Posts Tagged ‘Miami football history’

1984: Orwell, with a touch of 1 Samuel, Alice and JFK

Monday, June 8th, 2009

By Gaylon Krizak-Guest Writer

(first in a three-part series on 1984)

It was probably less Orwellian than Lewis Carroll-ish; more a trip through the looking glass than anything that paralleled “1984”, the 1949 George Orwell tome overwritten about throughout the year.

Strike that. It was more akin to a line from “JFK” referencing Carroll’s “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”.

On second thought, maybe there was some Orwell mixed in: In at least one case, true believers eventually were forced to denounce something they had considered sacrosanct.

Mix in a biblical parable, and you have 1984 — one of college football’s strangest seasons.

David and Goliath do Miami

Spoiler alert: In 1 Samuel 17:1-58, young David — either a young man or a boy (depending on the account) armed only with his staff, sling and five stones — takes down the Philistine Goliath (estimated in various telling as anywhere from 6-foot-7 to 9-foot-6). His trophy is Goliath’s head, and David goes on to become king of Israel.

Spoiler alert II (for those who don’t get ESPN Classic): In Miami’s Orange Bowl, 5-foot-10 Doug Flutie caps one of the wildest games on record by throwing a final-play 48-yard Hail Mary touchdown pass to Gerard Phelan, giving Boston College a 47-45 victory over Miami, the defending national champion. Flutie’s trophy is the Heisman, and he goes on to play in three pro leagues and have a cereal named after him.

The Eagles had won just two of 10 previous meetings with Miami and was an underdog the day after Thanksgiving, 1984. In truth, BC probably had a better team than Miami in 1984, though not by much. The Eagles were 8-2 and ranked No. 10 when they visited the Hurricanes, 8-3 and ranked No. 12. But Miami already had cultivated a reputation of being tough at home, and the field by game time was a swamp from steady rain.

In future retellings, the first 59 minutes, 54 seconds of the game became an indistinguishable offense-filled blur, and with good reason.  BC led 14-0 early, but Miami scrambled back and took a 45-41 lead with less than a minute to play.

hail-flutie

Flutie prepares to hail mary

Flutie moved the Eagles from their 28-yard line to the Miami 48, but only six seconds remained when he dropped back to run “55 flood tip.” Hail Mary time. Flutie’s 46th pass of the day, thrown into a wind gusting up to 30 mph, sailed more than 60 yards in the air. The ball skimmed over a pack of Eagles and ’Canes gathered around the goal line and into Phelan’s arms in the end zone.

It would be BC’s last victory over Miami until 2007, by which time both schools had helped symbolize the shift in the sport’s landscape with their moves from independent status to the Big East and, finally, to the Atlantic Coast Conference.

One unexpected effect, as chronicled in Murray Sperber’s 2001 book, “Beer and Circus”: “A surprising result of Flutie’s triumph, never previously seen in American higher education, was that applications for admission to BC spurted upward during 1985-86; hence the term ‘Flutie Factor’ for application jumps sparked by nationally televised college sports victories. (Subsequently, when BC’s football fortunes declined, so did applications, yet they remained higher than before the ‘Hail Mary’ touchdown.)”

(Sperber went on to add this criticism: The “Flutie Factor” at BC and other schools also led to an increase in the “party atmosphere” at each campus.)

Back to ’84: Miami, which that season already had yielded the biggest comeback in NCAA history in losing to Maryland (up 31-0, the ’Canes lost 42-40), went on to drop a 39-37 decision to UCLA in the Fiesta Bowl at sunny Tempe, Ariz.

BC’s reward? Dallas in January.

Strangest Storm-Miami Hurricanes of 1965

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

by Bert Hancock

Miami’s Hurricanes are known for a lot of things the past twenty-five years, little of which is losing football. But they once struggled mightily, to the point of nearly dropping the program.

A bit before that crisis point, in 1965, the ‘Canes were staggering from two losing seasons in a row following the loss of quarterbacking great George Mira and were searching for an identity.

Loss of George Mira Created an Erratic Hurricane

Loss of George Mira Created an Erratic Hurricane

This independent–no conference affiliation at the time–faced a schedule loaded with heavyweights. To no one’s surprise, Miami flunked its share of tests. Dejections including head-shakers to SMU (4-5-1 record on the year), Tulane (2-8), and Pitt (3-7). When you lose to squads like that, you know the big shots are going to make a tough sport even more unbearable.

Not this time, though.

Miami traveled to Syracuse to face the ninth-ranked and ground powered Orangemen. It promptly slammed the door on that running game, stifling the great Floyd Little to 60 yards in a 24-0 plastering. Meanwhile, Miami’s less heralded Pete Banaszak bulled for 104 yards.

The ‘Canes later shocked Sugar Bowl-bound, 10th-rated Florida and Steve Spurrier, 16-13. But though that came late in the ‘65 campaign, it wasn’t the end of the story.

Facing a powerful and sixth-ranked Notre Dame that including jarring running backs Nick Eddy and Larry Conjar, Miami valiantly held its own with two second half defensive stands. The result; a 0-0 deadlock when the final gun sounded.

The frustrated Fighting Irish would capture the national championship the following season with 1965’s personnel making the bulk of that great group.

This particularly 1965 storm known as the Miami Hurricane (5-4-1 record) blew in the most erratic manner possible. Weakly built programs were unscathed, even left thriving, while stoutly fortressed entities were dealt extensive damage. By the time this Hurricane was spent, the result may have been “the best mediocre club of all time.”