier, are on probation
  • Florida State loses first ACC game v. Virginia (the Judge watched this game with Wahoo fans in Houston at Dirty's Bar on Chimney Rock ... euphoria after the 4th down stop)
  • Ohio State's George narrowly defeated Tommy Frazier of Nebraska for Heisman (less than 300 vote differential)

Only 2 teams were take their place atop the AP standings in 1995, as pre-season #1 Florida State held onto its normal spot during the decade until the 33-28 loss at Virginia. The Noles would lose to Florida in the season finale, before defeating Notre Dame in the Orange Bowl.

The other #1 was Nebraska, the defending national champion, which took over the top billing in November after being #2 for the entire season. The Huskers played as the #1 team in four games, winning 73-14 over Iowa State, 41-3 over #10 Kansas, 37-0 in the rivalry game with Oklahoma and then pummeled #Florida, 62-24 in the Fiesta Bowl to claim the Bowl Alliance National Championship and complete their back-to-back run.

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Nebraska averaged 52.3 points per game in its undefeated run to the championship and were led by the Heisman runner-up Frazier, who amassed 1,362 yards passing with 17 touchdowns and another 604 yards rushing with 14 more touchdowns. Ahman Green paced the ground attack with 1,086 yards and Lawrence Phillips tallied 561 yards rushing and 9 TDs, while on defense, the Blackshirts picked off 20 passes and took 5 back for scores.

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Florida was a juggernaut as well during the year --- prior to the national title game --- and romped past the SEC and 5 top-25 opponents during the regular season. Before the Fiesta Bowl, the Gators' closest games had been 11-point difference against #6 Florida State (35-24) and #7 Auburn (49-38), and they were the favorites heading into the first-ever Bowl Alliance Title Game. Danny Wuerrfel, Elijah Williams, Terry Jackson, Ike Hilliard and Chris Doering paced the Steve Spurrier-led team that average 42.9 ppg.

Peyton Manning and Tennessee, with Jay Graham and Joey Kent, won all its game except the one v. Florida en route to a 12-1 season after winning the Citrus Bowl, "You can't spell Citrus without a U and a T!", against the Big Ten's representative.

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Ohio State
marched into November undefeated, and had the #2 ranking, leading up to "The Game" vs. Michigan in Ann Arbor. A win, and the Buckeyes would have met Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl. The final: Michigan 31, Ohio State 23. Bobby Hoying, Terry Glenn and George couldn't get OSU to the promised land, {and they couldn't stop Tim Biakabutuka either} and then the team faltered in the post-season, too, losing the Citrus Bowl to finish #6 in the polls.

But the nation's darlings in 1995 were the Northwestern Wildcats from Evanston, Illinois. The doormats of the Big Ten for years, Barnett led the Purple-clad Cats to a perfect 8-0 conference record and the Rose Bowl, ending a 59-year drought. Pat Fitzgerald and Darnell Autry captained the team that defeated Notre Dame 17-15, Michigan 19-13, Illinois 17-14 and Penn State 21-10. The only loss was to Miami, Ohio in their 2nd game of the season before facing Southern Cal in bowl season.

After winning all the Coach of the Year awards available, Barnett took the team to Pasadena to face the home-standing USC Trojans. Delon Washington and Keyshawn Johnson paced the Trojans to a share of the Pac-10 title, overcoming a tie with Washington, a loss to Notre Dame and a season-ending defeat to UCLA. The Huskies and Trojans tied at 6-1-1 in the conference, but the Huskies lost 2 non-conference games so the tiebreaker went to USC.

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USC took a 24-7 lead in the 2nd quarter, watched Northwestern battle back in the 4th to take the lead 32-31 and then score the game's final 10 points in the last 9 minutes to win 41-32.

OTHER BOWL GAMES


OVERTIME IN VEGAS
It is also the only Las Vegas Bowl game to go to overtime, with Toledo winning 40-37 and capping an undefeated season.

In the first quarter, quarterback Ryan Huzjak scored on a 31-yard rushing touchdown, giving Toledo an early 7-0 lead. Nevada's Ken Minor would get the equalizer on a 2-yard touchdown run, making it a 7-7 tie. In the second quarter, Wasean Tait scored on touchdown runs of 18 and 31 yards as Toledo claimed a 21-7 lead. With 1 minute left in the first half, Ken Minor scored on a 1-yard touchdown run, as Nevada cut the deficit to 21-14 at halftime.

In the third quarter, Damon Shea kicked a 34-yard field goal to make the score 21-17 Toledo. Dwayne Harris of Toledo scored on a 16-yard touchdown run, but a missed extra point kept the score at 27-17. Nevada's Eric Bennett came back to score on a 4-yard touchdown run, to make the score 27-24 Toledo at the end of three quarters of action.

In the fourth quarter, Wasean Tait scored on a 36-yard touchdown run to push the lead back up to 34-24 for Toledo. Ken Minor answered with his third rushing touchdown of the game, a 1 yarder to make it 34-31 Toledo. Damon Shea kicked a 26-yard field goal to tie the game, and it eventually headed to overtime.

