West Virginia At Miami Game Notes

West Virginia At Miami Game Notes

Oct. 24, 1999

West Virginia at Miami
October 30, 1999, noon
Orange Bowl, Miami, FL

The Game:
The 23rd-ranked University of Miami Hurricanes (3-3, 1-0 BIG EAST)open their BIG EAST Conference home schedule against the West VirginiaMountaineers (3-4, 2-1 BIG EAST). Miami will be playing its first home gamesince Sept. 18. Miami was scheduled to take on Temple in the Orange Bowl onOct. 16 but the threat of Hurricane Irene forced the game to be rescheduledfor Dec. 4th.

Miami is coming off of a dramatic 31-28 win at Boston College lastweekend. In that game the Hurricanes overcame a 28-0 third quarter deficitin registering the greatest comeback in school history.

West Virginia has won two consecutive games including a 20-17 winover Temple at Morgantown last weekend. The Mountaineers won with a lategame field goal as Jay Taylor booted a 32-yarder with just 32 secondsremaining.

MIAMI (3-3, 1-0)

8/29    vs. Ohio State      W, 23-12 9/4     FLORIDA A&M         W, 57-39/18    PENN STATE          L, 23-279/25    @ East Carolina     L, 23-2710/9    @ Florida State     L, 21-3110/23   @ Boston College    W, 31-2810/30   WEST VIRGINIA       12:00 p.m.11/6    @ Pittsburgh        12:00 p.m.11/13   @ Virginia Tech     7:30 p.m.11/20   RUTGERS             12:00 p.m.11/27   SYRACUSE            3:30 p.m.12/4    TEMPLE              TBD

WEST VIRGINIA (3-4, 2-1)

9/4     @ East Carolina     L,  23-309/11    MIAMI (OH)          W, 43-279/18    @ Maryland          L, 0-339/25    @ Syracuse          L, 7-3010/2    NAVY                L, 28-3110/16   RUTGERS             W, 62-1610/23   TEMPLE              W, 20-1710/30   @ Miami             12:00 p.m.11/6    VIRGINIA TECH       3:30 p.m.11/13   @ Boston College    12:00 p.m.11/27   PITTSBURGH          12:00 p.m.

COACHING MATCH-UP

MIAMICOACH BUTCH DAVIS
Record at Miami: 34-18 (5th Season)
Overall Record: 34-18 (5th Season)
Davis vs. West Virginia: 3-1

WEST VIRGINIACOACH DON NEHLEN
Record at West Virginia: 141-87-4 (20th Season)
Overall Record: 194-120-8 (3rd Season)
Nehlen vs. Miami: 2-8

The Series:
Miami and West Virginia face off for the 15th time with theHurricanes holding an 11-3 all-time series lead. Miami has won five of thelast six meetings including a 34-31 victory last season in Morgantown. TheHurricanes hold a 6-2 record against the Mountaineers at the Orange Bowlalthough West Virginia knocked off Miami 28-17 in its last trip to theOrange Bowl in 1997.

The Miami vs. West Virginia series has historically been a close onewith four of the last six contests being decided by five points or less andfive of the seven games played in at the Orange Bowl have been decided by 12points or less. Last season’s game wasn’t decided until WVU’s Jay Taylormissed a 53-yard field goal attempt on the game’s final play. In 1996 Miamigrabbed victory from defeat when Nate Brooks returned a blocked punt for atouchdown with less than 30 seconds to play in a 10-7 Miami win. In 1993West Virginia became the first team to defeat Miami in BIG EAST competitionwith a 17-14 win in Morgantown.

OVER THE AIRWAVES

Television
CBS – (Live): Craig Bolerjack (play-by-play), Ed Cunningham (analysis)
SportsChannel Florida – (Tape): Frank Forte (play-by-play), John Congemi(analysis).

Radio
Westwood One (National): John Tautges (play-by-paly), Fran Curci (analysis).
Hurricane Radio Network (WQAM 560 AM): Marc Vandermeer (play-by-play), JoeZagacki (analysis), Don Bailey, Jr. (sideline) and Josh Darrow(studio host). All UM football games will be carried statewide by theHurricane Radio Network on its flagship station WQAM in Miami.
En Espanol (WACC 830 AM): Jerry del Castillo (play-by-play), Joe Martinez(analysis) and Pepe Campos (studio).
Student Radio (WVUM 90.5 FM): Dan Laing (play-by-play), Alex Loeb(analysis) and Rick Thomas (analysis).

HEAD COACH BUTCH DAVIS: Butch Davis (Arkansas ’74) is in his fifth season atMiami. Davis has compiled a 34-18 overall record and a 21-8 mark in BIGEAST games. His record includes a 17-9 record at the Orange Bowl, whilegoing 14-9 on the road.

Davis is the 18th head coach in UM history. Prior to hisappointment in January, 1995, Davis served as an assistant coach with theDallas Cowboys from 1989-94 where he helped guide the Cowboys to a pair ofSuper Bowl championships. Davis also served as an assistant coach at UMfrom 1984-88 (where he was part of Miami’s 1987 National Championship team)and at Oklahoma State from 1979-83.

DAVIS AT MIAMI

Year    Record  Home    Away    Ntrl    BE1995    8-3     6-0     2-3     0-0     6-11996    9-3     3-3     5-0     1-0     6-11997    5-6     3-3     2-3     0-0     3-41998    9-3     4-2     4-1     1-0     5-21999    3-3     1-1     0-2     1-0     0-0Total   34-18   17-9    14-9    3-0     21-8

Butch Davis’ Hurricanes on Turf/Grass

Year    Overall Turf    Grass1999    3-3     1-0     2-31998    9-3     3-1     6-21997    5-6     2-1     3-51996    9-3     3-0     6-31995    8-3     2-0     6-3Total   34-18   11-2    23-16

LAST TIME OUT VS. BOSTON COLLEGE: Andy Crosland’s30-yard field goal with three seconds remaining capped the greatest comebackin school history as the 23rd-ranked Miami Hurricanes overcame a 28-0 thirdquarter deficit to defeat Boston College, 31-28, in Chestnut Hill, MA.

Boston College built a 28-0 lead with 6:18 left in the third quarterwhen Cedric Washington ran three yards for a touchdown. Washington had acareer-high 183 yards on 29 carries.

Miami started its comeback with 2:11 left in the third period whenKenny Kelly threw an eight-yard TD pass to fullback Will McPartland.

The Hurricanes cut the lead to 28-14 with 10:07 left when Kelly hitrunning back James Jackson on a 32-yard scoring pass. On the first play ofthe ensuing Boston College drive defensive lineman William Joseph recovereda Cedric Washington fumble on the Boston College 6. Jackson then found theend zone on the next play. With 3:51 remaining, Kelly tied the score with a10-yard scoring pass to tight end Daniel “Bubba” Franks.

Jackson carried 22 times for 134 yards. Kelly completed 20-of-26passes for 218 yards.

LAST TIME VS. WEST VIRGINIA: Miami quarterback Scott Covington hit DarylJones with a three-yard scoring pass with 1:37 left and Jay Taylor missed a53-yard field goal try on the final play as Miami upset the 13th-ranked WestVirginia Mountaineers, 34-31, in Morgantown, West Virginia.

The Hurricanes held a 27-24 lead entering the fourth quarter andprotected the advantage for the 119th time in their last 120 with a leadentering the final stanza. Their only loss in that span came against theMountaineers in the 1997 season. It appeared that West Virginia mightrepeat the feat when Anthony Green bulled in from a yard out with just over10 minutes remaining to give the Mountaineers a 31-27 lead.

But Miami drove 48 yards in five plays, including a 40-yard run byJames Jackson, en route to Covington’s scoring pass to Jones that gave Miamithe lead for good.

James out gained WVU’s Amos Zereoue rushing for 162 yards on 31carries. Zereoue, the BIG EAST’s leading rusher in 1997, picked up 113yards on 27 carries.

West Virginia’s Marc Bulger had a big day, completing 32-of-43passes for 380 yards and three touchdowns with one interception, whileCovington was 19-of-30 for 247 yards and two scores with one pick.

TAKING ON THE BEST: Each of the nation’s top three teams and five rankedteams overall are on Miami’s 1999 schedule. UM played at top-ranked FloridaState on October 9, a 31-21 FSU win. In that game, the Hurricanes led theNo. 1 Seminoles, 21-14 late in the second quarter. On September 18, Miamifell to No. 2 Penn State, 27-23, after leading 23-20 in the fourth quarter.The Hurricanes visit No. 3 Virginia Tech on November 13. East Carolina,currently ranked 17th, topped Miami, 27-23, on September 25 in Raleigh, NC.No. 24 Syracuse visits Miami on November 27.

COMEBACK KIDS: In last week’s win over Boston College, UM managed 31unanswered points after trailing 28-0. The 28-point comeback marked thelargest comeback in Miami history. Prior to last game, the largest comebackin school history was 16 points (twice). On September 17, 1988, Michiganled Miami, 30-14, with 10:32 remaining in the fourth quarter, Miami went onto defeat Michigan, 31-30. On October 3, 1987, Florida State led Miami,19-3, with 2:45 left in the third quarter, Miami went on to defeat FSU 26-25on that day.

POLL PRESENCE: At No. 23 last week, Miami (2-3) was the first team with asub-.500 record to be ranked in the Associated Press poll after at leastfour games since Southern California (3-4) came in at #20 on October 25,1971. That week, USC vaulted into the polls after defeating No. 6 Notre Damethe week before, 28-14. Of note: Southern Cal won the national title thefollowing season going 12-0 in 1972.

HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS: Due to the postponement of the Miami-Templegame, the Hurricanes have gone six weeks between home games. Miami lastplayed in the Orange Bowl on September 18 vs. Penn State and will have twoopen dates and three road games before hosting West Virginia on October 30.It marks just the second time in school history that the Hurricanes havegone six weeks without a home game. In 1979, Miami went six weeks without ahome game between October 20 and December 1. During that span in ’79, UMhad one open date, while playing three road games and a neutral site contest(Mirage Bowl in Tokyo, Japan vs. Notre Dame) between home contests. Thethird longest span between home games came in 1985 when UM went five weeks(9/7-10/12) without playing in the Orange Bowl.

TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THE TURNOVERS: This season, the Hurricanes have takenadvantage of many opponent miscues, scoring on nine of 23 overall drivesfollowing an opponent turnover. Three drives following opponent turnoverswere to close halves, so no offensive drives were taken. Overall, theHurricanes have parlayed nine opponent turnovers into 60 points.

