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The most significant games

BAMAPHIN 22

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1. Florida State 46, Virginia Tech 29, Sugar Bowl, Jan. 4, 2000: While the Seminoles won the game, Michael Vick's epic performance was the single biggest impetus to the influx of athletic-style quarterbacks we see today. It's not that there weren't "mobile" quarterbacks before Vick, but coaches rarely gave them the freedom to improvise. Vick helped convince any remaining cynics of just how big an impact such a player could have on a game if properly unleashed, a la Vince Young in this year's Rose Bowl.

2. Ohio State 31, Miami 24 (2 OT), Fiesta Bowl, Jan. 3, 2003: Besides being a classic game, it was the first time a Big Ten or Pac-10 team reached the BCS title game, a significant milestone considering it was these leagues' attachment to the Rose Bowl that had precluded a championship game for so long. More notably, the Buckeyes proved it possible to beat the 'Canes -- who had won 34 straight at the time -- simply by being the more physical team, something that hadn't happened to Miami in a long, long time.
3. Colorado 62, Nebraska 36, Nov. 23, 2001: For all the reasons mentioned above.

4. Louisville 26, Florida State 20, Sept. 26, 2002: It's amazing to me that more people don't remember this rainy, Thursday-night game as a defining moment. The 'Noles were less than two years removed from their streak of 14 straight top four rankings and three straight BCS title-game appearances. Louisville was then a member of Conference USA. The Cardinals won. If that doesn't say it all about the new era of parity in college football, I don't know what does.

5. Northwestern 54, Michigan 51, Nov. 4, 2000: In talking to coaches over the last several years, I've learned that this game is viewed as something of a landmark moment in the current craze of spread offenses. When people saw Northwestern, which had had one of the worst offenses in the country only a year earlier, use the spread to put up 654 yards on the Wolverines, it spawned a whole lot of copycats, most notably Urban Meyer when he took over at Bowling Green the following season.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/writers/stewart_mandel/05/16/mailbag/index.html
 
He's right about Weis.

It's too early to say at this point, but if Notre Dame does indeed "return to glory" under Charlie Weis, I'm sure last year's USC game will be viewed in much the same light as these.
 
2. Ohio State 31, Miami 24 (2 OT), Fiesta Bowl, Jan. 3, 2003: Besides being a classic game, it was the first time a Big Ten or Pac-10 team reached the BCS title game, a significant milestone considering it was these leagues' attachment to the Rose Bowl that had precluded a championship game for so long. More notably, the Buckeyes proved it possible to beat the 'Canes -- who had won 34 straight at the time -- simply by being the more physical team, something that hadn't happened to Miami in a long, long time

That was a good game.
 
It's too early to say at this point, but if Notre Dame does indeed "return to glory" under Charlie Weis, I'm sure last year's USC game will be viewed in much the same light as these.


Worst game of my life
 
Alex22 said:
Yes it was, USC never should have been in the Championship game

If Notre Dame wins that game at home by that last second small margin, u think that is enough to push them ahead of a USC team that would also have only one loss with all those stars. I still think USC would have been in front of Dame in the rankings, don't necessarily agree, but I feel it still would have been Texas and SC.
 
BAMAPHIN 22 said:
2. Ohio State 31, Miami 24 (2 OT), Fiesta Bowl, Jan. 3, 2003: Besides being a classic game, it was the first time a Big Ten or Pac-10 team reached the BCS title game, a significant milestone considering it was these leagues' attachment to the Rose Bowl that had precluded a championship game for so long. More notably, the Buckeyes proved it possible to beat the 'Canes -- who had won 34 straight at the time -- simply by being the more physical team, something that hadn't happened to Miami in a long, long time.

Man this game right here was one of the best games I ever saw, and Miami had actually won the game before the ref threw a bogus flag in overtime for some ticky tack PI wayyyyy late . . lol Shawn Taylor had already smashed his helmet for victory and they had to put it back together or he grabbed a new one or something of that nature. Also this was the game McGahee suffered that nasty injury and Claretts final game. Man I will never forget that night
 
Kdawg954 said:
If Notre Dame wins that game at home by that last second small margin, u think that is enough to push them ahead of a USC team that would also have only one loss with all those stars. I still think USC would have been in front of Dame in the rankings, don't necessarily agree, but I feel it still would have been Texas and SC.


It might not have pushed ND ahead of them, but another 1 loss team might have been able to jump USC. Penn St for example.
 
Kdawg954 said:
Man this game right here was one of the best games I ever saw, and Miami had actually won the game before the ref threw a bogus flag in overtime for some ticky tack PI wayyyyy late . . lol Shawn Taylor had already smashed his helmet for victory and they had to put it back together or he grabbed a new one or something of that nature. Also this was the game McGahee suffered that nasty injury and Claretts final game. Man I will never forget that night

Yeah that was a crappy call.
 
:shakeno: ..It was a late call yes, but he grabbed the HELL out of Gamble's jersey....it was the RIGHT call just announced too late!
 
Jan 1, 2001
University of South Carolina 24 Ohio State 7
One of the greatest coaches of all time Lou Holtz turned around an 0-11 team into a bowl bound power. The game****s were 14 point underdogs but come out to show even the underdogs of the SEC can come out very big.
 
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