In overtime Damon Shea kicked his third field goal of the game, a 22 yarder for Nevada to take its first lead of the game at 37-34. Wasean Tait rushed for his fourth touchdown of the game, a 2 yarder, as Toledo won in dramatic fashion, 40-37 in overtime, to cap an undefeated season.
 
15 days to go ...

The Big Red of the North was the pre-season #1 ... the Big Red of the South won the national championship ... the Big 12 dominated the polls, letting the top spot go to another conference for just 1 week, and had 5 schools finish in the top 12 post-bowl ranks. The year was 2000, 15 seasons ago in college football.

Pre-season #1 = Nebraska
In his 3rd season as coach, Frank Solich had the Huskers on the path to another national title as they started the year #1 in the pre-season polls. Nebraska reeled off seven-straight wins, including back-to-back poundings of Texas Tech (56-3) and Baylor (59-0), leading up to its showdown with #3 Oklahoma on October 28.

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The Sooners got the better of Nebraska that day in Norman, dismantling the Huskers 31-14. OU fell behind 14-0 after the 1st quarter as QB Eric Crouch picked apart the Sooner defense for 2 scores. Oklahoma would bounce back in a huge way, scoring the game's final 31 points in the span of 20 minutes with 24 in the 2nd quarter, and then the final nail early in the 3rd as Derrick Strait picked off Crouch and took it 32 yards to the end zone.

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Nebraska would bounce back the next week, but then lost for just the second time in 32 years to #16 Kansas State, 29-28 in Manhattan, as Jonathan Beasley hit Quincy Morgan for a 12-yard score with just 2:32 to play in 34-degree weather. After a narrow win over Colorado in the season finale, Nebraska would show the nation it was an elite team by pummeling Northwestern, 66-17 in the Alamo Bowl.

National champ = Oklahoma
The Sooners were also sporting a fairly new coach as Bob Stoops was entering year 2 in Norman. Starting the year ranked #19, Oklahoma would slay 7 ranked opponents on the way to the Big 12 title, the Orange Bowl and the National Championship.

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The team's first real test wasn't until the Red River Rivalry Shoot-Out in Dallas vs. Texas. OU had taken care of its 4 home games to start the season and this year's tilt in the Cotton Bowl among the State Fair attendees was a #10 vs. #11 match-up.

The game was never close, with OU building a huge lead 42-0 in the 2nd quarter and winning 63-14. Known as the TEXAS MASSACRE, Quentin Griffin would score 6 touchdowns against the Longhorns. The wins kept piling up as Oklahoma went into Manhattan and beat K-State 41-31 before the showdown with Nebraska.

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After coming out of that #1 v. #3 game, the Sooners pummeled Baylor before slipping by Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Oklahoma State (an incomplete pass on 4th down, knocked down by Strait [seen above]) to clinch the South Division of the Big 12.

In the Big 12 title game against Kansas State, the Sooners had their hands full in a rematch of their road win vs. the Wildcats. In a game that went back and forth, OU gained control with a 46-yard field goal by Tim Duncan to take a 27-17 lead with 1:25 to play. The win put Oklahoma in a title game showdown in south Florida, meeting up with Florida State in the Orange Bowl.

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The two teams hadn't played since 1980 and were ranked #1 and #2 in the new BCS standings. The 67th Orange Bowl had lots of hype, but was a defensive struggle as the Sooners limited Heisman Trophy winner Chris Weinke to just 214 yards and the Seminoles, who had scored 42 points per game in the regular season, mustered only a safety due to the Sooner's long snapper sending the ball into the 15th row of the bleachers. The 13-2 final was the lowest total for a title game during the BCS era.

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OU, Nebraska, K-State, Texas, Iowa State, Texas A&M and Colorado were all ranked during the season with only the last 2 missing out on the final top-25 poll in the AP.

Domination At Home = Florida State
The Seminoles of 2000 were on a mission, crushing teams at the friendly confines of Doak Campbell Stadium in scores of 63-14, 31-0, 59-7, 63-14 again, 37-3, 54-7 and 30-7. Florida State's issues came on the road as it narrowly escaped Georgia Tech, 26-21, before losing its first of two games in the Orange Bowl ... at Miami (FL) 27-24 on October 7 and then again for the national title.

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Chris Weinke would win the Heisman, the school's 2nd winner in just 7 seasons (Charlie Ward), as he passed for 4,167 yards and 33 touchdowns. Many of those went to Snoop Minnis, whose 63 catches for 1,340 yards were an NCAA-best 21.3 yards per catch, and he hauled in 11 TD passes.

Award Winners




Consensus All-America Teams

* unanimous selection




BCS bowls


Other New Years Day bowls


December bowl games



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Mississippi State v. Texas A&M ... Shreveport, LA ... Independence Bowl

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Oregon State's Chad Johnson streaks down the sideline ... Tempe, AZ ... Fiesta Bowl
 
14 days to go ... [aka JUST TWO WEEKS!!!!!!!!!!]

