Wednesday, September 28, 2016

[gatortalk] Fwd: [gatornews] [SUN]: Feeling Discouraged, Gators? Maybe This Will Cheer You Up

I just read this. 
I should have read it sooner, but I couldn't face much about the Gators for a couple of days there. 
Good feelings. :   )

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Begin forwarded message:

From: Shane Ford <goufgators@bellsouth.net>
Date: September 26, 2016 at 5:48:24 PM CDT
To: GatorNews <gatornews@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [gatornews] [SUN]:  Feeling Discouraged, Gators?  Maybe This Will Cheer You Up
Reply-To: gatornews+owners@googlegroups.com

Fueled by their loss to Nebraska in the 1995 title game, the Gators rolled to the university's first national title in 1996

Stories and player bios by Pat Dooley

The start of the special season wasn't in the summer of 1996 or with the opener against Southwestern Louisiana or on a rainy day in Knoxville, Tenn.

The start came right after the end of the 1995 season, on the plane ride home from Tempe, Ariz., where the in-flight meals were humiliation and regret.

"It all started on that plane," said linebacker Johnny Rutledge. "We knew we had enough coming back. We had a good core and now we knew what it took.

"We knew what it took to be a champion."

Florida had just been hammered by Nebraska in the national title game 62-24 by a Nebraska team that is — at worst — in the argument for the best team in the history of college football.

"I remember the bus ride to the airport," said linebacker James Bates. "We were all miserable. We were almost disgusted with ourselves.

"We knew we could be 10 times better and still not make it to the championship game. So we decided we are going to control what we can control."

The Gators had seen an unbeaten season limp home from the desert, a loss so devastating it left the team's head coach in a state of shock.

Meeting with reporters the morning after the Fiesta Bowl, Steve Spurrier looked like a man who had just put his dog down.

But by the time the charter flight landed in Gainesville, the players were ready to get started. That Nebraska game was more than just a beatdown. It had taught Spurrier a lesson.

"That was when I started thinking about the shotgun," he said. "I could see that if you had the right blitz on up the middle, a quarterback under center had no chance. He had a chance in the shotgun."

The new weapon stayed under a figurative tarp until the final game of the season. When it was released, it destroyed Florida State.

"The shotgun was a game-changer for me," said quarterback Danny Wuerffel. "They had guys who we couldn't block. That gave me a few seconds to get the passes away.

"I remember people saying their pass rush would be even faster on turf, so I knew well something is going to give."

FSU's defense gave. Florida piled up 52 points. The celebrations started at the Louisiana Superdome and finished up on Bourbon Street.

"My lasting memory is looking around at the end of the game at all the guys and seeing the excitement in a group that had worked so hard for this," said defensive back Tony George. "This is what we fought for. Being able to enjoy it with so many guys. There were tears streaming down my face."

It was 20 years ago that Florida put together the most special season ever, winning its first national title and beating their hated rivals in the process.

The Sun wanted to know what all of the guys who played in that game are doing now. That was no easy task simply because a 52-20 blowout means a lot of players were inserted into the game late.

"We kind of emptied the bench out there at the end," Spurrier said.

Still, we found them all. All 65 of them.

Thanks to the help of several players who encouraged former teammates to reach out to The Sun and Bill Feinberg of the Florida Players Network, we offer a "Where are They Now?" on the 1996 national champs. There was no participation list back then, so the only way to see who played was to watch the game several times and pick out the numbers.

Hopefully, we didn't miss anyone.

But first, the game.

Let's start at the beginning.

It really all started when defensive coordinator Bobby Pruitt left for Marshall and Spurrier hired Bobby Stoops. The new coordinator implemented an attack-style defense that gave Spurrier plenty of chances to run some ball plays.

"He allowed us to play at our speed," Rutledge said. "When he came in we went from really good to having a chance to be great."

Florida dispatched its first two opponents, then went to Knoxville, Tenn., for a game with Super Bowl-like hype. The Gators jumped out to a 35-0 lead and held on to win 35-29.

With a half-filled Neyland Stadium for most of the second half, linebacker James Bates offered this explanation after the game:

"I don't know where all those Tennessee fans went. Maybe the Jeff Foxworthy Show was on."

