MiamiVice7
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Miami Hurricanes' pursuit of perfection in 2001: an oral history | FOX Sports
Most of us probably read this at some point (it's a 2014 article), but I came across it yesterday and man, what a stroll down memory lane. This stuff is awesome.
It's the offseason so I'd say give it a read, you'll enjoy it. Still get caught up thinking about that three-year stretch (2000-2002) and how close we were to winning three in a row. Those teams were so good.
Here's the intro:
Most of us probably read this at some point (it's a 2014 article), but I came across it yesterday and man, what a stroll down memory lane. This stuff is awesome.
It's the offseason so I'd say give it a read, you'll enjoy it. Still get caught up thinking about that three-year stretch (2000-2002) and how close we were to winning three in a row. Those teams were so good.
Here's the intro:
It happens every year.
A college football team jumps to a 7-0 or 8-0 start, and the whispers begin. That same team makes it through the regular season with an unblemished record, and those whispers grow louder. A few weeks later it goes on to win a championship, and regardless of who they are, the college football world unites:
"Fill-in-the-blank school is the greatest college football team since the 2001 Miami Hurricanes."
No, they're not. Sorry, it's not even close.
The 2001 Miami Hurricanes were the most unique of teams: Born under NCAA sanctions, and hardened by a BCS controversy, which kept them out of the title game a year before. By the time the 'Canes took the field in 2001, no one was going to stop them, and ultimately no one did: Miami averaged almost 43 points a game that season, at a time when it wasn't vogue for college football teams to routinely score 40.
The Hurricanes gave up 9.75 points per game on defense, against a schedule that featured five Top 15 teams. Not to mention, they also set an FBS record by beating back-to-back ranked opponents by a combined score of 124-7, and their 26-point victory at Penn State, tied for the worst home loss of Joe Paterno's 46-year career at the school. Their 37-14 victory over Nebraska was more one-sided than it appears on paper; Miami was up 34-0 at halftime, before pulling its starters.