Football Writers Association of America Unveils 75th Anniversary College Team

DALLAS – The Football Writers Association of America proudly announces its 75th Anniversary All-America Team, celebrating the association's All-America teams from near the end of World War II through the 2014 season. The FWAA, which was founded in1941, has picked an annual All-America team since the 1944 season, making it the second longest continuously selected team inmajor college football.

The FWAA's first All-America team in 1944 included Army's famous running back tandem of Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis and Georgia Tech's Frank Broyles, who later became Arkansas' legendary head football coach. Seven decades later, the 2014 team featured Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Marcus Mariota of Oregon, Outland Trophy winner, offensive tackle Brandon Scherffof Iowa, and Bronko Nagurski Trophy winner, linebacker Scooby Wright III of Arizona.

"This was one of the most fun, yet most difficult exercises I've had in life – next to parallel parking, that is," said FWAA 75th All America Committee chairman Kirk Bohls of the Austin American-Statesman. "Truly, it was an exciting – if not impossible – task to find the best 75 college football players ever. Please save your hate mail, but feel free to weigh in and tell us how we messed up. And I'm sure we did, but no one should argue that it wasn't a great idea to honor the best who have ever played the game. Let the debating begin."

A nomination ballot with selected players from all FWAA All-America teams was sent to the entire membership this spring. The popular vote was then taken into consideration by a Blue Ribbon Committee of FWAA past presidents, current board members and officers. That committee put the finishing touches on selecting the 75-man team. In order for a player to be considered for the FWAA's 75th team, he had to be on a previous FWAA All-America team.

The FWAA's 25-man first team included Navy quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Roger Staubach, the only member from a military academy; the only two-time Heisman Trophy winner running back Archie Griffin of Ohio State; three-time FWAA All-America end Leon Hart of Notre Dame; and the only two-time Outland Trophy winner, center Dave Rimington of Nebraska.

On the three 25-man teams, the Cornhuskers led all schools with six selections – including four on the first team – and four of their overall honorees are Outland Trophy winners. Ohio State and Pittsburgh each had five selections and Alabama, Oklahoma and Texas had four. Schools with three selections were Florida State, Georgia, Michigan and USC.


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75th Anniversary All-Americans by school (75 players from 41 schools): Nebraska 6, Ohio State 5, Pittsburgh 5, Alabama 4, Oklahoma 4, Texas 4, Florida State 3, Georgia 3, Michigan 3, USC 3, Florida 2, Miami (Fla.) 2, Notre Dame 2, UCLA 2, Auburn 1, Baylor 1, Boston College 1, BYU 1, Colorado 1, Georgia Tech 1, Illinois 1, Iowa 1, Kentucky 1, Louisiana Tech 1, Marshall 1, Maryland 1, Michigan State 1, Mississippi Valley State 1, Navy 1, North Carolina 1, N.C. State 1, Oklahoma State 1, Penn 1, Penn State 1, SMU 1, Southern Miss 1, Tennessee 1, Texas A&M 1, Utah State 1, Virginia Tech 1, Washington 1.

75th Anniversary All-Americans by current conference: Big Ten Conference 19, Atlantic Coast Conference 15, Southeastern Conference 13, Big 12 Conference 10, Pac-12 Conference 7, Conference USA 3, Independents 3, American Athletic Conference 2, Ivy League 1, Mountain West Conference 1, Southwestern Athletic Conference 1.


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"Picking the FWAA's 75th Anniversary teams was like taking a final exam with no wrong answers," said 2015 FWAA President Lee Barfknecht of the Omaha World-Herald. "Even though some answers may be more 'right' than others, this will add to the colorful conversation about college football, honor those chosen, and help celebrate the game."

The quarterbacks of the top two teams are both Heisman Trophy winners: Staubach and Tim Tebow of Florida. Quarterback Tommie Frazier of Nebraska was selected to the third team after leading Nebraska to back-to-back national titles and finishing runner-up in the Heisman Trophy his senior season.

All six of the running backs are Heisman Trophy winners: Griffin, Georgia's Herschel Walker, Pittsburgh's Tony Dorsett, Oklahoma State's Barry Sanders, Auburn's Bo Jackson and SMU's Doak Walker. There are 16 Outland winners (selected since 1946) and five Bronko Nagurski Trophy winners (selected since 1993) on the three teams.

All eight decades in which the FWAA teams have been selected are represented on the 75-man team, starting in the 1940s with SMU's Walker all the way through Alabama's two-time All-America Barrett Jones, the 2011 Outland winner. In all, there are 56 members of the National Football Foundation's College Football Hall of Fame and 41 schools are represented on the three 25-man teams. The FWAA has selected All-America Teams in different forms over the years. All the teams are online at allamericateam.com andfootballwriters.com in the All-America section in the FWAA awards area.

"This was truly an enriching experience picking this team," said FWAA Executive Director Steve Richardson. "It put our members in contact with the great players of the past and truly gave them a better snapshot of college football history. All of our All-Americans were great, but picking this team was like choosing between a filet mignon and a Kansas City strip."