From there, Florida went on a rampage through the SEC. In the next five games, the Gators outscored their opponents 261-37. The fewest number of points they scored in a home game that year? The 51 they scored in a rout of Auburn.

"We could score some points in The Swamp," Spurrier said.

With SEC carnage discarded to the side of the road, UF went to Tallahassee to face FSU in a battle between the top two teams in America. The Seminoles pass rush, a called-back touchdown and kicking game issues allowed FSU to win 24-21.

"We felt like we blew that game in Tallahassee," said wide receiver Reidel Anthony.

Spurrier had complained loudly about Florida State's hits on Wuerffel. FSU coach Bobby Bowden said that his team hit "until the echo of the whistle."

This was not a rivalry between friends. Little did either coach know, but they would meet again sooner than expected.

And that Spurrier would have a new twist.

"I remember that Monday afternoon after the first FSU game when we came in," said guard Corey Yarbrough, "and Coach Spurrier said, 'Fellas, we're going to the shotgun.' "

To make the game a national title opportunity for UF, some things had to happen.

First, Texas stunned Nebraska in the Big 12 title game, converting a fourth down on a bootleg play.

"It was so loud in the hotel because guys were out in the hallway banging on their doors," said defensive lineman Cameron Davis.

When Florida beat Alabama in an offensive thriller 45-30 to win the SEC title, the rematch was set. And when Ohio State surprised unbeaten Arizona State on the night of Jan. 1 in the Rose Bowl, the Florida-FSU game the next night was suddenly a national championship game.

"We were out of it,' Wuerffel said. "The way it unfolded, we were the happiest, hungriest team ever."

The Sugar Bowl started with a bang, FSU hit a 65-yard pass to Andre Cooper against UF cornerback Fred Weary.

"I wasn't used to the hashmarks in a pro stadium," Weary recalled. "They threw me off. But they didn't get me the rest of the game."

Florida held thanks to a fourth-down stop by linebacker Mike Peterson, then unleashed the shotgun. Wuerffel threw for three touchdowns, including the signature play of the game to Ike Hilliard. Hilliard caught a deep throw in mid-air, planted his foot as two FSU defenders flew by and walked into the end zone.

"It was a 97 route, just a simple slant," Hilliard said. "I felt (James) Colzie behind me and the linebacker just flashed in my face. I kind of created it in midair.

"It was just instinctive."

Florida rolled offensively and shut FSU down defensively despite losing Bates, the starting middle linebacker, to a concussion at halftime.

"I knew I wasn't right because I didn't know anything about football," Bates said. "I couldn't remember how to play the game. It was so frustrating. I was really confused."

The clincher was a 42-yard touchdown run by Terry Jackson, which he punctuated with a dive into the end zone.

"Once that touchdown happened we knew that was it," Jackson said. "You could actually breathe."

And so, the celebrations started. In some ways, they haven't stopped. The players, well, let them tell you how they felt.

Teako Brown: "The game was a formality. It was revenge, pure and simple. Not just for Florida State but for Nebraska the year before. We watched Nebraska celebrate. We kind of bottled that moment."

Tony George: "I think about it every day. If I'm having a bad day, I think about that game and it pushes me through."

Ryan Kalich: "They had more athletes than we had, more NFL guys. They had better players, but we were better coached."

Lawrence Wright: "We could have beat them worse than that. They didn't want to face us a second time. It was like that all season, everybody's face had fear in it."

It was late in the game when everyone knew it was over and Spurrier sidled up next to Bates.

"Coach came up to me and said, 'When we win this thing get some of your buddies and lift me up on your shoulders," Bates said. "But I was concussed. I forgot. And after the game he asked me why I didn't do it."

Instead, they posed on the field with the scoreboard in the background.

52-20.

Contact Pat Dooley at 352-374-5053 or at pat.dooley@gvillesun.com. And follow at Twitter.com/Pat_Dooley.


Sent From Shane's iPhone
Go Gators!   &   Skål Vikes!
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1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions 2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 National Football Champions |
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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