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Wide Right II

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the 2024 NFL play, see2023–24 NFL playoffs § AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 27, Buffalo Bills 24.

College football game
Wide Right II
Non-conference game
Florida State SeminolesMiami Hurricanes
(4–0)(3–0)
1619
Head coach: 
Bobby Bowden
Head coach: 
Dennis Erickson
APCoaches
33
APCoaches
22
1234Total
Florida State733316
Miami0100919
DateOctober 3, 1992
Season1992
StadiumOrange Bowl
LocationMiami,Florida
RefereeJoe Rider
Attendance77,338
United States TV coverage
NetworkABC
AnnouncersKeith Jackson andBob Griese

Wide Right II is a colloquial name for the1992 college football game between theMiami Hurricanes andFlorida State Seminoles. The game is notable in theFlorida State–Miami football rivalry and derives its name from the colloquial nameWide Right I, played during the immediately preceding season. Like its predecessor, the game had decisivenational championship implications and ended with a Florida State kicker missing a game-alteringfield goal in the waning seconds.[1]

Background

[edit]

Miami entered the October 3, 1992, matchup of intrastate rivals as thedefending national champion and second-ranked team in the country, riding a 20-game winning streak. Miami, however, appeared to be vulnerable, asHurricane Andrew had disrupted the early portion of its schedule and Miami was unimpressive in surviving an 8-7 scare against theArizona Wildcats the week prior. Because of Miami's lackluster performance against Arizona, the Hurricanes lost their number one ranking in theAP Poll and were dropped to number two, behind theWashington Huskies. Nevertheless, Miami featured a bevy of stars on its roster, includingHeisman Trophy candidate quarterbackGino Torretta, wide receiverLamar Thomas, and linebackersJessie Armstead andMicheal Barrow, and the team was in the midst of anNCAA-record 58-game home winning streak at theOrange Bowl.Florida State was looking to avenge its loss to Miami inWide Right I the season before.[2]

The game

[edit]

Florida State came strong out of the gate, asTamarick Vanover took the opening kickoff back 94 yards for atouchdown. Miami struck back in the second quarter with a 24-yard Dane Prewitt field goal and a 29-yard touchdown pass fromGino Torretta toColeman Bell, taking the lead, 10–7. Florida State countered with a 22-yard field goal by Dan Mowrey, and the teams headed to the locker room deadlocked at 10.

Mowrey added a 38-yard field goal in the third quarter and a 41-yarder early in the fourth. Leading 16–10 with just over 9 minutes to play, the Seminoles found themselves in a position eerily similar to the season before: a 6-point lead late in the game and a field goal kicker who was 3-for-3 on the day.

Miami responded as it did the season before, going on a 7-play, 58-yard drive that culminated with a 33-yard touchdown pass from Torretta toLamar Thomas. Torretta was drilled as he released the ball, but Thomas was able to sneak behindClifton Abraham and make a basket catch. With the extra point, Miami seized the lead, 17–16.

Miami's defense held on the next possession, and the Florida State defense forced a punt on Miami's subsequent series. The ensuing punt proved disastrous for the Seminoles: punt returnerCorey Sawyer was penalized for attempting an illegal forward pass from his own end zone, resulting in asafety for Miami. With Miami now leading 19–16, a field goal could only tie the game for the Seminoles. The Miami defense again held, but Florida State then forced the 'Canes to punt, giving the Seminoles one last chance with 1:35 left.

QuarterbackCharlie Ward drove the Seminoles 59 yards and into field goal range, converting a crucial fourth-and-12 with a completion toKez McCorvey along the way. The drive was highlighted by Matt Frier's diving, fingertip reception for 17 yards. After Ward picked up 19 yards on two quick scrambles, the Seminoles were on the Miami 22-yard line but nearly out of time. On the game's final play, Florida State called upon Mowrey to make a 39-yard field goal and tie the game at 19. With both Miami's and Florida State'snational championship hopes again hanging in the balance, Mowrey, kicking into the open end of theOrange Bowl, missed wide right and collapsed face down onto the turf.

Aftermath

[edit]

Miami once again used a hard-fought win over its rival as a springboard for a national championship run, winning its final seven regular season games and earning a berth in the1993 Sugar Bowl as the nation's number one team in both theAP andCoaches' Polls. This time, however, the Hurricanes could not complete the perfect season, losing to the second-ranked and eventual national championAlabama Crimson Tide in the Sugar Bowl 34–13, and finishing 11–1 and ranked third in the country.

Unlike the previous season, when the Seminoles followed up their loss to Miami with an upset loss toFlorida, Florida State rebounded and won the rest of its games, going 11–1 on the season. The Seminoles soundly defeated theNebraska Cornhuskers in the1993 Orange Bowl, 27–14, and, despite the loss to Miami, were ranked second in the final polls, one spot ahead of the Hurricanes.

The game was the second in a peculiar string of 5 games in 12 years in which Florida State lost to Miami due to a late missed field goal that would have won or tied the game for the Seminoles, often with national championship implications.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Bradley, Michael (2006).Big games: college football's greatest rivalries. Potomac Books. pp. 61–.ISBN 978-1-57488-908-6. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2012.
  2. ^Long, Gary (2006).Stadium stories: Florida State Seminoles. Globe Pequot. p. 114.ISBN 978-0-7627-4093-2. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2012.
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