Founded in 1941, the Football Writers Association of America consists of 1,400 men and women who cover college football. The membership includes journalists, broadcasters and publicists, as well as key executives in all the areas that involve the game.

The FWAA welcomes comments on the selection of its 75th Anniversary All-America Team. Please send your comments toallamerica@fwaa.com or Tweet them to @TheFWAA.
 
Dee-White ... would anyone score on that 1st-team defense? I mean, just look at that back 7!

And how in the world do you leave off Clemson great Chris Gardocki? Come on.
 
Tebow a great College Football Player but has no business being ahead of Tommie Frazier...
 
Tommie Frazier would piss on Tim Tebow and Tebow would say thanks for the opportunity

What a fucked up list
 
what is above first team? I want to see who VY is playing with.


He had those 2 unreal years, a bit sloppy early but I'd put him on Frazier level or even a bit above.

Those '05 and '06 Rose Bowls might be best b2b bowls ever.
 
He had those 2 unreal years, a bit sloppy early but I'd put him on Frazier level or even a bit above.

Those '05 and '06 Rose Bowls might be best b2b bowls ever.

Frazier was great. Probably has one of, if not THE greatest run ever in what amounts to a championship game.
 
I saw Tommy Frazier at a golf tourney last summer.......would not have known it was Tommy Frazier had my NU-crazed friend not told me it was him. He was a great one, no doubt.
 
Sorry, twink. Been traveling for work a ton this year, especially during the countdown. Sorry to have let you down, but will try to get some things up next week. This worker-guy life is no fun, as I'd much rather be doing daily updates here, but gotta pay the bills.

Thanks for understanding though.
 
Sorry, twink. Been traveling for work a ton this year, especially during the countdown. Sorry to have let you down, but will try to get some things up next week. This worker-guy life is no fun, as I'd much rather be doing daily updates here, but gotta pay the bills.

Thanks for understanding though.

:rofl:its all good bro

just fucking with ya:shake:
 
4 days to go ...

Random things with '4' in them, that I thought were cool.

Illinois RB Howard Griffith still holds the record with 8 rushing touchdowns in a single game. Griffith scored once in the first quarter but saw his team down 21-7 to Southern Illinois, a Division I-AA team, then romped for 3 more scores in the 2nd quarter. He scored 4 touchdowns in the 3rd quarter, finishing with scoring runs of five, 51, seven, 41, five, 18, five and three yards.

Here's a game recap from #15 Illinois win over Southern Illinois, 56-21, on September 22, 1990:
September 23, 1990... From Associated Press ... CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Howard Griffith out-galloped a Ghost and out-shined a Showboat, but he wasn't trying to be anybody but himself. Somebody suggested "Galloping" Griffith would be a good name for a fellow who scored an NCAA-record eight touchdowns. "No nicknames--just call me Howie," Griffith said after No. 15 Illinois trounced Southern Illinois, 56-21. Griffith scored every Illini touchdown, exceeding the record of seven set in 1951 by Mississippi's Arnold (Showboat) Boykin against Mississippi State. Also gone is the record of 43 points in a game, set by Jim Brown of Syracuse against Colgate in 1956. Wiped out as well was perhaps Illinois' most revered record--five touchdowns scored by Red Grange, the "Galloping Ghost," in a 1924 game against Michigan. Grange's five touchdowns came in the dedication game of Memorial Stadium. Griffith, who carried 21 times for 208 yards before a crowd of 64,469, was carried off the field by his teammates after his eighth touchdown. Griffith put the Illini (2-1) on the scoreboard first, but the Salukis (2-2) used two turnovers--one by Griffith--to take a 21-7 lead in the first quarter. After the Illini changed quarterbacks in the second quarter, Griffith scored three touchdowns to allow his team to regain the lead. He got four more touchdowns in the third quarter as the Illinois defense shut out the Salukis, a Division I-AA team, the last 46 minutes of the game."Howard's performance today was a great one and those TDs weren't gimmes, either," Coach John Mackovic said. "Our line did a nice job blocking for him, but he made several of those runs work." Griffith scored on runs of five, 51, seven, 41, five, 18, five and three yards. "I just hope someone got a snapshot of the scoreboard when we were up 21-7," Southern Illinois Coach Bob Smith said. "We didn't get beat because we played badly; we got beat because Illinois is bigger, stronger and faster than us in a lot of areas." When Jeff Kinney replaced Jason Verduzco at quarterback, Illinois scored on its next three drives to take control of the game."We were off to a slow start," Mackovic said. "Jason was OK, but we weren't doing anything and we weren't moving. "It allowed us to see (Kinney) play under pressure." Kinney, a sophomore, engineered scoring drives on seven of eight possessions but took little credit for the success."Howard Griffith right, Howard Griffith left," Kinney said. "He played a great game." Griffith turned down a scholarship at Southern Illinois to walk on at Illinois. He earned a scholarship and has started for the Illini for three years.


