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- <text id=93TT0661>
- <title>
- Nov. 22, 1993: The Arts & Media:Sport
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 22, 1993 Where is The Great American Job?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 83
- Sport
- Not Again!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Once more, Florida State fails to "win the Big One," as they
- come up short against Notre Dame.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Greg Aunapu/Miami and Julie R. Grace/South Bend
- </p>
- <p> If Rodney Dangerfield had 109 heads and weighed 11 tons, he
- would be the Florida State University football team. F.S.U.
- has won 10 games or more six years in a row; it is undefeated
- in its past 11 bowl games; it gobbles up most opponents like
- Homer Simpson at an all-you-can-eat restaurant. Yet for years
- the Seminole team had the reputation of a pigskin bridesmaid
- because it somehow managed to find a way to lose to those cross-state
- behemoths at the University of Miami. Even the F.S.U. press
- book repeats the phrase "can't win the Big One," like a mantra.
- It's meant ironically but still reveals an open psychic wound.
- </p>
- <p> "Naturally, when you're as close as we've been and haven't won
- the big games, people start wondering why," says F.S.U. head
- coach Bobby Bowden, with the long-suffering tone of a man who
- prowls the sidelines on Saturdays, then mounts a pulpit on Sundays
- as a lay preacher. "But the only way to answer their questions
- is to win." In October Bowden thought he had the answer. After
- three heartbreaking losses to Miami (on a failed two-point conversion
- and two late field goals that went wide right), Florida State
- becalmed the Hurricanes 28-10. Bowden had won "the big game."
- Except he hadn't--because, it turned out, he had a bigger
- date with another unbeaten team, Notre Dame. When the two teams
- met on Saturday, the Irish were ranked No. 2 to F.S.U.'s dominating
- No. 1.
- </p>
- <p> It was a matchup made in hype-heaven. Burt Reynolds' team vs.
- the God squad. The pro-style strategy of Florida State vs. the
- grind-it-out ground game of Notre Dame. Seminole speed vs. Irish
- beef. Irresistible force meets immovable object. "This might
- be the biggest game ever in college football," F.S.U. defensive
- end Derrick Alexander declared at midweek, and few would disagree--certainly not the fellow who claimed a ticket by piloting
- his '79 Ford LTD from Los Angeles to South Bend, Indiana, in
- 21 hours, nor the fan who traded his 1991 Honda for tickets
- on the 50-yard-line at Notre Dame stadium.
- </p>
- <p> Before the game, Irish coach Lou Holtz, an old friend of Bowden's,
- might have wished he had F.S.U.'s quarterback Charlie Ward.
- Smooth and stoic, Ward is an idol on the Tallahassee campus;
- he was elected student-body president in his junior year. A
- starting point guard for the 'Noles basketball team as well
- as conductor of Bowden's fast-break offense, Ward sees his job
- as simply getting the ball to his teammates. He has done that
- brilliantly enough this fall, completing 69% of his passes in
- F.S.U.'s first nine games and throwing for 16 touchdowns with
- only one interception, way down from 17 last year. That stat
- indicates Ward's newfound maturity; but he is by nature no rah-rah
- jock. After F.S.U.'s win over Miami he uncharacteristically
- pumped both fists at the ecstatic crowd--not from emotional
- overdrive but because, he said, "I thought they deserved it."
- Good doggies, says the stern master.
- </p>
- <p> Still, Holtz figured Notre Dame had a chance. "This team has
- tremendous character," he said. "That goes a long way." Their
- character was tested in the game's first minutes, as Ward smoothly
- quarterbacked his fleet receivers to an early touchdown. But
- that seemed to get the home team's Irish up. Like a space-age
- tank, Notre Dame rumbled to three quick, imposing scores. F.S.U.,
- which had humiliated its first nine opponents 205-27 in the
- first half, found itself inexplicably down 21-7 at intermission.
- </p>
- <p> It had been more than a year since the road-running front runners
- had had to play catch-up, and they were playing on unfamiliar
- turf--both their predicament and against a ground game as
- rapacious as Notre Dame's. Teams are usually so far behind the
- Seminoles in the early going that they're forced to pass for
- quick yardage. The Seminoles were dispirited, logy; they trudged
- through most of the second half, allowing the Irish to build
- a 31-17 lead. Not until late in the fourth quarter did F.S.U.
- flash its famous spark. Ward connected for one quick touchdown
- and ended the game with a goal-line pass that Notre Dame knocked
- down. The Irish had won the Big One, 31-24 to succeed Florida
- State as college's top team.
- </p>
- <p> Holtz, judiciously praising both teams, pronounced that "this
- is one game that I think lived up to all the hype." And all
- the anguish. After a tough year in which he had lost many starting
- stars and been excoriated in a tell-all book about Notre Dame,
- the conquering coach was vindicated. Not so Bowden. "I wish
- we could win the rest of our games and play 'em again," said
- the vanquished F.S.U. coach of Notre Dame. The Dangerfield mask
- was on him again.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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