| In the first round of the major college football playoffs Saturday,
Miami escaped from Virginia Tech, Tennessee upset Florida, Oregon
survived Oregon State, Colorado got revenge on Texas, and Virginia
eliminated Penn State.
Thats the way it could have been if there were playoffs in the
N.C.A.A.s Division I-A. All of those games were decided by 6
points or less, and four by 3 points or less (three by 2 points)
on a rare balmy first Saturday in December.
Instead of playoffs we have the BCmesS, choreographed by Disney
(ABC and ESPN) with a Pepsi Twist of late-season missteps. Last
week, Nos. 1, 2 and 3 collapses, and Saturday another No. 2 fell.
Entering the week, Miami was No. 1 and Florida was No. 2 and Texas
was No. 3 and Nebraska was No. 4 and Oregon was No. 5 and Tennessee
was No. 6 and Colorado was No. 7.
No. 1 Miami finished the season with a perfect 11-0 by barely
surviving as a 13-point favorite at Virginia Tech, 26-24. But
the Hurricanes won a trip to the Rose Bowl to play a team to be
named later in the national championship game on Jan. 3 at 8 P.M.,
Eastern, on ABC, of course. Everyone thought Florida would be
Miamis opponent. Everyone, that is, but Tennessee.
No. 2 Florida (9-2) was a 18-point favorite over No. 6 Tennessee
(10-1) but fell at home, 34-32. Instead of distracting his team
by publicly blaming the Florida State senior citizen Bobby Bowden
for intentionally injuring his star running back Earnest Graham,
Florida coach Steve Spurrier, the Mouth of the South, should have
focused on Tennessee coach Phillip Fulmer.
No. 3 Texas (10-2) fell behind early to surging No. 7 Colorado
(10-2) as Chris Simms forced passes into three interceptions and
lost a fumble in the Dr Pepper Big XII Championship game at Texas
Stadium. Then came the Marry Me Major sign and the appearance
of Major Applewhite on Army-Navy day to rescue the Longhorns.
He did not win a promotion to colonel as Colorado avenged an earlier
41-7 licking from Texas by sending Chris Brown into the end zone
three times (179 yards on 34 carries) on the 98G rush off tackle,
as he did six times for touchdowns against Nebraska, for a convincing
39-37 victory. ABCs Brent Musburger was convinced that Nebraska
would be in the title game before he had to retrieve his Porterhouse-thick
Texas brochure from his garbage last Monday. We did it with heart,
Colorado coach Gary Barnett said of his Buffaloes, college footballs
best team down the homestretch.
No. 4 Nebraska (11-1), still hanging around despite being hammered
by Colorado, 62-36, was watching the others on television and
could wind up in Pasadena.
No. 5 Oregon (10-1) survived a subpar game by New York billboard
boy Joey Harrington and beat Oregon State, 17-14, in the Civil
War. The Oregon State Beavers entered the season as Sports Illustrateds
coverboys and projected No. 1 team before the S.I. jinx struck
them.
And, all inspired Penn State, a 6-point favorite, needed was a
sixth victory to become bowl eligible after starting the season
0 for 4. But redshirt freshman quarterback Zack Mills, headlined
General Mills Is In Command by The Washington Post last Tuesday,
was ambushed at Virginia. He saved his worst for last, throwing
three interceptions, allowing Al Grohs Cavaliers to rally from
a 14-3 deficit for a crushing 20-14 victory. Zack is still a
freshman, coach Joe Paterno said. I think he got flustered.
Four turnovers in a game and youre going to get licked. The
turnovers sent Penn State to its second consecutive losing season
at 5-6, again without a bowl, for the first time in Joe Paternos
coaching history and left the Nits 10-16 in their last 26 regular-season
games. After opening with Central Florida next Aug. 31, the Nits
play Nebraska on Sept. 14, which is not a soothing way for a reeling
team to recover. I thought we had out best win today, and played
our best game so far, Groh said of his Cavaliers (5-7). Our
greatness lies in the future, and tomorrow we have to go get it.
The days biggest irony was that both Mills and Simms threw three
interceptions each in their teams losses. When Penn State lost
Simms, it went after Mills.
So who will play Miami? Certainly not Florida, but maybe Colorado,
because it humiliated Nebraska, or Oregon, fittingly as the traditional
Pacific-10 Conference representative in the Rose Bowl, or Tennessee,
which next plays Louisiana State for the Southeastern Conference
title. The final BCmesS standings on Dec. 9 will determine who
plays Miami.
In the Heisman Trophy playoffs, Miamis Ken Dorsey survived while
Floridas Rex Grossman failed, and Oregons Harrington was eclipsed
by the defense leading the Ducks comeback. So that leaves either
Dorsey (21 of 44 for 235 yards and a touchdown), or the best college
football in the country, the Paul Hornung of his time, Antwaan
Randle El, as the favorites to strike the Heisman pose next Saturday
night. Even Archie Griffin, the only two-time Heisman winner,
thinks no one parallels Randle El, the magician for Indiana (5-6).
If he were at Notre Dame, like Hornung was in 1956 with a 2-8
team, he would win in a landslide.
Even the playoff survivors struggled. Miami hung on after Virginia
Tech returned a blocked punt for a touchdown but a wide-open Ernest
Wilford let a two-point conversion pass that would have tied at
26-26 slip through his fingertips in the end zone. Miamis defense
forced quarterback Grant Noel into four interceptions and a fumble.
Noel is no Randle El.
"I'm happy we won," cornerback Phillip Buchanon said, "but walking
off the field I didn't have that feeling you should for a team
going to the Rose Bowl."
Miami again struggled on the road as it did before escaping at
Boston College, 18-7. At home since the trip to New England, Miami
outscored Syracuse and Washington, 124-7.
"Our team didn't flinch," Miami coach Larry Coker said. "It certainly
didn't look good for us at times, but I'm extremely proud of the
way we played."
In The Swamp, Florida allowed Travis Stephens, to run for a career-high
226 yards. Stephens had touchdown runs of 49, 35 and 68 yards
as only Herschel Walker once did against Florida.
After Grossman led Florida on its final 77-yard touchdown drive
and failed on the 2-point conversion, Tennessee recovered the
onside kick and its band blared the Rocky Top fight song. Tennessee
had not won at Florida Field since 1971, when Fulmer played guard
at Tennessee. Incidentally, he is no longer at his playing weight.
Stephens had runs of 49, 35 and 68 yards as only Herschel Walker
did against the Gators.
The most poignant game was Army-Navy, with the No. 1 fan, George
W. Bush, watching the Black Knights, who are up the Hudson River
north of the fallen twin towers, beat the Midshipmen, 26-17, against
the backdrop of the war against terrorism. For the Army guys
overseas, I think they are smiling right now, maybe they have
some motivation, Army linebacker Brian Zickefoose said. They
have bragging rights for a year. |