At Boston College, Chris Campbell forced Eagle running back CedricWashington to fumble on the BC’s six yard line. William Joseph recoveredthe ball for the ‘Canes and James Jackson converted the turnover on a sixyard rush into the endzone.

At Florida State, the Hurricanes converted a touchdown on one of itstwo drives following a Seminole turnover. One of FSU’s turnovers was toclose out the first half, so no offensive drive was taken. Following FSUfullback Dan Kendra’s fumble on the Miami 11-yard line, the Hurricanesmarched 89 yards on 13 plays to eventually grab a late second quarter leadover the Seminoles, 21-14.

At East Carolina, Miami turned the Pirates’ first two turnovers intoa Clinton Portis four-yard touchdown run and a 38-yard field goal by AndyCrosland, extending the Hurricanes lead to 20-0.

Against Penn State, the Hurricanes did not convert on four drivesfollowing PSU turnovers.

Against Florida A&M, Miami nearly turned all five turnovers intoscores, but settled for four touchdowns. Three FAMU fumbles and oneturnover on downs resulted in scores for James Jackson, Ethenic Sands and two for Clinton Portis.

The Hurricanes turned just one of seven opponent turnovers into ascore against Ohio State. Two of OSU’s turnovers were to close out thefirst and second halves, so no offensive drive was taken. On the score,Kenny Kelly rushed for seven yards followed by a James Jackson two-pointconversion.

IF THE HURRICANES SCORE FIRST…: When the Hurricanes score first they arenearly a lock to win. Beginning with the 1983 season, the Hurricanes havegone 130-13 (.909) when scoring first. Under Butch Davis, UM is 23-6 (.793)when scoring first.

IF THE HURRICANES SCORE 30 OR MORE POINT STREAKS: Miami has won (lastdefeat)…

69 Straight when scoring 30 or more points (10-15-88, Notre Dame 31,UM 30).

90 Straight when scoring more than 30 points (1-1-85, UCLA 39, UM37).

FOURTH QUARTER DOMINANCE: Over the last 14 seasons, Miami has been almostunbeatable when leading after three quarters. Since 1985, Miami has won 125of 127 regular season games in which it entered the fourth quarter with alead.

The Hurricanes took a 23-10 lead into the fourth quarter at EastCarolina, but surrendered 17 points to be defeated 27-23. In 1997, WestVirginia snapped a UM streak of 111 straight victories when leading afterthree quarters.

Prior to that 1997 WVU game, the last time the Hurricanes did notwin a regular season game when leading after three quarters was on Nov. 10,1984, when UM lost to Maryland, 42-40, after leading 34-21 heading into thefinal stanza.

OPENING POSSESSIONS: Miami has posted points on two of its six openingpossessions this season. Most recently, Andy Crosland had his 46-yard fieldgoal attempt blocked by Florida State’s Tommy Polley, following a 6-play34-yard yard drive to the FSU 28.

Game            Plays   Yards   TOP     ResultOhio State      2       42      0:48    TouchdownFAMU            6       32      2:26    PuntPenn State      3       -7      1:46    Punt East Carolina   11      80      4:16    TouchdownFlorida State   6       34      2:39    Blocked FGBoston College  4       20      1:38    Punt

MIAMI IN THE POLLS: Miami has been ranked in both national polls each weekthis season. Miami opened the season at No. 12 in both the AP and USAToday/ESPN polls. UM posted season-high rankings of No. 8 in the AP poll onAug. 29 and No. 9 in the USA Today/ESPN poll on Sept. 5.

Date        AP  USAT/ESPN   Date    AP  USAT/ESPNPreseason   12  12          Oct. 17 23  23  Aug. 29     8   No poll     Oct. 24 23  23Sept. 5     8   9           Oct. 31     Sept. 12    8   9           Nov. 7      Sept. 19    9   13          Nov. 14     Sept. 26    18  20          Nov. 28     Oct. 3      19  21          Dec. 5      Oct. 10     24  24          Jan. 5      

ASSOCIATED PRESS – October 24, 1999

                        '99 Record  Points1.  Florida State (55)      8-0     1,7332.  Penn State (10)         8-0     1,6843.  Virginia Tech (5)       6-0     1,6034.  Tennessee               5-1     1,5155.  Florida                 6-1     1,4566.  Kansas State            7-0     1,4127.  Georgia Tech            5-1     1,3298.  Mississippi State       7-0     1,1808.  Nebraska                6-1     1,18010. Georgia                 6-1     1,07211. Wisconsin               6-2     1,010   12. Texas                   6-2     99213. Marshall                7-0     92114. Alabama                 5-2     80515. Michigan                5-2     64916. BYU                     6-1     63417. East Carolina           6-1     54518. Purdue                  5-3     51119. Michigan State          6-2     44620. Southern Mississippi    5-2     43421. Ohio State              5-3     38822. Texas A&M               5-2     26423. MIAMI                   3-3     24424. Oklahoma                4-2     17425. Mississippi             5-2     171

Others Receiving Votes: Notre Dame 119, Stanford 67, Utah 59, Syracuse 57,Minnesota 47, Arkansas 25, Illinois 10, Clemson 3, Louisiana Tech 3,Maryland 3, Air Force 2, Oregon 2, Washington 1.

USA TODAY/ESPN – October 24, 1999

                        '99 Record  Points1.  Florida St (41)         8-0     1,4562.  Penn St (16)            8-0     1,4273.  Virginia Tech (2)       6-0     1,3554.  Tennessee               5-1     1,2615.  Florida                 6-1     1,2326.  Kansas State            7-0     1,1997.  Georgia Tech            5-1     1,1148.  Mississippi State       7-0     1,0229.  Nebraska                6-1     1,02110. Georgia                 6-1     94111. Wisconsin               6-2     86212. Texas                   6-2     78613. Marshall                7-0     72914. Michigan                5-2     63015. BYU                     6-1     61316. Alabama                 5-2     53917. East Carolina           6-1     50818. Texas A&M               5-2     44819. So. Mississippi         5-2     35120. Michigan State          6-2     33221. Ohio State              5-3     32322. Purdue                  5-3     24523. MIAMI                   3-3     19124. Syracuse                5-2     14725. Stanford                5-2     82

Others receiving votes: Utah 79, Oklahoma 68, Mississippi 65, Arkansas 59,Minnesota 21, Maryland 19, Notre Dame 18, Virginia 14, Kentucky 7, ColoradoSt 3, Rice 2, Air Force 1, Arizona 1, Boston College 1, Clemson 1, Oregon 1,Western Mich 1.

1999 CAPTAINS SELECTED: At at team meeting preceding the Florida State game,permanent team captains for the remainder of the 1999 season were selectedby the Hurricane players. Junior defensive tackle Damione Lewis, senioroffensive guard Ricahrd Mericer, junior linebacker Dan Morgan, juniorlinebacker Nate Webster and senior center Ty Wise were named captains.Typically, two offensive and two defensive players are named captains eachyear. However, the voting was so close between Lewis, Morgan and Websterthat three defensive captains were named.

DON’T MESS WITH TEXAS: When freshman Charles Pharms, a resident of Houston,recorded his first start in the 1988 season’s sixth game against Cincinnatiit would begin a streak of 128 consecutive games that at least one playerfrom the state of Texas has started for Miami. The 1999 Hurricane rosterboasts 11 players who hail from the “Lonestar State”, four of which aremainstays in the UM starting line-up: Andy Crosland (K), Daniel Franks(TE), Damione Lewis (DT) and Robert Hall (OT).

Prominent Hurricanes from Texas (since 1988)

    Player (years at UM)        Hometown    Jessie Armstead (89-92)     Dallas    Kevin Williams (90-92)      Dallas    K.C. Jones (93-96)          Midland    Tremain Mack (94-96)        Tyler    Daniel Franks (97-present)  Big Spring    Damione Lewis (97-present)  Sulphur Springs    Andy Crosland (96-present)  Dallas

BIG FIRST HALF, BIG POINT TOTAL AGAINST FAMU: The 40 points scored in thefirst half against FAMU marked the most points scored by the Hurricanes inthe first half since scoring 49 points vs. Rutgers on Oct. 14, 1995. The 57overall points scored ranks ninth all-time for total points scored in a gameby UM.

UM STAYS “NO. 1” AT THE NFL DRAFT: During the last 13 years, Miami hasproduced more NFL first-round draft picks than any other college. In 1991,UM defensive lineman Russell Maryland was the overall No. 1 pick. In 1999,UM’s Edgerrin James was picked with the No. 4 overall selection of the firstround, making him the 20th Hurricane selected since 1987.

DOLPHINS SELECT HURRICANES NO. 1: Of the Miami Dolphins’ 36 all-time NFLDrafts, the University of Miami leads all schools with 14 players selectedby the fish. Yatil Green (1997) was the last Dolphin picked in the firstround, No. 15 overall.

HURRICANES SEND FIVE MORE TO THE NFL RANKS: At the 1999 NFL Draft, Miami hadthree players drafted, Edgerrin James by Indianapolis in Round 1, NickWilliams in Round 3 and Scott Covington in Round 7. Two others, Derrick Ham(Washington) and Nate Brooks (New England), signed as rookie free agents.

MAKING AN EARLY IMPACT: Of the 99 players who opened up the Hurricanes’ 1999Fall Practice, 60 (61%) are underclassmen (freshmen or sophomores), while 39(39%) are upper-classmen (24 juniors and 15 seniors).

Underclassmen – 36 freshmen (22 true and 14 redshirt)
Upperclassmen – 24 sophomores (15 true and 9 redshirt)
Last season, 24 underclassmen were in the Hurricanes startingline-up for at least one game, on either offense,defense or specialists.

KELLY NAMED MOST VALUABLE PLAYER IN KICKOFF CLASSIC WIN: Sophomorequarterback and first-year starter Kenny Kelly was named the Most ValuablePlayer in Miami’s 23-12 victory over then-No. 9 Ohio State in the KickoffClassic. Kelly completed 17 of 25 attempts for 245 yards and was part oftwo Hurricane touchdowns. Kelly rushed for a touchdown on a seven-yard runearly in the second quarter and finished the second quarter with a 67-yardstrike to Santana Moss. After the touchdown strike to Moss, Kelly ran for asuccessful two-point conversion.