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Central Florida RB Kevin Smith ... NCAA record 450 rushes in a single season in 2007.

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He had a standout college career as a Knight, becoming UCF's all-time leading rusher after just three seasons (2005–07). He started 34 out of 36 games for the Knights, establishing new career records with 905 carries for 4,864 yards (5.37 avg) and 45 touchdowns. His 4,864 yards rank second in Conference USA history. His 180 points scored in 2007 rank fourth on the NCAA season-record chart. During his junior campaign Smith set a major college record of 450 rushing attempts, topping the old mark of 405 carries by Marcus Allen (USC) in 1981 and falling just 62 yards shy of setting the NCAA season-rushing record of 2,628 yards set by former Lions great, Barry Sanders (Oklahoma State) in 1988. Early in his last season, Smith was touted as a dark horse candidate for the Heisman trophy and ended up finishing in eighth place with 55 total points and three first-place votes to become only the second UCF player (after Daunte Culpepper, his future Lions teammate) to receive Heisman votes. He was also the first consensus All-American from UCF, being selected to almost every 2007 All-American First Team, including SI.com's.



Klingler Has NCAA-Record 11 TD Passes
November 18, 1990 ... MICHAEL A. LUTZ ... ASSOCIATED PRESS ... HOUSTON — David Klingler threw an NCAA-record 11 touchdown passes and tied the NCAA season record of 47 scoring throws in a season, leading No. 12 Houston to an 84-21 victory over Eastern Washington on Saturday. A week ago, the Texas Longhorns beat Houston, 45-24, knocking the Cougars (9-1) out of a chance to win the national championship and ending their 12-game winning streak. Klingler wanted to put that behind them in a hurry.
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"That (the record) is nice, something I might look back on, but what's important is the won-loss and I wish we had that one last week," Klingler said. "I wish we could switch weeks, but this is the best week I've had as far as accuracy." The Cougars scored on their first six possessions on passes by Klingler, who extended his NCAA record of most 400-yard passing performances in a season to eight. "It was pretty much like practice," receiver Tracy Good said. "We've had harder practices. Their defensive backs weren't too fast. It was like a scrimmage, really." Eastern Washington hadn't been beaten so badly in 68 years. Coach Dick Zornes was not too happy after he watched his Eagles suffer their worst loss since they were beaten 81-0 by the Washington State freshman team in 1922. "They've got great athletes and they leave them in from the beginning to the end," Zornes said. "That's him (Houston Coach John Jenkins). Some day, he'll be on the other end of the broom. "The things I believe in obviously aren't the same things he believes in. He's probably disappointed he couldn't leave them in the last five minutes."

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Klingler completed 41 of 58 passes for 452 yards and left the game with 8:24 to play. Jenkins has become accustomed to hearing teams complaints about the Cougars running up the score. "We go at everyone with the same tempo, the 49ers or St. Mary's Cathedral," Jenkins said. "David deserves to get his reps. I'm not going to take him out at the half. National records had nothing to do with it." The Cougars, whose 12-game winning streak was snapped last week by Texas, burst to a 42-14 halftime lead on Klingler's touchdown passes, including two each to Chuck Weatherspoon and Manny Hazard and one each to John Brown III and Tracy Good. Klingler threw touchdowns of 40 yards to Verlon Brown, eight and seven to Patrick Cooper in the 21-point third quarter to tie the NCAA record of nine touchdown passes in a game by San Diego State's Dennis Shaw in 1969. The record came with 13:35 left on an eight-yard touchdown pass to TiAndre Sanders after a 57-yard punt return by Weatherspoon. Klingler's 51-yarder to Marcus Grant with 12:40 left in the game tied the NCAA mark of 47 touchdown passes in a season, set by BYU's Jim McMahon in 1980. Weatherspoon became the fourth player in Southwest Conference history to rush for 1,000 yards in three consecutive seasons.


Louisiana Tech WR Troy Edwards sets record in loss at Nebraska
In the 1998 season opener, the Huskers posted a 56-27 victory over the Bulldogs in the Eddie Robinson Classic, but it was Louisiana Tech’s passing show that set records. The game featured more than 1,000 yards of total offense, and the Huskers posted a comfortable victory despite being out-gained 569 to 462. Louisiana Tech quarterback Tim Rattay completed 46-of-68 pass attempts for 590 yards and four touchdowns in the losing effort. Rattay’s 590 passing yards are 101 yards more than the No. 2 passing effort against Nebraska. Tech receiver Troy Edwards made a name for himself by setting an NCAA record with 405 receiving yards on 21 receptions. The next highest receiving total against Nebraska is 220 yards. Edwards caught four touchdown passes, including three TD receptions of more than 50 yards. Edwards’ 94-yard touchdown reception is the second-longest ever against Nebraska, while an 80-yard connection between Rattay and Edwards is tied for the eighth-longest passing touchdown against the Huskers.

