Erickson's offense in other years would occasionally break loose on the ground. He'd get ****y and say something like, "As I've always said, you can run the ball in this offense." Great, but overall he was too stubborn and it steadily caught up with us. Entering that 1992 Sugar Bowl I knew our only escape was huge plays. I was on Las Vegas radio and said, "This program is getting ready for the big fall. It's better to go against them than with them." After the 1993 season embarrassment in the Fiesta Bowl I was surprised that the 1994 team regrouped and came as close as it did.
I saw Miami and Washington in person in 1991. I attended Washington at USC. It was Rob Johnson's freshman year. The Huskies methodically churned out a low scoring victory. Very impressive team but I was never convinced Washington would have defeated the Canes that season. All the local wise guys were preferring Washington. These days if you go to the sites that use computer programs or schedule strength -- or whatever -- they all proclaim Washington the true champion of that season. Regardless, I think they are overdoing it. The top SEC teams, even in that era, had explosive defensive athletes all over the field. Washington had a tough defense but if you weren't intimidated it wasn't impossible to make some plays. I remember losing a wager on Washington -14 at California when the Bears gave Washington plenty of trouble.
The Canes were favored by -6.5 or more in the 3 games they lost for the title -- 1986 Penn State (-7.5), 1992 Alabama (-6.5) and 2002 Ohio State (-11.5). In 1991 it would have been the opposite. The oddsmakers were saying Washington would have been a small favorite. I think perception would have been wrong again and Miami prevailed narrowly.
1987 was excellent other than Jerome Brown being gone from the 1986 team. Florida State exploited that early in the season with Sammie Smith.
It's chic to call 1990 underrated but I believe that season is evaluated correctly...a very talented team that blew it. BYU passed for more than 400 yards and Notre Dame rushed for nearly 300. We fully earned those defeats. In fact, we lost both games despite receiving 5 turnovers from BYU and 3 from Notre Dame. We were life and death at San Diego State in a game in which the Aztecs outgained us both rushing and passing.
The Cotton Bowl result tends to deflect all the legitimate struggles from that season.