Milestone Games

1   10-30-26    Rollins         W   7-050  12-4-31     Paris Island    W   12-6100 11-5-37     Stetson         W   25-13200 10-1-48     Rollins         W   25-0300 10-4-58     @ Baylor        W   14-8400 11-24-67    Notre Dame      L   22-24500 9-17-77     @ Ga. Tech      L   6-10600 11-23-85    Colorado St.    W   24-3700 9-10-94     @ Arizona St.   W   47-10750 10-24-98    @ W. Virginia   W   34-31763 10-30-99    West Virginia   ?   ?

Milestone Wins

1    10-30-26   Rollins         7-050   12-4-36    Georgetown      10-6100  1-1-46     vs. Holy Cross  13-6200  12-1-62    Florida         17-15-300 10-2-82    @ Louisville    28-6400  9-5-92     @ Iowa          24-7463  10-23-99   @ Boston Coll.  31-28

1999 SEASON HURRICANE BIRTHDAYS

September    1   Sherko Haji-Rasouli (OL)        Clinton Portis (RB)    3   William Joseph (DL)    7   Joaquin Gonzalez (OL)    9   Delvin Brown (DB)    10  Nick Nettles (DL)    11  Edward Reed (DB)    13  Zachary Hart (QB)    15  Aaron Moser (WR)    18  James Sutton (LB)    19  Phillip Buchanon (DB)        Ivan Mercer (TE)    23  Bryant McKinnie (OL)    24  Coach Mario Cristobal    26  Robert Williams (TE)October    2   Coach Chuck Pagano    4   Martin Bibla (OL)    10  Brett Romberg (OL)    11  Quincy Hipps (DE)    15  Mondriel Fulcher (FB)    21  Darell Arline (DB)    26  Jeff Popovich (DB)    29  Michael Smith (LB)    31  Greg Laffere (OL)November    5   Coach Curtis Johnson    7   Clint Hurtt (DT)        Will McPartland (FB)    8   Coach Don Soldinger        Mike Rumph (DB)    10  Adrian Wilson (DT)    17  Coach Butch Davis        Andy Crosland (K)         Reggie Wayne (WR)    26  Andre King (WR)    29  Pat Del Vecchio (OL)        Nate Webster (LB)        Dan Smith (TE)December    9   Ed Wilkins (OL)    17  Antwain Joyce (DB)        Derryl Williams (RB)    18  Leonard Myers (DB)    19  Dan Morgan (LB)        James Lewis (DB)    25  Larry Anderson (DL)    26  Jarrett Payton (RB)    28  Jermell Weaver (LB)        Jerrell Weaver (LB)    31  Anthony Johnson (WR)January    2   LaVaar Scott (LB)    5   Brian Stinson (DE)

CAN YOU SMELL WHAT THE ROCK IS COOKIN’: Dwayne Johnson, aka “The Rock”, a UMdefensive lineman from 1991-1994, will make a special appearance at theMiami-West Virginia game on October 30 at the Orange Bowl. “The Rock”, athree-time World Wrestling Federation heavyweight champion, is one ofprofessional wrestling’s most popular superstars. He will be signingautographs from 10-11:30 a.m. at Touchdown Alley at the Orange Bowl, beforetaking the field and addressing the crowd just before gametime.

FULL FORCE FOOTBALL BECOMES A BIG DRAW IN 1999: A sell-out total of 74,427fans attended Miami’s recent meeting with Penn State at the Orange Bowl onSept. 18. The figure ranks as the 17th largest crowd in school history and14th largest crowd during regular season games. In addition, the 74,427stands as the seventh largest regular season crowd during the 1990’s.Thesellout is the first home sellout for UM since Florida State (75,913) onOct. 12, 1996. The last home sellout in a non-FSU game also came agaistPenn State (75,723) on Oct. 12, 1991. In Miami’s, 57-3, victory over FloridaA&M in the home opener on Sept. 4, a total of 54,147 were in attendance.That figure was the largest crowd at the Orange Bowl since 63,617 came towatch the UM/FSU game on Oct. 10, 1998. In addition, it marked the largesthome crowd for a non-FSU game since 57,721 came to watch the UM/FAMU game onSept. 9, 1995. It also marked the largest crowd in a home-opener since FAMUon Sept. 9, 1995.

BUTCH DAVIS TV SHOW: The Butch Davis TV Show, hosted by WPLG sportscasterFrank Forte, is a weekly program featuring Head Coach Butch Davis. Producedby Fairway Production Group, the show takes an in-depth look at Hurricanefootball. The half-hour program contains game and practice highlights,music videos and features. Throughout the year, the Butch Davis Show airson SportsChannel Florida and WPLG-Channel 10 at 11:30 a.m. every Saturday.The show will be taped at the University Food Court on the UM campus withperiodic taping off-campus throughout the season. The taping of the show isopen to the public.

HURRICANE HOTLINE EVERY THURSDAY: The Hurricane Hotline radio show airsevery Thursday from 6-8 p.m. on SportsRadio 560 WQAM, the new flagship radiostation for University of Miami football, basketball and baseball. Thetwo-hour talk show features Head Coach Butch Davis and Athletic DirectorPaul Dee, as well as Hurricane assistant coaches and players. The HurricaneHotline is hosted by UM’s football broadcast team of Don Bailey, Jr., MarcVandermeer and Joe Zagacki. Callers may participate on the show by calling567-0560 from either the (305) or (954) area codes. Mobile callers can call#560.

COACH’S BREAKFASTS AND LUNCHEONS: Throughout the season, University of Miamicoaches will appear at breakfasts in Dade County and luncheons in BrowardCounty hosted by the Hurricane Club. Individual tickets to the breakfastsare $6 for Hurricane Club donors and $7 for Non-Hurricane Club donors, whilethe luncheons are $16 for donors and $18 for non-donors. Season seriestickets for the breakfast are $30 for the breakfasts and $90 for theluncheons. Contact Kelly James at (305) 284-2491 for more information.

SCHIANO ARRIVES AS NEW D-COORDINATOR: The Hurricanes open 1999 with newdefensive coordinator in Greg Schiano. Schiano comes to Miami from theChicago Bears where he spent the past three years as an assistant under DaveWannstedt. Prior to arriving in Chicago, Schiano was the defensivebackfield coach for Penn State University from 1990-96. Born June 1, 1966,Schiano takes the UM coordinator position at the ripe age of 33, while hewas named a full-time assistant at Penn State at age 23.

‘CANES ON THE FAST TRACK: Miami football players have enjoyed a reciprocalrelationship with the UM track and field program. During the 1999 season,12 members of the UM football team were listed on the Hurricane track andfield roster. At the 1999 BIG EAST Indoor Championships, members of theHurricane football team accounted for 43 of the team’s 67 points as Miamifinished fourth as a team, its best finish in school history. Leading theway were Santana Moss and Aaron Moser. Moss won the 60-meter dash (6.87),while Moser won the pentathlon title with a BIG EAST record total of 3,643points. In the preliminaries of the 60-meter dash, Moss set a BIG EASTrecord with a time of 6.83.

‘CANES IN THE COMMUNITY: Hurricane student-athletes volunteer over 1,000hours of community service each school year. Annual projects include thefootball team’s distribution of thanksgiving dinners to area shelters,”Join-A-Team, Not-A-Gang” – a program that encourages area youth to seekpositive alternatives to gangs, “Future ‘Canes Program” which exposesat-risk youth to the benefits of sports, “Canes on Patrol” – where theHurricanes assist the Broward County Sheriffs Department, “Red Ribbon Day”aimed at promoting drug awareness, and “Take A Kid to the Game” – anationwide grass roots program encouraging adults to take a child to acollege athletic contest.

CURRENT UM PLAYERS LISTED ON INDIVIDUAL CAREER LISTS

Point After Touchdowns4.  136 Andy Crosland, 1996-97-98

Field Goals5. 39 Andy Crosland, 1996-97-98

Points Scored Kicking4. 250 Andy Crosland, 1996-97-98

Points Scored4. 250 Andy Crosland, 1996-97-98

CURRENT UM PLAYERS LISTED ON INDIVIDUAL GAME RECORDS LISTS

Rushing Attemptst3. 33  James Jackson vs. Penn State, 1999

Rushing Yards (attempts)5. 187 James Jackson vs. Temple, 1997 (18)

Rushing Average (min 4. attempts)8. 15.8 James Jackson vs. Virginia Tech, 1997 (9)

Points After Touchdowns (attempts)1. 9 Andy Crosland vs. ETSU, 1998 (9)6. 7 Andy Crosland vs. UCLA, 1998 (7) 7 Andy Crosland vs. FAMU, 1999 (7)

Field Goals7. 3 Andy Crosland vs. East Carolina, 1998 3 Andy Crosland vs. Rutgers, 1998

Passing Yards10. 370 Kenny Kelly at Florida State, 1999

Total Offense9. 382 Kenny Kelly at Florida State, 1999 (380+2)

Receiving Yards5. 180 Santana Moss at Florida State, 1999

Longest Pass Play6. 84 Reggie Wayne from Scott Covington vs. Virginia Tech, 1998

Longest Rush from Scrimmage10. 79 James Jackson vs. Boston Coll., 1998

Most Kickoff Return Yardage1. 208 Najeh Davenport vs. Syracuse, 1998

Touchdown Receptions1. 3 Santana Moss vs. Rutgers, 1998

CURRENT UM PLAYERS LISTED ON INDIVIDUAL SEASON RECORDS LISTS

Rushing Average (min. 25 attempts)3.  7.35    James Jackson, 1997 (81)4.  7.04    Najeh Davenport, 1998 (55)9.  6.65    James Jackson, 1998 (82)

Receptions9. 48 Reggie Wayne, 1997

Touchdown Passes Caught5. 8 Santana Moss, 1998

Point After Touchdowns1. 51 Andy Crosland, 19989. 38 Andy Crosland, 1996

Field Goals10. 13 Andy Crosland, 1996

Points Scored Kicking9. 77 Andy Crosland, 1996

Total Tackles and Assists5. 150 Dan Morgan, 1998

OFFENSE NOTES:

IN THE REDZONE
In Miami’s 31-28 win at Boston College, the Hurricanes scored threetouchdowns and one field goal in their four trips into the BC redzone. TheEagles scored four TD’s and recorded a missed field goal in their five tripsinto the UM redzone.

                 Miami   OpponentTimes           25      18Scored          20      15    Touchdowns  14      10    Field Goals 6       5   Turnovers       1       1   Missed FG       3       2Downs           1       0

QUICK STRIKE OFFENSE: Two of UM’s four touchdown drives at Boston Collegewere less than two minutes in duration. The Hurricanes have recorded 14touchdown drives under two minutes this season.