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Despite the aerial heroics by Louisiana Tech, Nebraska cruised to the victory on the strength of holding the Bulldogs to a minus-21 yards rushing on 14 attempts. Offensively, Nebraska received 143 rushing yards from Correll Buckhalter and a 9-of-10 passing effort by quarterback Bobby Newcombe. Nebraska sprinted to a 35-6 edge at halftime and held a 32:04 to 27:56 advantage in time of possession.
 
2 days to go ...

If the Heisman Trophy is the measuring stick the general public uses to determine greatness in college football, then there's just one player that rises above since he has 2 trophies ... Archie Griffin, RB, Ohio State and the 1974 and 1975 Heisman Trophy winner.

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1974: 256 carries, 1,695 yards (6.6 ypc), 12 touchdowns in leading the Buckeyes to a 10-2 record (7-1 in Big10) and a Rose Bowl berth

ESPN Article from Dec 2014...
COLUMBUS, Oh. -- When 24 former Heisman Trophy winners gather in New York this weekend to welcome the newest member into college football's most exclusive fraternity, former Ohio State running back Archie Griffin will be two of them.

Forty years ago last week, Griffin, a Buckeye junior, won the 1974 Heisman. And 40 years ago next December, Griffin won a second. He remains the only player in the history of the game to win its most prestigious individual award twice.

Were that the only characteristic that set apart Griffin from the other Heismen, it would be enough. The difficulty of winning a second Heisman has amplified beyond merely being the best player in college football in consecutive seasons.

The NFL beckons players three years out of high school. A demanding voting body compares the defending Heisman winner not only to every other college football player that season, but to his winning performance a year earlier.

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1975: 262 carries, 1,450 yards (5.5 ypc), 4 touchdowns in leading Ohio State to a perfect 8-0 Big10 record, another trip to the Rose Bowl and an 11-1 overall

But that's not the reason that the Heisman fraternity has a special place in its membership for Griffin. As far as the other winners are concerned, the next two-time winner will have to not only better his own performance on the field, but match Griffin off it.

"Archie is the godfather of the group," said Andre Ware, the 1989 Heisman winner and an ESPN college football analyst. "He is the standard."

"He's one of the humblest Heisman Trophy winners I've ever been around," said George Rogers, the 1980 winner. "He doesn't say very much, but when he does, everybody listens."

"Archie always handles himself well," said Gino Torretta, the 1992 Heisman recipient. "There's a ton of respect for him."

In an era when the past two Heisman winners have been guilty of boorish, immature behavior off the field, their older brethren are concerned about them tracking mud into the Heisman House.

"Good guys don't do those things," Rogers said. "It's a reflection on the next guy, and the next guy, and the next guy, and the next guy. Everybody knows if you're a hardhead or not."

Added Torretta, "Tim Brown said, 'I wouldn't vote for anybody who wins the award to win it again. I think Archie should be the only two-time winner.'"

Brown, the 1987 winner, did not return calls seeking comment.


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The woods are full of college football heroes who blaze into the public consciousness and fade away as age and gravity rob them of their athletic gifts. Griffin remains an iconic figure because of gifts he has continued to display long after he retired in 1982 after seven seasons in professional football.

He has never met a stranger. He never loses his patience. That means, when he's dining out in his hometown of Columbus, he never finishes a meal without interruption from a Buckeye who wants to tell him about how he saw Griffin rush for 160 yards versus UCLA as a senior, or wants to hear about how Griffin never lost to Michigan (3-0-1) in four seasons, or, What was Woody Hayes like?

"I feel it's a gift that could be taken away at any time," he said. "I'm going to appreciate that gift, let people know I appreciate the way that they think of me. ... Yesterday, I must have been asked three or four times about football. For people to remember after that period of time? It blows me away! It really does. It blows me away."

Imagine that. Of course the people who need to hear that wisdom, the 25-year-old multimillionaires that modern professional sports created, don't always listen. It's not as if Griffin came to that realization late in life, as if he decided to be humble after life had humbled him. It has ever been thus.

For instance, there's the story of how Griffin won his second Heisman, in 1975, even though he failed that season to become the first (and still would be the only) three-time winner of the Silver Football, given to the Big Ten most valuable player. His teammate and roommate, quarterback Cornelius Greene, won that award.

Larry Romanoff served as a senior manager on the 1972 team, Griffin's freshman year. Romanoff retired this year after more than four decades in the Ohio State athletic department.

"In 1975, Corny Greene was voted MVP of the Ohio State team," Romanoff said. "That's when they would take the 10 [team] MVPs and vote on who won the Silver Football. And the only reason that Corny Greene won that award was that Archie went to everybody on the team and said, 'Look, I won that award in '73. I won that award in '74. You guys got to vote for Corny. He deserves to win it.'"

Greene won the team MVP by one vote -- Griffin's vote.

"How many guys do that?" Romanoff asked. "And if you go back and look in your history books, I bet you don't find another Heisman Trophy winner that wasn't MVP of his own team."


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Or there's the penniless football graduate assistant (yes, a redundancy) in the mid-1980s who needed Christmas presents for his family.

