Miami-FSU tee it up; NW-Michigan, Cal-Utah in league games

Oct 10, 2015 - 6:36 AM Way back when, a 5-foot-6, 145-pound kicker nicknamed ''Flea'' trotted over to the sideline and told the big guy wearing a jacket and tie, holding his trademark pipe and looking anxious, ''Coach, this one's for you.''

With that, Jeff Davis kicked a dramatic 19-yard field goal on the last play in the final regular-season game in 1983 that sent Miami to a 17-16 win over Florida State and on to its first national championship.

It was one of the rare times this intense rivalry produced a field goal that lifted a team to victory. Oh, there have been quite a few memorable attempts since - none of them good and all of them flubs by Florida State, as in Wide Right I, II, III, IV and Wide Left I.

''Dadgumit,'' was retired Florida State coach Bobby Bowden's favorite way of describing so many near-misses against the Hurricanes.

''This is a fairybook story with a fairybook ending,'' was Miami's pipe-smoking coach Howard Schnellenberger's response after the `83 game.

New coaches, new players, new era, but the `Canes (3-1) and 12th-ranked `Noles (4-0) tee it up again on Saturday night (ABC, 8 p.m. ET), with Florida State looking to make it six in a row over Miami.

These days, the game is played earlier in the season, but if it's close - even if it's not - stay tuned for replays of some classic finishes from yesteryear.

On Saturday, Roberto Aguayo kicks for Florida State and Michael Badgley for Miami.

Those misses?

- Gerry Thomas: Wide right with a 34-yard attempt with less than a minute left of a 17-16 loss in 1991.

- Dan Mowrey: Wide right with a 39-yard attempt on the final play of a 19-16 loss in 1992.

- Matt Munyon: Wide right on a 49-yard attempt on the final play of a 27-24 loss in 2000.

- Xavier Beitia: Wide left on a 43-yard attempt on the final play of a 28-27 loss 2002.

- Beitia: Wide right on a 39-yard attempt with 5:30 left of a 16-14 loss in the 2004 Orange Bowl.

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GATOR FLOP?

Let's not leave surprising Florida out of the Sunshine State conversation. The 11th-ranked Gators (5-0, 3-0 SEC) are at Missouri (4-1, 1-1) and coming off a rout of No. 14 Mississippi. However, they were less than dominant in wins against East Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee.

''Let's look at it from a historical standpoint. This is where the University of Florida should be,'' coach Jim McElwain said. ''So don't be surprised, but let's take advantage of it. I don't know what they're going to do.''

Keep your eyes on QB Will Grier, who is completing more than 67 percent of his passes. For Missouri, it's freshman QB Drew Lock starting again with Maty Mauk still suspended. The Tigers may find it difficult to run the ball - they are last in the SEC, while the Gators are second in rushing defense (SEC Network, 7:30 p.m.).

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WILDCATS AT WOLVERINES TOPS BIG TEN CARD

If this is not a statement game for No. 13 Northwestern (5-0, 1-0), it's tough to know what is. With a win in the Big House, the Wildcats move to 6-0 for the first time since 1962, when Ara Parseghian was their coach. If you get tired of Baylor and TCU piling on, Michigan (4-1, 1-0) has two shutouts in a row, and is second in points allowed under coach Jim Harbaugh (BTN, 3:30 p.m.)

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PAC-12 SPOTLIGHT: CAL AT UTAH

Surprise unbeatens meet in a Pac-12 showdown. And the QBs are pretty good, too - Jared Goff of No. 23 California (5-0, 2-0) and the less-heralded Travis Wilson of No. 5 Utah (4-1, 1-0). The Utes moved way up in the rankings with a 42-point win over Oregon two weeks ago, and may just be the best team in the league. In three games, Wilson has been an efficient leader for a team that has a strong running game and rugged defense. Cal goes as Goff goes. He is among the nation's leaders in completion percentage, passing efficiency, passing touchdowns and yards passing. The Bears are looking for their first win over a top-10 team in 12 years (ESPN, 10 p.m.).

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RED RIVER BLOWOUT?

It's the day's early rivalry game featuring No. 10 Oklahoma (4-0, 1-0 Big 12) and the hapless Texas Longhorns (1-4, 0-2) in their annual hoe-down. It's not often that a top-notch program falls as far as fast as Texas under coach Charlie Strong, so maybe the `Horn gather themselves for a big effort. But poor play, bickering players and embarrassing blowout losses don't bode well for a close game. Sooners QB Baker Mayfield (from Austin) is certainly worth watching. He's averaging 380 total yards per game (ABC, noon).

In other Big 12 action, look to see if No. 2 Baylor (4-0, 1-0) can top 70 points against Kansas (FS1, noon) and if Heisman hopeful QB Trevone Boykin and No. 3 TCU (5-0, 2-0) can romp at Kansas State (3-1, 0-1), which appears to have little offense due to injuries (Fox, 7:30 p.m.)

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AP college football website: collegefootball.ap.org






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