Opponent        Quarter Plays   Yards   TOPBoston College  4       1       6       0:03Boston College  3       5       80      1:22Florida State   1       1       80      0:17East Carolina   2       4       26      0:54Penn State      3       3       61      1:15FAMU            1       4       44      0:58FAMU            1       4       53      1:09FAMU            2       5       42      1:37FAMU            2       1       1       0:04FAMU            3       2       16      0:42FAMU            4       2       9       0:40Ohio State      1       2       42      0:48Ohio State      2       4       59      1:09Ohio State      2       4       78      1:48

THE BIG PLAYS Yards gained No. of plays 10-19 5020-29 1430 or more 12

Player 10+ Yds PlaysSantana Moss 16James Jackson 15Reggie Wayne 10Daniel Franks 10Andre King 6Clinton Portis 6Najeh Davenport 3Mondriel Fulcher 1 Kenny Kelly 4Will McPartland 1Ivan Mercer 1Ethenic Sands 1Wilbur Valdez 1

JACKSON SERVES AS A “BIG-PLAY” MAKER: James Jackson is accustomed to making”Big Plays”. The first-year starter has totaled seven carries of 40 or moreyards in his career, four of which were for touchdowns and five of whichcame within his first five carrries in the game.

KELLY’S PERFORMANCE, BEST EVER VS. FSU: Kelly connected on touchdown strikesof 8, 80, and 14 yards. Kelly set career highs in completions (27),attempts (41) and passing yards (370), while registering the longest passplay of his career, an 80-yard TD to Santana Moss. Kelly’s performance wasthe best output by a Miami quarterback all-time vs. Florida State and in sixyears overall (Ryan Collins vs. Memphis State, 11-27-93, 32-54-392, 3 TD).

KELLY’S FIRST QUARTER SUCCESS: Kenny Kelly is 17-of-26 for 240 yards andthree touchdowns in the first quarters of the past three games. At BostonCollege, Kelly was 5-of-7 for 133 yards. Below are Kelly’s first quarterstatistics over the last three games.

Team            Comp-Att-Int    Yards   TDBoston College  5-7-0           133     0Florida State   5-7-0           130     2East Carolina   7-12-0          77      1Total           17-26-0         240     3

KELLY AND MOSS’ CAREER HIGHS AT FSU: In total, eight career highs were setbetween Kelly and Moss at Florida State:

 Moss:   Receiving Yards 180 (previous best: 146 at Rutgers, 1998)        Receptions      9 (previous best: 6 at Rutgers, 1998)        Long            80 (previous best: 71 at Rutgers, 1998, vs. UCLA, 1998)Kelly:  Completions     27 (previous best: 17 vs. Ohio State, 1999)        Attempts        41 (previous best: 37 at East Carolina, 1999)        Passing Yards   370 (previous best: 245 vs. Ohio State, 1999)        Touchdowns      3 (previous best: 2 vs. Florida A&M, 1999)        Long            80 (previous best: 67 vs. Ohio State, 1999)

DOUBLE-FIGURE GAINS: The Hurricane offense has run 432 plays over its firstsix games, with 76 of those plays resulting in gains of 10 or more yards.In addition, UM has recorded 12 plays of 30 or more yards equaling the 1998season total. Miami recorded 15 plays of 10 or more yards in its victoryover Boston College including a 32 yards touchdown run by James Jackson inthe fourth quarter. At Florida State, the UM offense totaled a season-best17 plays of 10 or more yards, including a 45-yard run and an 80-yard TDcatch.

PORTIS MAKES MARK: As the first true freshman tailback to start at Miamisince 1995 and only the third true freshman to start at tailback since 1975,Clinton Portis rushed for more yards (147) at East Carolina than any othertrue freshman running back in the modern era of UM history. He also becamethe first true freshman to rush for over 100 yards since Edgerrin James cameoff the bench to rush for 105 vs. Temple on Oct. 28, 1995. FollowingPortis’ 147 yards rushing is James’ 123-yard performance against BostonCollege in 1995. In addition, Leonard Conley rushed for 120 yards as afreshman vs. Cincinnati during his freshman season in 1987.

CHEVY PLAYER OF THE GAME, TWICE: WR Santana Moss has twice been named aChevrolet Player of the Game in 1999. Moss won the award on August 29th forthe first time with a three-catch, 115-yard performance vs. Ohio State atthe Kickoff Classic. In that game, Moss had a dramatic TD reception of 67yards from QB Kenny Kelly. At FSU on October 9, Moss won the ChevroletAward again with a career best nine-catch, 180-yard, three-TD output.

BILTENIKOFF CANDIDATE: Hurricane wide receiver Santana Moss is one of 35candidates for the Biletnikoff Award, presented annually to the nation’sbest receiver.

DOAK WALKER CANDIDATE: Junior James Jackson is one of 38 candidates for theDr. Pepper Doak Walker Award, given to the nation’s best running back.

WAYNE JUMPS TO NO. 5 IN ALL-TIME RECEPTIONS: Following his five-catcheffort at Florida State, Reggie Wayne jumped past Chris T. Jones, RandalHill and Glenn Dennison into fifth place all-time on Miami’s career catcheslist. Wayne caught two passes against Boston College to give him 111receptions for his career.

Additionally, teammate Santana Moss has 71 career catches.

All-time Receptions

1.  Lamar Thomas (1989-92)      1442.  Michael Irvin (1985-87)     1433.  Wesley Carroll (1989-90)    114    Willie Smith (1984-86)      1145.  Reggie Wayne (1997-)        1116.  Glenn Dennison (1981-83)    1087.  Randal Hill (1987-90)       1078.  Chris T. Jones (1991-94)    1059.  Bill Miller (1959-61)       10210. Larry Brodsky (1979-81)     100

All-time Receiving Yards

1.  Michael Irvin (1985-87)     2,4232.  Lamar Thomas (1989-92)      2,2713.  Eddie Brown (1983-84)       1,7544.  Wesley Carroll (1989-90)    1,7225.  Larry Brodsky (1979-81)     1,6966.  Randal Hill (1987-90)       1,6437.  Chris T. Jones (1991-94)    1,6408.  Reggie Wayne (1997-)        1,5239.  Willie Smith (1984-86)      1,52110. Brian Blades (1984-87)      1,49311. Yatil Green (1994-96)       1,47412. James Cox (1965-67)         1,46413. Bill Miller (1959-61)       1,44814. Horace Copeland (1990-92)   1,42415. Santana Moss (1997-)        1,401

WAYNE AND MOSS MOVE UP THE CAREER RECEIVING YARDS LIST: With his 30receiving yards at Boston College, Reggie Wayne moved into 8th placeall-time with 1,523 career receving yards.

Santana Moss is currently 15th with 1,401 receiving yards.

KELLY TO MOSS, WAYNE & FRANKS, TOO: With six starts under his belt, KennyKelly has already found a potential favorite target – Santana Moss.

Daniel Franks and Reggie Wayne have also become scoring options forKelly as well, as the trio have combined for six scores.

Kelly to Moss was successful at Florida State, as the duo recordedtwo TD’s by air. The first scoring connection was an 80-yard strike onfirst down, while the second was a 14-yard score.

So far this season, the duo have connected on three other TD strikesof 40 yards against Penn State, nine yards against Florida A&M and 67 yardsagaint Ohio State. In addition, Moss was a favorite of former UM QB ScottCovington, as the two joined in on eight TD’s in 1998.

Reggie Wayne’s eight-yard touchdown catch from Kelly at FloridaState marked the quarterback’s second scoring connection with Wayne. Thefirst, was a 21-yard TD pass at East Carolina.

Against Boston College, Kelly connected with Daniel Franks for a10-yard touchdown that tied the game at 28-28. It marked the fourth time inKelly’s career that he connected with Franks for a touchdown.

Kelly’s Targets

Receiver    TD's (Career from Kelly)Santana Moss    7Bubba Franks    4Reggie Wayne    2James Jackson   1Will McPartland 1Andre King (98) 1Dan Smith (98)  1Omar Rolle (98) 1

YOU CAN ONLY HOPE TO CONTAIN HIM: When Santana Moss makes a reception it isusually for big yardage. This season the junior has caught 27 passes for 512yards for an average of 19.0 yards per reception. Over hiscareer, Moss has averaged 19.7 yards per catch to rank second on UM’sall-time list behind Rocky Belk who averaged 21.9 yards per reception from1980-82.

Top Five Career Average Yards Per Catch (min. 50 catches)

1.  Rocky Belk (1980-82)        21.9 (58-1,272)2.  Santana Moss (1997-Pres.)   19.73 (71-1,401)3.  Eddie Brown (1983-84)       19.71 (89-1,754)4.  Phil August (1973-76)       18.9 (61-1,155)5.  Brian Blades (1984-87)      18.7 (80-1,493)

SCORING QUICKLY: James Jackson’s two touchdowns came 22 seconds apart. Thatmarked the shortest span between Miami touchdowns since September 10, 1994when UM scored TDs 12 seconds apart in the first quarter at Arizona State.

JACKSON’S SECOND HALF EFFORT AGAINST PENN STATE: James Jackson’s 106 yardsrushing in the second half against Penn State was the most in a single halfsince Edgerrin James darted for 173 in the first half against UCLA on Dec.5, 1998. Earlier this season, Jackson ran for 103 yards in the first halfagainst Florida A&M.

Jackson rushed for 96 yards in the first quarter against FAMU,marking the most yards in a single quarter since Edgerrin James ran for 102yards in the second quarter vs. UCLA on Dec. 5, 1998. As a freshmen Jacksonrushed for 112 yards in the fourth quarter vs. Virginia Tech on Nov. 8,1997.

100 YARD GAMES: Santana Moss’ nine catches for 180 yards at Florida Statemarked career-highs for the junior receiver. The 100-yard effort was thethird of his career. Earlier in the season against Ohio State, Moss totaled115 yards on three catches. James Jackson’s 134 yards rushing against BostonCollege marks his seventh career 100-yard performance placing him thirdall-time at UM. At East Carolina, freshman back Clinton Portis earned hisfirst 100-yard game with 147 yards on 27 carries.

Game            Player          Carries Catches YardsOhio State      Santana Moss            3       115FAMU            James Jackson   19              103 Penn State      James Jackson   33              129East Carolina   Clinton Portis  27              147Florida State   Santana Moss            9       180Boston College  James Jackson   22              134

KELLY’S FIRST START: Third-year sophomore Kenny Kelly made his first careerstart against Ohio State. Dating back to Jim Kelly in 1979, Hurricanequarterbacks have led UM to an 8-3 record in their first career starts.