"I had zero. I was in debt," Buckeye head coach Urban Meyer said. "I had sisters, parents, grandparents, so the only way I could get them gifts was I would go get autographed pictures from Archie Griffin and give everyone that for Christmas. I was the hero, and it cost me zip. My sisters still got them."

Meyer wore No. 45, Griffin's number, when he played. He signed his name with a 45, the way Griffin did.

"It's not just the number," Meyer said. "It's what he stands for and the way he handled his business. He's a role model. To me, he's the ultimate. Two-time Heisman Trophy winner, that's the most humble, genuine -- one of the most genuine guys I've ever been around."

Griffin spent the first half of his non-football life working in the Ohio State athletic department and hoping for an opportunity to become athletic director. And then, in 2003, The Ohio State University Alumni Association asked him to interview to become its president.

"Rex Kern [quarterback of the 1968 national champion Buckeyes] called me," Griffin said, "and he had served on the alumni association board of directors, and told me that you couldn't ask for a better job. ... People just told me, 'That is the job that just fits you,' mainly because I seem to get along well with people."

The job is no sinecure arranged for a hero home from the wars, not at an institution the size of Ohio State University.

"A lot of schools have hired their former athletes in alumni relations or development," Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said. "There's no one I can think of who has the level of responsibility he does. We have 500,000 alumni. His schedule has to be ridiculous."


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A couple of Fridays ago, Griffin spoke to a group of Ultimate Software customers meeting for breakfast at the Ohio Union. He got a forkful or two of his scrambled eggs and potatoes into his mouth before he was summoned to be Archie Griffin.

He strode across the room to stand behind the lectern. Griffin has retained his athletic build more than four decades after he came to campus from nearby Eastmoor High. Greene, the quarterback, once recalled one of their first practices, when this squat, muscular classmate beat him in a sprint.

"Goodness," Greene thought, "the guards here are running 4.5s."

The first thing he did, which he does at every speaking engagement, is what he calls "a Buckeye test."

"O!-H!" Griffin yelled.

"I!-O!" came the louder reply.

Griffin spoke of his reverence for Hayes while promoting the volunteer opportunities at the alumni association, telling the story of how he went from fifth-string tailback to setting the school rushing record in one afternoon against North Carolina at Ohio Stadium. It was the second Saturday of his freshman season. On the first Saturday, on his first carry, Griffin had fumbled the football. He worried that Hayes, with his fiery temper, would never give him a second carry.
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"All of a sudden," Griffin told his rapt audience, "midway through the first quarter, a call from the bench, 'Griffin!' Kept calling, 'Griffin!' I knew he wasn't talking to me. Couldn't have been talking to me. All week on the scout squad, couldn't have been me.

"But I was the only Griffin on the team at the time, so I went up to Coach Hayes. He grabbed me by the shoulder and told me to go in at tailback.

"I got all excited. I went to run out on the field. One of my teammates called me back. Because in all of the excitement, I had forgotten to take my helmet."

Griffin didn't fumble this time. In fact, he ran for 239 yards and came out early in the fourth quarter to a standing ovation. That tribute remains his most treasured memory of his four seasons as a Buckeye.

"I was actually on the sideline at North Carolina, the visitors' sideline, running the balls," Romanoff said. "The coach [Bill Dooley] kept going, 'Who the hell is that guy?'"

Griffin spoke for a half-hour, answered questions, and then left -- without finishing the cold eggs and potatoes -- so that the Ultimate folks could convene their business meeting. And when he left, three women followed Griffin into the hallway, meeting be damned, and handed an observer their phones to take a picture of each of them with Griffin.


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He walked down the hall of the Union, past the Archie M. Griffin Grand Ballroom, past the 1975 Heisman, which sits behind glass outside the ballroom. The 1974 Heisman is showcased at the Buckeye Hall of Fame Grill.

"If they're sitting in my house," he explained as he kept walking, "no one would see them."

The next morning, Griffin navigates through an icy rain toward Ohio Stadium, where he parks about 15 yards from the entrance less than an hour before Ohio State kicks off against Indiana (It's good to be the king). He knows the guys at the entrance to the Stadium West parking lot, one of whom waits with a jersey for Griffin to sign. He does so, using his steering wheel as a table, with a neat, legible hand.

Beneath his name, he writes, "H-T."

Beneath that, he writes, "'74-'75."

He has never forgotten where he came from, literally and otherwise. Griffin likes to point out that he came into this world at the campus hospital, just south of the Horseshoe, that he played at the Horseshoe, and that he has worked for some 30 years in two buildings -- St. John Arena, where he worked as an assistant athletic director -- and the Longaberger Alumni House, both a short walk from the 'Shoe.

That Griffin played at Ohio State was something of an anomaly for Hayes, who hesitated before signing recruits from Columbus because of the pressure on a boy playing in his hometown.

"When Bo [Schembechler, the late Michigan coach] was living," Griffin said, "he used to always tell me, 'You know, Woody would have never recruited you if I hadn't recruited you first.'"

