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Miami holds edge over Nebraska in title games

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Posted 2:50PM on Thursday 3rd January 2002 ( 23 years ago )
PASADENA, Calif. - Mention Miami-Nebraska football games, and the Wayback Machine takes us to Jan. 2, 1984, the Orange Bowl, 48 seconds left, Hurricanes ahead 31-30, Huskers going for two. <br> <br> &#34;When the guy went in motion, it looked like we had a shot, and we did,&#34; Nebraska coach Frank Solich recalls of the scene he saw from the assistants&#39; box that day. <br> <br> But at the last instant, Miami safety Kenny Calhoun steps in front of running back Jeff Smith in the end zone and knocks away Turner Gill&#39;s pass. <br> <br> Game over. Miami wins its first national championship with the huge upset over the top-ranked Huskers. Losing coach Tom Osborne is praised for his gutsy decision, even an easier extra-point kick for a tie would have given him a title. <br> <br> Gill, now Solich&#39;s quarterbacks coach, said Osborne asked the players at the start of the &#39;83 season what they wanted to do if a big game came down to a 2-point conversion. &#34;We all said, `Hey, we want to be 13-0,&#34;&#39; Gill said. &#34;I was glad we did go for two points.&#34; <br> <br> On Thursday night in the Rose Bowl, the Huskers and Hurricanes renewed their rivalry, with a national title on the line again. This time, No. 1 Miami was favored. Times sure have changed, and the Nebraska-Miami series is a big reason why. <br> <br> Since the &#39;84 Orange Bowl, considered one of the greatest college games ever played, Miami and Nebraska met in three other OBs, twice with the national title at stake. <br> <br> The Hurricanes beat the Huskers 23-3 in the &#39;89 Orange Bowl, then won their third national crown with a 22-0 win in the &#39;92 OB. Nebraska finally broke through to give Osborne his first title in 1994, beating Miami 24-17 in the &#39;95 Orange Bowl. <br> <br> Rob Chudzinski, Miami&#39;s offensive coordinator, was the Canes&#39; tight end in the &#39;91 game, and a graduate assistant for the &#39;95 game. He remembers. <br> <br> &#34;Boy was I sore after the game,&#34; he said. &#34;Our defense played great. I thought it was great to play a team like Nebraska, one with a great tradition and such a great program.&#34; <br> <br> The &#39;92 game was a benchmark for the Cornhuskers, who had just been shut out for the first time since 1973, a span of 221 games. Miami, with two interceptions, two fumble recoveries and five sacks, held the Huskers&#39; powerful running game to 82 yards, initiating a rare change in Nebraska&#39;s coaching philosophy. <br> <br> In 1993, Nebraska switched from their 5-2 alignment that relied on big interior linemen and defensive backs playing zone to make up for a lack of speed. The Huskers went to a 4-3, recruiting speedy defensive backs for man-to-man coverage. They moved safeties to linebacker to cover tight ends and running backs on pass routes, and linebackers stepped up to the line with the tackles. <br> <br> The changes paid off when the Huskers and Hurricanes met again. Nebraska won 24-17 and sacked quarterback Frank Costa four times, once for a safety. <br> <br> The breakthrough ended Nebraska&#39;s seven-bowl losing streak from 1987-93, six of the losses coming against Florida State or Miami. <br> <br> &#34;We tried to learn from our losses to the Florida teams. We learned you better have speed on your football team if you want to win big games,&#34; Solich said. &#34;We went to a concept where we could play the passing game better, get an extra linebacker on the field, and not go with the prototype 6-foot-3, 250-pound guy but use linebackers like Miami, ones with great speed.&#34; <br> <br> Chudzinski agrees, and credits former Miami coach Jimmy Johnson&#39;s brand of aggressive play for initiating defensive change around the country. Johnson coached the &#39;Canes from 1984-88. <br> <br> &#34;That was a landmark game for them,&#34; Chudzinski said of the shutout. &#34;That&#39;s when they, just like a lot of other teams, finally switched defenses. When they beat us, they ran a defense similar to the one they have now. They load up and try to get to the quarterback. They can fly at every position.&#34; <br> <br> Before the series of Orange Bowl meetings, the teams also met in the 1961 Gotham Bowl. Solich was a freshman at Nebraska. <br> <br> &#34;I was in the weight room,&#34; he said. &#34;I felt pretty good when I saw the game on TV. They were playing in a snowstorm. It was a tough day to play football but I thought Nebraska did a great job playing the type of football they needed to play to win the game.&#34; <br> <br> The Huskers won in an upset, 36-34, in a game played at Yankee Stadium before a shivering crowd of 6,166. <br> <br> Art Kehoe, Miami&#39;s offensive line coach, has been on the Hurricanes staff for all the Orange Bowls against Nebraska. Before the Rose Bowl, Kehoe hoped his team was ready. <br> <br> &#34;We&#39;ve had a few tussles, Nebraska and us,&#34; Kehoe said. &#34;And they&#39;re real physical and real good. I told our kids, `Hey, you&#39;re in for a scrap here.&#34;&#39; <br> <br> <br>

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