OFFENSE MAKING THE MOST OF ITS DRIVES: Of the 96 total drives the UMoffense has logged this season, 54 or 56% have resulted in UM crossing intoopponent territory. In the 54 drives that UM has crossed over midfield, 29or 54% have resulted in scoring. Overall, Miami has scored either atouchdown or field goal in 30 percent of its offensive drives.

UP FOR GRABS: The FSU game marked the first time since 1993 that UM hadfour different receivers with five or more catches. The same feat wasaccomplished vs. Memphis State in a 41-17 UM win.

Receiving           No  Yds TD  LongJones, Chris        7   152 1   54tHarris, Jonathan    9   133 1   52Bennett, Donnell    8   70  0   17Tellison, A.C.      5   43  1   15

DEFENSE NOTES:

NOT LETTING THE OPPONENT CAPITALIZE ON TURNOVERS: So far this season, theUM offense has handed the ball to the opponent defense 13 times by turnover(4 fumbles, 9 INT). Of those 13 turnovers, the opponent has scored on onlyfour drives for 19 points.

Opp.            Quarter UM Turnover     ResultFlorida State   4       Interception    PuntEast Carolina   1       Interception    FumbleEast Carolina   3       Fumble          FumblePenn State      1       Interception    Field GoalPenn State      1       Interception    TouchdownPenn State      2       Fumble          PuntPenn State      4       Interception    DownsPenn State      4       Interception    Game endedFlorida A&M     1       Interception    PuntOhio State      1       Fumble          TouchdownOhio State      2       Interception    Missed FGOhio State      3       Fumble          FumbleOhio State      3       Interception    Field Goal

ZERO OR NEGATIVE YARDS: Of the 422 total plays run against the UM defenseover the first six games, 170 or 40% have gained zero or negative yards. Inaddition, the Hurricane defense has held their opponents to 249 plays or 59%in which the offense netted three or less yards.

Game                Zero    Negative    3 or less   Double-figuresOhio State          15      9           36          8Florida A&M         26      10          45          3Penn State          11      21          44          15East Carolina       21      8           41          21Florida State       16      6           42          20Boston College      19      8           41          15Total (422 plays)   108     62          249         82

STUFFING DRIVES: The Hurricane defense has held their opponents scorelessin 72 of 95 total drives or 76%. The UM defense has held its opponentswithout a touchdown in 80 of 95 drives or 84%.

Game            Opp. Drives Scoreless   TD  FGOhio State      15          12          1   2Florida A&M     19          18          0   1Penn State      17          12          3   2East Carolina   17          12          3   2Florida State   12          7           4   1Boston College  15          11          4   0   Totals          95          72          15  8

SOLID AGAINST THE RUN: A total of 228 rushing plays have run against the UMdefense, of those plays:

    68 percent (156) have been for less than five yards.    64 percent (145) have gained three or less yards.    34 percent (78) have gone for zero or negative yards.    26 percent (60) have gone for negative yards only.    13 percent (29) went for double-figures.

POPOVICH RECORDS DEFENSIVE FIRST IN CONSECUTIVE GAMES: In the East Carolinagame on Sept. 25, senior Jeff Popovich registered his first careerinterception in the second quarter. At Florida State, Popovich recorded hisfirst career sack on a third down in the fourth quarter to force an FSUpunt.

DEFNSIVE POW: Middle linebacker Nate Webster was named the BIG EASTDefensive Player of the Week for his performance vs. Penn State on Septmeber18. In that game, Webster registered 20 tackles (14 solo), including fourtackles for loss and one sack.

LEWIS LEADS SACK ATTACK: Junior defensive tackle Damione Lewis’ sack atFlorida State marked his fifth on the season and 11th for his career. Thefive sacks are already a career season-high for Lewis. In 1997, then-a truefreshman Lewis recorded four. He had two in 1998.

Lewis’ two sacks against Ohio State marked the first multi-sack gamein his career.

Sophomore safety Ed Reed places second on the team with three sacks,while sophomore linebacker Dan Morgan has 2.5.

Other than Lewis, defensive ends Michael Boireau and William Josephshared a sack and safety Jeff Popovich recorded one. The sacks were thefirst for Joseph and Popovich, while Boireau has 1.5 on his career.

Player          '99 Sacks   CareerDamione Lewis   5.0         11.0Ed Reed         3.0         5.0Dan Morgan      2.5         7.5Howard Clark    1.0         1.0Jamaal Green    1.0         1.0Jeff Popovich   1.0         1.0James Sutton    1.0         1.0Matt Walters    1.0         1.0Nick Ward       1.0         1.0Michael Boireau 0.5         1.5Quincy Hipps    0.5         6.5William Joseph  0.5         0.5James Lewis     0.5         0.5Matt Sweeney    0.5         5.5

CLIMBING THE CHART: Following his 15-tackle performance at Boston College,junior linebacker Dan Morgan’s career tackle total rose to 313 which ranksin 10th place all-time at the University of Miami. Morgan, who recorded 105tackles as a freshman and a BIG EAST best 150 tackles as a sophomore,surpassed linebackers Jay Brophy (1981-83) and Richard Griffiths (1972-74)who were tied for 10th place with 308 career tackles. A Butkus Awardsemi-finalist, Morgan enters the West Virginia game eight tackles shy of No.9 Rick Liddell (321 tackles, 1972-74) and 14 tackles shy of No. 8 TedHendricks (327 tackles, 1966-68). Morgan is 177 tackles shy of the school’scareer tackles record held by Geroge Mira Jr. (490 tackles 1984-87).

All-Time Tackles

1.  George Mira Jr. (1984-87)   4902.  Scott Nicolas (1978-80)     4563.  Michael Barrow (1989-92)    4234.  Darrin Smith (1989-92)      4015.  Ray Lewis (1993-95)         3886.  Rod Carter (1985-88)        3617.  James Burgess (1993-96)     3438.  Ted Hendricks (1966-68)     3279.  Rick Liddell (1972-74)      32110. Dan Morgan (1997-)          313

THE PLAY STOPS HERE: Junior linebacker Dan Morgan has led the Hurricanes intackles in each of his first two seasons. Last season Morgan tallied 150stops to lead the BIG EAST Conference. His 1998 total ranked fifth in thenation last season and ranks as the fifth highest single season total in UMhistory.

MORGAN, WEBSTER – NAGURSKI AND BUTKUS CANDIDATES: Junior linebackers DanMorgan and Nate Webster are two of 20 semi-finalists for the Bronko NagurskiTrophy, presented by the Football Writers Association of America to thenation’s best defensive player. Five finalists for the award will beannounced in late November. The award be announced on December 6 inCharlotte, NC…Morgan and Webster were also candidates for the ButkusAward, which is given to the nation’ sbest linebacker. Last week, Morganwas named one of 11 semifinalists, three finalists will be named on November11, the Butkus Award winnner will be named on December 6.

SPECIAL TEAMS NOTES:

CROSLAND CLOSES IN ON FOURTH PLACE DANNY MILLER: Senior kicker/punter AndyCrosland’s seven points at Boston College (4 PAT, 1 FG) moved him intofourth-place on UM’s career scoring list with 250 points. Carlos Huerta(1988-91) leads all UM players with 397 overall points.

Crosland’s Career

Distance    Attempts    MadeInside 20   0           0   20-29       21 (5)      15 (2)30-39       16 (4)      13 (4)40-49       12 (3)      6 (1)50 +        3           2Totals      53 (12)     36 (7)

CROSLAND TIES CAREER-BEST FOR FIELD GOALS AT EAST CAROLINA: Andy Croslandmatched his career high for both field goals made and by going 3-of-4against East Carolina. Crosland went 3-of-3 at Memphis in 1996 and vs.Rutgers in 1997. The performance at Memphis came in his first career game.

WALK-ON CAPSHAW MAKES FIRST START AS PUNTER: Sophomore walk-on FreddieCapshaw made his first career start as the Hurricanes punter vs. EastCarolina. Capshaw had seven punts for 294, including a career-long 52yarder in the fourth quarter. Four of Capshaw’s seven punts fell inside the20-yard line.

CAPSHAW GOES INSIDE THE 20: Punter Freddie Capshaw has dropped nine of his25 punts (36 percent) inside the opponent’s 20-yard line this season.

KICKER’S DEBUT: True-freshman Jesse Ohliger kicked off twice in the firsthalf against Florida State marking the first career game action for thewalk-on from Newark, Delaware.

POPOVICH HONORED BY BURGER KING: Burger King Corporation has namedUniversity of Miami defensive back Jeff Popovich a Division I-A CollegeFootball Scholar Athlete. In honor of his outstanding athletic and academicachievements and his commitment to mentoring the community’s youth, BurgerKing Corporation has donated $10,000 to the University of Miami’s generalscholarship fund in his name. The award will be presented by Burger KingFranchisee Robe St. Juste and University of Miami Athletic Director, PaulDee, during today’s game.

Popovich is a senior who has maintained over a 3.43 grade pointaverage as a Biomediacal Engineering Major, while playing strong safety forthe Hurricanes. In addition to his academic and athletic endeavors,Popovich also volunteers with elementary school children and the Easter SealSociety.

HURRICANES ENJOYING BLOCK PARTY: So far this season, Miami has registered ablock or deflection four times. The figure is two behind last season’soverall total of six and two more than 1997’s total of two blocks. UM is ontrack to register nine blocked kicks this season.

UM SPECIAL TEAMS IN THE NCAA: Andy Crosland and Freddie Capshaw haveassisted the Miami’s special teams unit to a No. 28 ranking in net puntingwith a 38.3 yards per punt average. The Hurricanes’ punt returners place33rd nationally with 11.4 yards per return. Santana Moss is rated No. 39 in the nation in punt returns with an9.59 average. Additionally, Crosland places 38th nationally with 1.17 fieldgoals per game.

HURRICANES RECORD FIRST SAFETY IN BUTCH DAVIS ERA: Miami’s safety with 1:14left in the first half of the FAMU game marked the first safety of the ButchDavis era. The last time the Hurricanes recorded a safety was Oct. 3, 1992vs. Florida State, when Malcom Pearson tackled Corey Sawyer. The recentFAMU safety came on a blocked punt by Aaron Moser.

TOUCHBACK: Kickers Todd Sievers and Andy Crosland were successful inreaching the end zone with their kickoffs in 1998. The tandem forcedtouchbacks on 30 percent (19 of 68) of their kickoffs. Fourteen of Sievers’53 kickoffs were for touchbacks, while Crosland forced touchbacks on 4-of-15kickoffs. The 19 touchbacks in 1998 was dramatically higher than UM’s totalof two from the 1997 season.