He believes his job in Suite 19, the one that belongs to the alumni association, is not to watch Buckeye football. His job is to serve as host and greeter to the guests who are in Suite 19 and beyond. When Ohio State scored its first touchdown, Griffin had his back turned to the field, speaking quietly with a lovely older woman in the back of his suite. Later in the first half, he quietly ducked out to stop by the suites of the businesses that sponsor Ohio State athletics.

"He travels with us and sits in my suite," said Smith, the athletic director. "Opposing fans in other suites will come to my suite. ... We'll be in airports and I have to walk over and literally drag him away. 'Our plane is leaving,' I say. Archie would stand there talking to them."

Watch the game? Griffin does that at home on Sunday morning, when the replay is televised.

In the end, Griffin speaks of three great influences in his life. His mother and father -- who expected all eight of their children to graduate from college even though they had not (all seven boys and one daughter did just that) -- and Hayes. Not the volatile man who is recalled for the way he attacked officials and sportswriters and, at the end of his career, an opposing player.


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Griffin recalled the man who spoke to his players about education and military history, the man who had foresworn money and considered Ralph Waldo Emerson's "Compensation" to be sacred text.

"Woody always called it, 'Paying forward,' doing things to help others," Griffin said. When he speaks to audiences about Hayes, Griffin always mentions Emerson.

"In the order of nature," Emerson wrote, "we cannot render benefits to those from whom we receive them, or only seldom. But the benefit we receive must be rendered again, line for line, deed for deed, cent for cent, to somebody. Beware of too much good staying in your hand. It will fast corrupt and worm worms. Pay it away quickly in some sort."


Or, as Griffin said of his fame, every benefit is a gift that could be taken away at any time. If the next two-time Heisman winner must measure up to the standard set by Griffin, we may wait a while.
 
1 day to go ...

26 schools have only ever been to 1 bowl game, and nine of those have perfect 1-0 records with Bucknell, The Citadel, Columbia, Duquesne, Eastern Michigan, George Washington, Great Lakes Navy, Harvard and Tampa in that group


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Bucknell won the 1934 Orange Bowl, the very first Orange Bowl in fact, 26-0 over Miami (FL)

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The Citadel
won the 1960 Tangerine Bowl (now the Citrus Bowl) in a 27-0 shutout over Tennessee Tech

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Columbia
was a 7-0 winner over Stanford in the 1934 Rose Bowl to cap an 8-1 season

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Duquesne
only played 14 seasons of big-boy football but won the 1937 Orange Bowl, 13-12, over Mississippi State

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Eastern Michigan
, a perennial doormat since the mid-80s, won the 1987 California Bowl over San Jose State, 30-27 to cap a 10-2 campaign

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George Washington
concluded an 8-1-1 season on January 1, 1957 with a 13-0 win over Texas-El Paso; the program ended in 1966

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Great Lakes Navy
, established during both war times in the 20th century, played 5 seasons and went to the 1919 Rose Bowl where it defeated Mare Island Marines, 19-0 as George Halas (above, right) was the game's MVP


1919harvard_rose.png

Harvard
would make its only bowl appearance the very next year in the 1920 Rose Bowl, defeating Oregon 7-6 and capping off its only national championship season with a 9-0-1 record

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Tampa
played just 7 seasons of football but made it to the 1972 Tangerine Bowl, defeating Kent State 21-18 behind the running of Freddie Solomon

************************************************************

Schools that have a chance to make this list in 2015/2016 are:
Appalachian State
Georgia Southern
Georgia State
Massachusetts
Old Dominion
Texas State
Texas - San Antonio

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UMass has a 1998 Division I-AA National title but no bowl wins at the D-I level


Other schools looking for first bowl win in 2015/2016 are:

Alabama-Birmingham (0-1) ... when they come back from the program closing up shop
Ball State (0-7)
Buffalo (0-1)
Kent State (0-2)
Louisiana-Monroe (0-1)
South Alabama (0-1)
Western Michigan (0-5)

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South Alabama lost to Navy in 2013, above, and lost to Bowling Green in the Camelia Bowl of 2014


BOWL RECORDS:
Bowl Appearances: ALABAMA, 62
Bowl Wins: ALABAMA, 35
Bowl Loses: NEBRASKA, 26
Bowl Ties: 3 schools with 3 (Alabama, Arkansas and Georgia)
Winning Percentage: 14 schools with 1,000% (Louisiana-Lafayette and West Texas A&M, 4-0)

27rosebowl004_medium.jpg

1927 Rose Bowl: Alabama 7, Stanford 7 ... teams split national championship ... first ever coast-to-coast radio broadcast on NBC ... first tie in the Rose Bowl
 
I love you Judge

BUT

This is my favorite thread to see GO AWAY

Cuz that means....IT IS TIME!!
 
Same feeling here, twinkie. Just means it's time for football.

Another summer in the books, amigos, so let's get some wins starting tomorrow night!!!

[I think I might have something for tomorrow morning, too.]
 
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