Cincinnati.Com
NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Currently:
45°F
Partly Cloudy
Weather | Traffic
The Enquirer
HOME
NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
SPORTS
REDS
BENGALS
LOCAL GUIDE
MULTIMEDIA
ARCHIVES
SEARCH
 
 TODAY'S ENQUIRER 
 Front Page 
 Local News 
-- Sports 
 Business 
 Editorials 
 Tempo 
 Home Style 
 Travel 
 Health 
 Technology 
 Weather 
 Back Issues 
 Search 
 Subscribe 

 SPORTS 
 Bearcats 
 Bengals 
 High School 
 Reds 
 Xavier 

 VIEWPOINTS 
 Jim Borgman 
 Columnists 
 Readers' views 

 ENTERTAINMENT 
 Movies 
 Dining 
 Horoscopes 
 Lottery Results 
 Local Events 
 Video Games 

 CINCINNATI.COM 
 Giveaways 
 Maps/Directions 
 Send an E-Postcard 
 Coupons 
 Visitor's Guide 
 Web Directory 

 CLASSIFIEDS 
 Jobs 
 Cars 
 Homes 
 Obituaries 
 General 
 Place an ad 

 HELP 
 Feedback 
 Subscribe 
 Search 
 Newsroom Directory 



 
Sunday, December 29, 2002

Close wins got Miami, OSU to Tempe



By Richard Rosenblatt
The Associated Press

ARE YOU GOING?
    Hey, Ohio State fans! Headed to the Fiesta Bowl? The Enquirer wants to hear your stories as you prepare to leave for next week's national championship game and then talk to you while you're soaking up the scene in Tempe. Contact Rick Green, assistant manager editor for Business and Metro, in the Enquirer newsroom at (513) 768-8477. Or, better yet, send him an e-mail at rgreen@enquirer.com. Please include your telephone number here in Cincinnati and/or where you'll be in Tempe.
TEMPE, Ariz. - Miami and Ohio State have perfect records for the same reasons: Both are not only good, they're lucky.

No matter how much talent they put on the field this season, the ball always seemed to bounce the right way at precisely the right time for the top-ranked Hurricanes and the No. 2 Buckeyes.

The results delivered exactly what college football craves - a true national championship game in the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 3 between the only teams to make it through the season without a loss.

Perfection, though, didn't come easily.

Maurice Clarett, Ohio State's freshman tailback, nearly hyperventilated in the final minutes of a 10-6 win over Purdue on Nov. 9.

"It was crazy! Crazy!" Clarett said moments after Craig Krenzel's 37-yard touchdown pass on fourth down with 1:36 left lifted the Buckeyes to victory.

Ken Dorsey, Miami's superb quarterback, couldn't even watch the final play of the Hurricanes' 28-27 win over Florida State on Oct. 12. When Xavier Beitia's 43-yard field goal attempt missed wide right, Miami's Willis McGahee told Dorsey what happened. "And then I gave him a kiss on the cheek, and we were dancing around together for a long time," McGahee said.

A play here and a play there. That's how close Miami (12-0) and Ohio State (13-0) came to defeat. And those were just two close calls. There were plenty of other scary moments on the road to the Bowl Championship Series' national title game.

Ohio State won six games by seven points or fewer, including its last three: the Purdue game, followed by a 23-16 overtime victory over Illinois and a 14-9 decision over Michigan.

Miami had three quarters' worth of trouble before pulling away from West Virginia and lowly Rutgers. And then there was a 28-21 win over Pittsburgh, secured only after Rod Rutherford's final-seconds, fourth-down pass into the Hurricanes' end zone sailed over Yogi Roth's outstretched arms and fell incomplete.

"The season has been so difficult for us," said Dorsey, who threw for 3,073 yards and 26 TDs and is 38-1 as a starter. "There have been so many ups and downs. One week we're the best team in the country, and the next week we're going to lose to god only knows who. It's been such a roller coaster."

Miami, in its second season under coach Larry Coker, was expected to return to the title game and was ranked No. 1 in the AP preseason poll. Ohio State, in Jim Tressel's second season, was No. 13 and not even favored to win the Big Ten Conference.

The Hurricanes lived up to expectations early, rolling to a 5-0 record that included an overwhelming 41-16 win over rival Florida at the dreaded Swamp in Gainesville.

Then came the Seminoles. With Greg Jones running up the gut of the Miami defense, Florida State led 27-14 with just over eight minutes to go. But Dorsey recovered from one of his worst days and led the Hurricanes to a pair of TDs that proved to be the difference.

Coker, 24-0 since taking over for Butch Davis, is well aware close calls are part of the mystique of reaching national-champion status.

"Yeah, we've had some narrow escapes," Coker said, "and if you look around the history of some of the national championship games, almost every national champion has some narrow escapes."

Take last season. Miami pulled out close games against Boston College and Virginia Tech en route to winning its fifth national championship. Coker remembers another.

"When I was in the Big Eight, Colorado was a national champion and I think they won six games coming from behind in the second half," Coker said of his time as an Oklahoma assistant from 1990-92.

After putting away West Virginia and Rutgers, Miami toyed with Tennessee 26-3, a rare feat when the Vols play at home in front of more than 107,000 fans.

Then came the narrow win over Pitt, followed by a 49-7 rout of Syracuse. All that remained was Virginia Tech, a team that has given Miami fits over the last several years.

In the wildest game of the season, Miami ran its winning streak to 34 with a 56-45 victory. Dorsey threw for 300 yards and two TDs and McGahee ran for 205 yards and a school-record six touchdowns.