CHARTING CROSLAND’S CAREER

Point After Touchdowns1.  Carlos Huerta (1988-91) 1782.  Greg Cox (1984-87)      1613.  Dane Prewitt (1992-95)  1494.  Andy Crosland (1996- )  136

Field Goals1. Carlos Huerta (1988-91) 732. Danny Miller (1978-81) 563. Greg Cox (1984-87) 474. Dane Prewitt (1992-95) 415. Andy Crosland (1996- ) 39

Points Scored Kicking1. Carlos Huerta (1988-91) 3972. Greg Cox (1984-87) 3023. Dane Prewitt (1992-95) 2724. Andy Crosland (1996- ) 250

Points Scored (overall)1. Carlos Huerta (1988-91) 3972. Greg Cox (1984-87) 3023. Dane Prewitt (1992-95) 2724. Andy Crosland (1996- ) 250

WHAT AN IMPACT: In Butch Davis’ 51 games as UM’s head coach, the ‘Caneshave blocked 34 kicks. In the 10 years prior to Davis’ arrival (1985-94),the Hurricanes blocked 23 kicks. UM established a new single-season recordwith 12 blocks in 1995, shattering the previous high of six set in 1970.Since 1951, Miami has blocked 92 kicks. Below is a listing of blocks underDavis:

Game (Year)         Type            PlayerFAMU (95)           Punt deflection Omar RolleVirginia Tech (95)  Field goal      Twan RussellFlorida State (95)  Punt            Tremain MackRutgers (95)        Punt deflection Tremain Mack                    Punt            Tremain MackBoston College (95) Field goal      Kenny Holmes                    Field goal      Kenny Holmes                    Field goal      Booker PickettWest Virginia (95)  Extra point     Nelson Smith                    Punt            Tremain Mack                    Punt deflection Tremain MackSyracuse (95)       Field goal      Tremain MackMemphis (96)        Punt            Booker PickettThe Citadel (96)    Punt            Eugene RidgleyRutgers (96)        Punt deflection Tremain MackWest Virginia (96)  Punt            Tremain MackTemple (96)         Field goal      Tremain MackVirginia Tech (96)  Field goal      Booker PickettBoston College (96) Punt            Jack HallmonSyracuse (96)       Field goal      Booker PickettVirginia (96)       Field goal      Tremain Mack                    Field goal      Kenny HolmesArizona State (97)  Punt deflection Nick WardFlorida State (97)  Extra Point     Duane StarksETSU (98)           Punt deflection Nate Brooks                    Punt            Edward ReedCincinnati (98)     Punt            Nate Brooks                    Field goal      Matt SweeneyVirginia Tech (98)  Punt            Nate BrooksTemple (98)         Punt            Nick WardFAMU (99)           Punt            Aaron MoserFAMU (99)           Punt deflection Maurice SikesPenn State (99)     Punt deflection James LewisEast Carolina (99)  Field Goal      Edward Reed

1999 Awards and Honors Watch:

Freddie Capshaw
BIG EAST Special Teams Player of the Week: vs.Florida St. (Oct. 9)

James Jackson
Dr. Pepper Doak Walker Award: (nation’s best running back)- One of38 preseason candidates…winner will be announced on Dec. 9.

Kenny Kelly
Kickoff Classic MVP: vs. Ohio State (Aug. 29)

Dan Morgan
Butkus Award: (nation’s best linebacker)- One of 65 candidates onthe Butkus Award Watch List…10 semi-finalists named on October 21. Three finalists named on November 11 and the winner is announced onDec.10.
Bronko Nagurski Award: (nation’s best defensive play) – One of 20semifinalists…five finalists named in late November…winner named on Dec.6.

Santana Moss
Biletnikoff Award: (nation’s best receiver)- One of 35 players onthe award’s “Watch List”.
Chevrolet Player of the Game: vs. Ohio State (Aug. 29), vs. FloridaState (Oct. 9)

Jeff Popovich
Burger King Division I-A College Football Scholar-Athlete (PennSt.).Nate Webster
Butkus Award: (nation’s best linebacker)- One of 65 candidates onthe Butkus Award Watch List…10 semi-finalists named on October 21. Three finalists named on November 11 and the winner is announced onDec.10.
Bronko Nagurski Award: (nation’s best defensive play) – One of 20semifinalists…five finalists named in late November…winner named on Dec.6.
BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week: vs. Penn St. (Sept. 18)

CANES IN THE PRE-SEASON PUBLICATIONS:

Al Blades, Jr., Free Safety
BIG EAST: First Team – Preview Sports, Second Team – The Sporting News.

Michael Boireau, Sr., Defensive End
BIG EAST: Second Team. – The Sporting News

Andy Crosland, Sr., Punter
BIG EAST: Second Team – The Sporting News

Najeh Davenport, So., Running Back
BIG EAST: Second Team – SportsLine/Lindy’s.

Daniel Franks, Jr., Tight End
All-America: First Team – College Sports News, SportsLine/Lindy’s, SecondTeam – Athlon’s, Street & Smith’s, Football News.
BIG EAST: Offensive Player of the Year – College Football News, First Team -The Sporting News, Athlon’s, College Football News, Street & Smith’s,Football News.
Player Ratings: The Sporting News #2 Tight End, College Football News #2Tight End, SportsLine/Lindy’s No. 9 BIG EAST Talent, Sports Illustrated -“One of 10 Players the NFL Wants Now”

Joaquin Gonzalez, So., Tackle
All-American: Second Team – Street & Smith’s, Third Team – College SportsNews.
BIG EAST: First Team – College Football News, Preview Sports, Street &Smith’s, Second Team – The Sporting News, SportsLine/Lindy’s.
Player Ratings: College Football News #16 Offensive Lineman, Outland TrophyCandidate – Street & Smith’s, Lombardi Award Candidate – Street & Smith’s.

James Jackson, Jr., Running Back
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, Preview Sports, Street & Smith’s,Football News, SportsLine/Lindy’s.
Player Ratings: SportsLine/Lindy’s No. 2 BIG EAST Talent.

Kenny Kelly, So., Quaterback
Player Ratings: SportsLine/Lindy’s BIG EAST Newcomer of the Year

Damione Lewis, Jr., Defensive Tackle
All-America: Second Team – Sportsline/Lindy’s.
BIG EAST: First Team – Preview Sports, SportsLine/Lindy’s.Player Ratings: SportsLine/Lindy’s No. 6 BIG EAST Talent.

Richard Mercier, Sr., Guard
All-America: First Team – The Sporting News, Preview Sports, Street &Smith’s, Football News, Sportsline/Lindy’s, Second Team – Athlon’s, CollegeSports News.
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, Athlon’s, College Football News,Street & Smith’s, Football News.
Player Ratings: The Sporting News #1 Guard, College Football News #12Offensive Lineman, Fans Only No. 4 Outland Trophy Candidate, Fans OnlyLombardi Award Candidate, SportsLine/Lindy’s No. 5 BIG EAST Talent.

Dan Morgan, Jr., Outside Linebacker
All-America: First Team – College Sports News, Street & Smith’s, Second Team- Athlon’s, Preview Sports, Third Team – Football News.
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, Athlon’s, College Football News,Preview Sports, Street & Smith’s, Football News, SportsLine/Lindy’s.Player Ratings: Butkus Award Watch List, College Football News #8Linebacker, Bednarik Award Candidate – Street & Smith’s, Butkus AwardCandidate – Street & Smith’s, SportsLine/Lindy’s BIG EAST Defensive Playerof the Year, SportsLine/Lindy’s No. 3 BIG EAST Talent.

Santana Moss, Jr., Wide Receiver
All-American: Honorable Mention – College Sports News, Street & Smith’s.BIG EAST: First Team – Athlon’s, College Football News, Preview Sports,Street & Smith’s, Football News, Second Team – The Sporting News,SportsLine/Lindy’s.
Player Ratings: College Football News #14 Wide Receiver.

Leonard Myers, Jr., Cornerback
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, Athlon’s, College Football News,Street & Smith’s, Football News, Second Team – SportsLine/Lindy’s.Player Ratings: The Sporting News #9 Cornerback.

Edward Reed, So., Strong Safety
All-American: Honorable Mention – Football News.
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, Athlon’s, Football News, SecondTeam – SportsLine/Lindy’s.

Eric Schnupp, Sr., Guard
BIG EAST: Second Team – The Sporting News

Reggie Wayne, Jr., Wide Receiver
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, Second Team – SportsLine/Lindy’s.
Player Ratings: The Sporting News #11 Wide Receiver.

Nate Webster, Jr., Inside LinebackerAll-American: Third Team – College Sports News, Honorable Mention – Street &Smith’s, Football News.
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, Athlon’s, College Football News,Preview Sports, Street & Smith’s, Football News, SportsLine/Lindy’s.
Player Ratings: Butkus Award Watch List, The Sporting News #13 InsideLinebacker, College Football News #7 Linebacker.

Ty Wise, Sr., Center
BIG EAST: First Team – The Sporting News, SportsLine/Lindy’s.
Player Ratings: The Sporting News #7 Center.

THE LAST TIME:

Kickoff Return For TD
By Hurricane: Tremain Mack at Syracuse, 11/30/96,95 yards, UM 38-31
By Opponent: Kevin Johnson, Syracuse, 11/28/98, 100 yards, SU66-13

Punt Return For TD
By Hurricane: Duane Starks at Baylor, 8/30/97, 85yards, UM 45-14
By Opponent: Corey Harris, The Citadel, 9/7/96, 80 yards, UM 52-6

Blocked Punt Return For TD
By Hurricane: Nate Brooks vs. EastTennesse State, 9/5/98, 12 yards, blocked by Edward Reed, UM 66-17
By Opponent: Alphonso Williams, Florida State, 10/3/87, 5 yards,blocked by Martin Mayhew, UM 26-25

Interception Return For TD By Hurricane:
Al Blades, at Rutgers,10/3/98, 60 yards, UM 53-17
By Opponent: Keion Carpenter, Virginia Tech, 11/16/96, 100 yards,VT 21-7

Fumble Return For TD
By Hurricane: Nick Ward vs. Arizona State,9/13/97, 85 yards, UM 12-23
By Opponent: Shevin Smith, FSU, 10/12/96, fumble returned 54yards, FSU 34-16

Safety Recorded
By Hurricanes: vs. FAMU, 9/4/99, blocked punt by AaronMoser, UM 57-3
By Opponent: Florida State, 10/10/98, Kenny Kelly sacked inendzone, FSU 26-14

Shutout at Miami’s Home
By Hurricanes: vs. Pittsburgh, 9/28/96, UM 45-0
By Opponent: Auburn, 10/4/74, AU 3-0

Shutout On Road
By Hurricanes: at Rutgers, 9/12/96, UM 33-0
By Opponent: Florida State, 10/4/97, FSU 47-0

Blocked Field Goal
By Hurricane: Matt Sweeney at Cincinnati, 9/12/98,UM 38-12
By Opponent: Tommy Polley, Florida State, 10/9/99, blocked46-yard attempt, FSU 31-21

Blocked Field Goal
By Hurricane: Matt Sweeney at Cincinnati, 9/12/98,UM 38-12
By Opponent: Tomha McMillan, East Carolina, 9/25/99, ECU 27-23

PAT Unsuccessful
By Hurricanes: Andy Crosland vs. Penn State,9/18/99 kick wide left, PSU 27-23
By Opponent: Dan Stultz, Ohio State, 8/29/99, kick wide left, UM23-12

100-Yard Rushing-Game
By Hurricane: James Jackson, at Boston College,134 yards, 22 carries, 10/23/99, UM 31-28
By Opponent: Cedric Washington, Boston College, 183 yards, 29carries, 10/23/99, UM 31-28

200-Yard Rushing-Game
By Hurricane: Edgerrin James vs. UCLA, 299 yards,39 carries, 12/5/97, UM 49-45
By Opponent: Amos Zereoue, West Virginia, 206 yards, 25 carries,9/27/97, WVU 28-17

300-Yard Passing-Game
By Hurricane: Kenny Kelly vs. Florida State,10/9/99, 370 yards, 27 of 41, FSU 31-21
By Opponent: Chris Weinke, Florida State, 10/9/99, 332 yards, 23of 34, FSU 31-21

400-Yard Passing-Game
By Hurricane: Gino Torretta vs. Iowa, 9/5/92, 433yards, 31 of 51, UM 24-7
By Opponent: Cade McNown, UCLA, 12/5/98, 513 yards, 26 of 35, UM49-45

100-Yard Receiving-Game By Hurricane:
Santana Moss vs. Florida State,10/9/99, 180 yards, 9 receptions, FSU 31-21
By Opponent: Chaffie Fields, Penn State, 9/18/99, 177 yards, 5receptions, PSU 27-23

200-Yard Receiving-Game
By Hurricane: Wesley Carroll vs. California,9/15/90, 208 yards, 11 receptions, UM 52-24
By Opponent: Gerard Phelan, Boston College, 11/23/84, 226 yards,11 receptions, BC 47-45

60+Yard Punt
By Hurricane: Freddie Capshaw at Boston College, 10/23/99,60 yards,UM 31-28
By Opponent: Chris Sailer, UCLA, 12/5/98, 65 yards, UM 49-45

70+Yard Punt
By Hurricane: Rob Rajsich vs. Kansas, 9/30/78, 79 yards,UM 38-6
By Opponent: Sean Liss, Florida State, 10/12/96, 76 yards, FSU34-16

50+Yard Field Goal
By Hurricane: Andy Crosland vs. Arizona State, 50yards, UM 12-23
By Opponent: Nate Trout, Syracuse, 51 yards, SU 66-13

Three Field Goals-Game
By Hurricane: Andy Crosland at East Carolina,9/25/99 (34, 38, 47), ECU 27-23
By Opponent: Chris Ferencik, Pittsburgh, 10/21/95, (34, 26, 39),UM 17-16

Three TDs-Game
By Hurricane: Edgerrin James vs. UCLA, 12/5/98, (45 run,10 run, 1 run), UM 49-45
By Opponent: Donovan McNabb, Syracuse, 11/28/98, (1 run, 51 run,1 run), SU 66-13

Four TDs-Game
By Hurricane: Melvin Bratton vs. Boston College, 11/23/84,(2 run, 1 run, 52 run , 1 run), BC 47-45
By Opponent: Tony Gabriel, Syracuse, 11/21/70, (5 pass, 53 pass,7 pass, 7 pass), SU 56-16

Three Rushing TDs-Game
By Hurricane: Edgerrin James vs. UCLA, 12/5/98,(45 run, 10 run, 1 run), UM 49-45
By Opponent: Donovan McNabb, Syracuse, 11/28/98, (1, 51, 1), SU66-13

Four Rushing TDs-Game
By Hurricane: Melvin Bratton vs. Boston College,11/23/84, (2, 1, 52, 1), BC 47-45
By Opponent: Joseph Scott, Texas A&M, 1944, (60, 11, 6, 7), A&M70-14

Three Passing TDs-Game
By Hurricane: Kenny Kelly at Boston College,10/23/99, (8, 23, 10), UM 31-28
By Opponent: Marcus Crandell, East Carolina, 10/19/96, (2, 33,19), ECU 31-6

Four Passing TDs-Game
By Hurricane: Ryan Clement vs. The Citadel, 9/7/96(34, 10, 17, 25), UM 52-6
By Opponent: Cade McNown, UCLA, 12/5/98, (77, 7, 14, 61, 59), UM49-45

Three Receiving TDs-Game
By Hurricane: Santana Moss at Rutgers,10/3/98, (12, 28, 71), UM 53-17
By Opponent: Tom Durrance, Florida, 11/27/71, (9, 9, 12, 15), UF45-16

***Bowl Game

GAME-BY-GAME RECAPS – 1999

GAME 1

No. 12 MIAMI 23, No. 9 OHIO STATE 12
August 29, 1999
Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ

Kenny Kelly threw for 245 yards and a touchdown and ran for anotheras No. 12 Miami defeated No. 9 Ohio State, 23-12, in the Kickoff Classic.

James Jackson opened the scoring for the Hurricanes with a 44-yardrun 3:16 into the first quarter.

After the ninth-ranked Buckeyes took a 9-7 lead on a Dan Stultzfield goal and a Steve Wisniewski touchdown reception, Miami put the gameaway with 16 unanswered points including a showstopping 67 yard touchdownreception by Santana Moss with eight seconds remaining before halftime.

With the win Miami handed the Buckeyes their first season-openingloss since 1986. Kelly, making his first collegiate start, was named thegame’s Most Valuable Player.

BOXSCORE

               1   2   3   4   FMiami (12)     7  16   0   0   23Ohio State (9) 9   0   3   0   12

First Quarter
Mia-Jackson 44 run (Crosland kick)
OSU-FG Stultz 23
OSU-Wisniewski 6 pass from Moherman (kick failed)

Second Quarter
Mia-Kelly 7 run (Kelly pass to Jackson)
Mia-S Moss 67 pass from Kelly (Kelly run)

Third Quarter
OSU-FG Stultz 24

                    Miami Fla  Ohio St First downs         14         12Rushes-yards        43-153     33-116Passing yards       245        104Comp-Att-Int        17-25-2    11-23-2Sacked-yards lost   3-27       3-20Punts               4-45.0     6-37.2Fumbles-lost        2-2        4-2Penalties-yards     10-82      7-31Time of possession  33:14      26:46

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING: Miami Fla-Jackson 24-89, Davenport 13-81, Fulcher 1-4, Team1-0, Kelly 4-minus 21. Ohio St-Wiley 9-72, Wells 11-44, Keller 2-15, Martin2-8, Bellisari 2-minus 11, Moherman 7-minus 12.
PASSING: Miami Fla-Kelly 17-25-2-245. Ohio St-Moherman 10-22-2-107,Bellisari 1-1-0-minus 3.
RECEIVING: Miami Fla-Franks 5-52, Wayne 5-40, S Moss 3-115, Fulcher2-43, Davenport 1-1, Jackson 1-minus 6. Ohio St-Germany 4-56, Wisniewski2-30, Keller 2-15, Wells 2-2, Rambo 1-1.

Att: 73,037

GAME 2

No. 8 MIAMI 57, Florida A&M 3
September 4, 1999
Orange Bowl, Miami, FL

Junior running back James Jackson rushed for 103 yards and twotouchdowns in the opening half as No. 8 Miami opened a 40-3 halftime leadand cruised to a 57-3 win over Division I-AA Florida A&M in the Orange Bowl.

After a 25 yard field goal by Jeremy Edwards which gave FAMU a 3-0lead with 10:12 to play in the first quarter, Miami responded bothoffensively and defensively scoring 57 unanswered points and limiting FAMUto six first downs and 69 yards of total offense, including minus-17rushing. The Hurricanes totaled 364 yards, including 191 on the ground.

Jackson carried 19 times for 103 yards and Kelly completed 9-of-15passes for 119 yards, two touchdowns and one interception.

BOXSCORE

             1   2   3   4   FFlorida A&M  3   0   0   0   3Miami (8)   14  26  10   7   57

First Quarter
FAMU-FG Edwards 25
MIA-Santana Moss 9 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)
MIA-Jackson 43 run (Crosland kick)

Second Quarter
MIA-Jackson 7 run (Crosland kick)
MIA-FG Crosland 22
MIA-Franks 3 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)
MIA-Portis 1 run (Crosland kick)
MIA-Safety

Third Quarter
MIA-FG Crosland 32 MIA-Sands 13 pass from Dorsey (Crosland kick)

Fourth Quarter
MIA-Portis 2 run (Crosland kick)

                    Florida A&M  Miami FlaFirst downs         6            18Rushed-yards        29-(-17)     48-191Passing yards       85           163Comp-Att-Int        8-29-0       13-28-1Sacked-yards lost   6-50         0-0Punts               13-31.9      7-41.1Fumbles-lost        6-4          1-0Penalties-yards     9-63         8-50Time of possession  26:59        33:01

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING: Florida A&M-T Williams 14-30, K Williams 4-20, Lordeus2-minus 3, Team 1-minus 12, J Jackson 4-minus 22, Dykstra 4-minus 30. MiamiFla-Jackson 19-103, Payton 9-32, Portis 9-19, D Williams 5-18, Mcpartland1-9, Valdez 2-5, Fulcher 1-4, R Williams 1-2, Hart 1-minus 1.
PASSING: Florida A&M-Q Gray 4-11-0-55, Dykstra 3-11-0-25, J Jackson1-7-0-5. Miami Fla-Kelly 9-15-1-119, Dorsey 4-12-0-44, Hart 0-1-0-0.
RECEIVING: Florida A&M-Nunnally 5-36, Lamb 2-43, Bendross 1-6.Miami Fla-S Moss 4-73, Franks 2-19, Sands 2-18, Mercer 1-21, Wayne 1-17,Jackson 1-5, Fulcher 1-5, R Williams 1-5.