"To get back to a national championship game is exactly what we wanted," Dorsey said. "We've got to go out and hopefully play well against Ohio State and earn the right to get a little respect."

If Miami is looking for respect, what about the Buckeyes? Despite the best regular season in its 113 years of football, Ohio State is a double-digit underdog in the Fiesta Bowl.

The reasoning is simple: The Buckeyes barely win. There were the early close games - 23-19 over Cincinnati, 19-14 over Wisconsin and 13-7 over Penn State. The final three games - Purdue, Illinois and Michigan - were all nail-biters.

All-American safety Mike Doss summed up his team's season best:

"My stomach wasn't churning. I kept believing - as a player you're always thinking the best," he said. "But as far as the fans, every week they were saying: 'I'm going to have a heart attack!' Then the next week it was, 'I'm going to have a stroke!"'

While Miami won with offense (41.9 points per game), Ohio State relied on defense in tight spots. The Buckeyes averaged 29.2 points, but were well off that figure when Clarett missed games - or played sparingly - because of knee or shoulder injuries.

After edging Purdue, Ohio State played its first overtime game against Illinois. Maurice Hall scored on a short run, and the Buckeyes survived three incomplete passes into the end zone from the 9.

The final piece of perfection came against the rival Wolverines. Ohio State trailed 9-7 until Hall scored from 3 yards out with 4:55 left. Michigan had one more shot, but a final-play pass near the goal line was intercepted by Will Allen.

"It takes some luck and it takes a lot of things going our way," Doss said. "Each week, we came out there and kept playing football and found a way to win."



SEE CINERGY IMPLOSION
Animation from Enquirer photos
Video from WCPO
Galleries: Implosion | Crowd | Aerial shots | Views from Kentucky

CINERGY IMPLOSION STORIES
What's next for the Riverfront?
New skyline already earning praise
Cinergy Field down in 37 seconds
Implosion called 'perfect event'
Partiers impressed by implosion
Fifty-five years that shaped Cincinnati's riverfront

BENGALS GAMEDAY
Bills 27, Bengals 9
Game might be LeBeau's last
Mooshagian to interview for college job
Isolation Booth: TKO Vs. Bledsoe
Keys to the game
Bengals-Bills by the numbers
The Edge
Life as a Rookie

AROUND THE NFL
This week's NFL picks, power rankings
If winning is only stat that matters, give McNair MVP
Giants 10, Eagles 7
Raiders 24, Chiefs 0
Home not so sweet for Browns
Colts in, but are they ready?
The playoff picture remains unclear

UC BEARCATS
UC 66, Miami 54
Fouls hurt RedHawks
UC-Miami Notebook: Hicks comes back
DAUGHERTY: What if UC had beaten OSU?

WOMEN'S CROSSTOWN SHOOTOUT
UC women beat Xavier with defense
Ex-Bearcats, Pirtle say hello

XAVIER
No. 21 Xavier 84, Eastern Kentucky 60

OTHER COLLEGE BASKETBALL NEWS
Pitino's rebuilt Cardinals rout Wildcats
Stone's redemption - UK's nightmare
Ohio State 94, Tennessee State 73
Temple 71, No. 10 Indiana 64
Saturday's Top 25 roundup
NKU men top Ferris St. to reach perfect 10

FIESTA BOWL
Buckeyes wary Miami has speed to burn
Close wins got Miami, OSU to Tempe
Buckeyes' home away from home is isolated in desert
Five questions with John Gonsior

OTHER COLLEGE FOOTBALL NEWS
Brooks hired as UK football coach
Alamo goes to Badgers in OT
Lundy powers Virginia to win
Bowls at a glance

PREP SPORTS
Ohio boys: No. 1 Bacon loses first game
Ky. boys: Dixie gives Draud 100th win
Ohio girls: No. 2 Mercy runs away from Notre Dame
Ky. girls: Campbell wins Ryle challenge with 73-46 win
Hockey: Powell too much for Moeller
Preps schedules, results

BASEBALL
Reds Q&A
Prospects aren't improving for Orioles
It's goodbye to an era
Final countdown on Cinergy Field
Riverfront timeline

PRO HOOPS
NBA: Riley, ref ignore each other
Local players in the NBA

HOCKEY
Kariya plays despite death of father
Ducks go down; Cyclones roll

TRISTATE SPOTLIGHT
Area players' bowl (games) runneth over
Enquirer's Page Two power rankings

PLAN YOUR DAY
Sports on TV, radio this weekend

 

Latest Headline News
Updated Every 30 Minutes
SPORTS NEWS

49ers Look to Relocate New Stadium

Paterno Won't Coach Penn St.-Temple Game

San Francisco 2016 Games Bid in Jeopardy

NCAA: Athletes Graduating at Higher Rate

Mauresmo Advances at WTA Championships

Randhawa Takes Lead at HSBC Champions

Bob Knight Approaches Winning Milestone

Bears-Giants a Key Game Despite Injuries

Spurrier Shadow Looms Large in Florida

A's, Cisco Reach Deal to Build Ballpark


Cincinnati.Com
Search our site by keyword:  
Search also: News | Jobs | Homes | Cars | Classifieds | Obits | Coupons | Events | Dining
Movies/DVDs | Video Games | Hotels | Golf | Visitor's Guide | Maps/Directions | Yellow Pages

  CINCINNATI.COM  |  NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help


Search | Questions/help | News tips | Letters to the editors | Subscribe
Newspaper advertising | Web advertising | Place a classified | Circulation

Copyright 1995-2007. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies agreement to terms of service updated 12/19/2002.