Att: 54,147

GAME 3

No. 3 PENN STATE 27, No. 8 MIAMI 23
September 18, 1999
Orange Bowl, Miami, FL

Chafie Fields caught a 79-yard touchdown pass from Kevin Thompsonwith 1:41 left to rally No. 3 Penn State to a 27-23 victory over No. 8 Miamiat the Orange Bowl.

Trailing 23-20 late in the fourth quarter, Penn State’s defensestopped the Hurricanes (2-1) on fourth and two from the Penn State 22 yardline. A first down likely would have sealed the game as Penn State (4-0) wasout of timeouts with 1:52 left. Penn State took over and Thompson hit Fieldsdown the left sideline for the winning score.

Kelly completed 11-of-21 passes for 160 yards but threw fourinterceptions. Jackson carried 33 times for 129 yards and two touchdowns. Hebecame the first player to break 100 yards rushing aginst the Nittany Lionssince Fred Taylor (Florida) in the 1998 Florida Citrus Bowl.

Fields made five catches for 177 yards, including a 49-yard TD fromRashard Casey on the final play of the first quarter. Casey completed 7-of-9passes for 99 yards and an interception and Thompson was 9-of-15 for 147yards. Penn State had 356 total yards, but Fields had 128 on his two scoringcatches alone.

BOXSCORE

                1   2   3   4  FPenn State (3) 10   0   7  10  27Miami (8)       0   3   7  13  23

First Quarter
PSU-FG Forney 32
PSU-Fields 49 pass from Casey (Forney kick)

Second Quarter
Miami Fla-FG Crosland 29

Third Quarter
PSU-Mccoo 2 run (Forney kick)
UM-Jackson 18 run (Crosland kick)

Fourth Quarter
UM-S Moss 40 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)
PSU-FG Forney 26
UM-Jackson 39 run (kick failed)
PSU-Fields 79 pass from Thompson (Forney kick)

                    Penn St.  Miami Fla First downs         17        15Rushed-yards        45-110    40-160Passing yards       246       160Comp-Att-Int        16-24-1   11-21-4Sacked-yards lost   6-17      2-13Punts               6-39.2    6-37.5Fumbles-lost        4-2       4-1Penalties-yards     8-79      5-49Time of possession  32:23     27:37

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING: Penn St-Mccoo 16-46, Casey 9-37, A Harris 6-24, Cerimele3-13, Thompson 4-1, L Johnson 2-1, Easy 1-0, Fields 1-minus 1, Drummond1-minus 5, Team 2-minus 6. Miami Fla-Jackson 33-129, Kelly 6-26, Mcpartland1-5.
PASSING: Penn St-Thompson 9-15-0-147, Casey 7-9-1-99. MiamiFla-Kelly 11-21-4-160.
RECEIVING: Penn St-Drummond 6-53, Fields 5-177, T Stewart 2-19, AHarris 2-minus 6, Crenshaw 1-3. Miami Fla-S Moss 4-67, Franks 2-14, Jackson1-21, McPartland 1-20, Wayne 1-18, King 1-15, Fulcher 1-5.

GAME 4

EAST CAROLINA 27, No. 9 MIAMI 23
September 25, 1999
Carter-Finley Stadium, Raleigh, NC

East Carolina scored the last 24 points to upset ninth-ranked Miami,27-23, in a game moved to Carter-Finley Stadium due to Hurricane Floyd.

ECU quarterback David Garrard threw a 27-yard touchdown pass toKeith Stokes with 4:51 left to cap the improbable comeback and the school’sfirst 4-0 start since 1977.

Garrard completed 30-of-46 passes for 328 yards, one touchdown andan interception. He also gained another 29 yards on 11 carries.

In his first start, Miami running back Clinton Portis ran 27 timesfor 147 yards – a Miami record among true freshman – but played sparingly inthe second half.

The Pirates again dominated the second-half totaling 331yard ofoffense while holding Miami to just 154 yards. Miami managed 235 of its 389yards in the first two quarters, when Portis carried 22 times for 133 yards.Kelly completed only 15-of-37 passes for 159 yards, a TD and interception.

BOXSCORE

               1   2   3   4   FMiami Fla (9) 10  10   3   0   23East Carolina  0   3   7  17   27

First Quarter
UM-Wayne 21 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)
UM-FG Crosland 34

Second Quarter
UM-Portis 4 run (Crosland kick)
UM-FG Crosland 38
ECU-FG Miller 38

Third Quarter
UM-FG Crosland 47
ECU-J Wilson 24 run (Miller kick)

Fourth Quarter
ECU-J Wilson 18 run (Miller kick)
ECU-FG Miller 39
ECU-Stokes 27 pass from Garrard (Miller kick)

                    Miami Fla  East CarolinaFirst downs         22         27Rushed-yards        49-230     32-122Passing yards       159        328Comp-Att-Int        15-37-1    30-48-1Sacked-yards lost   3-24       2-14Punts               7-42.0     6-39.3Fumbles-lost        2-1        3-2Penalties-yards     14-95      2-10Time of possession  32:57      27:03

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING: Miami Fla-Portis 27-147, Jackson 9-38, Kelly 10-34, Payton3-11. East Carolina-J Wilson 8-71, Garrard 11-29, Henry 6-19, Stokes 1-10,Team 3-minus 3, Alston 3-minus 4.
PASSING: Miami Fla-Kelly 15-37-1-159. East Carolina-Garrard30-46-1-328, Alston 0-2-0-0.
RECEIVING: Miami Fla-Wayne 7-80, S Moss 3-37, Franks 1-11, Valdez1-11, Fulcher 1-9, Jackson 1-7, Portis 1-4. East arolina-Chappell 8-76, RBurns 5-42, Dodd 4-69, J Wilson 4-32, Stokes 3-34, Floyd 2-32, Powell 2-14,M Harris 1-29, Henry 1-0.

Att: 45,900

GAME 5

No. 1 FLORIDA STATE 31, No. 19 MIAMI 21
October 9, 1999
Doak Campbell Stadium, Tallahassee, FL

FSU quarterback Chris Weinke completed 23-of-34 passes for 332 yardsand two touchdowns and Travis Minor rushed for 146 yards on 25 carries tolead the No. 1 ranked Seminoles to a 31-21 victory over No. 19 Miami.

Kenny Kelly and Santana Moss had career games for Miami. Kelly was27-of-41 for 370 yards and three touchdowns while Moss caught nine passesfor 180 yards and two scores.

Florida State scored first as Weinke hit Germaine Stringer on a48-yard scoring pass 3:47 into the game. Kelly threw an eight-yard scoringpass to Reggie Wayne 3:08 later but Florida State responded with athree-yard TD burst by Jeff Chaney on its next possession. On the next playfrom scrimmage, Kelly hooked up with Moss on an 80-yard scoring pass to tiethe score at 14-14. Miami took the lead with 9:40 left in the first halfwhen Kelly threw a 14-yard TD pass to Moss. The Seminoles marched back andtied the game with a 13-play, 73-yard drive that ended with a Weinke 18-yardTD toss to Ryan Sprague.

The FSU defense took over in the second half holding the Hurricanesscoreless while its offensive unit managed to put another 10 points on theboard including a two-yard TD run by Minor in the fourth quarter which putthe game out of reach.

BOXSCORE

                1   2   3   4   FMiami Fla (19)  14  7   0   0   21Florida St (1)  14  7   3   7   31

First Quarter
FSU-Stringer 48 pass from Weinke (Janikowski kick)
UM-Wayne 8 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)
FSU-Chaney 3 run (Janikowski kick)
UM-S Moss 80 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)

Second Quarter
UM-S Moss 14 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)
FSU-Sprague 18 pass from Weinke (Janikowski kick)

Third Quarter
FSU-FG Janikowski 38

Fourth Quarter
FSU-T Minor 2 run (Janikowski kick)

                    Florida St. Miami Fla First downs         23          23Rushed-yards        31-78       41-153Passing yards       370         332Comp-Att-Int        27-41-1     23-35-1Sacked-yards lost   2-12        3-24Punts               6-43.8      5-38.0Fumbles-lost        2-0         3-1Penalties-yards     7-56        10-88Time of possession  30:16       29:44

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING: Miami Fla-Jackson 22-74, Mcpartland 1-5, Kelly 6-2, Fulcher1-2, S Moss 1-minus 5. Florida St-T Minor 25-146, Chaney 6-12, Kendra 5-8,Weinke 5-minus 13.
PASSING: Miami Fla-Kelly 27-41-1-370. Florida St-Weinke 23-34-1-332,M Minnis 0-1-0-0.
RECEIVING: Miami Fla-S Moss 9-180, King 5-78, Wayne 5-59, Franks5-36, Jackson 2-15, Fulcher 1-2. Florida St-Dugans 5-80, M Minnis 4-54,Stringer 3-80, T Minor 3-21, A Boldin 2-13, Sprague 1-18, Bell 1-17, Chaney1-15, Morgan 1-15, Gardner 1-12, Kendra 1-7.

Att: 80,976

GAME 6

No. 23 MIAMI 31, BOSTON COLLEGE 28
October 23, 1999
Alumni Stadium, Chestnut Hill, MA

Andy Crosland’s 30-yard field goal with three seconds remainingcapped the greatest comeback in school history as the 23rd-ranked MiamiHurricanes overcame a 28-0 third quarter deficit to defeat Boston College,31-28, in Chestnut Hill, MA.

Boston College built a 28-0 lead with 6:18 left in the third quarterwhen Cedric Washington ran three yards for a touchdown. Washington had acareer-high 183 yards on 29 carries.

Miami started its comeback with 2:11 left in the third period whenKenny Kelly threw an eight-yard TD pass to fullback Will McPartland.

The Hurricanes cut the lead to 28-14 with 10:07 left when Kelly hitrunning back James Jackson on a 32-yard scoring pass. On the first play ofthe ensuing Boston College drive defensive lineman William Joseph recovereda Cedric Washington fumble on the Boston College 6. Jackson then found theend zone on the next play. With 3:51 remaining, Kelly tied the score with a10-yard scoring pass to tight end Daniel “Bubba” Franks.

Jackson carried 22 times for 134 yards. Kelly completed 20-of-26passes for 218 yards.

BOXSCORE

                1   2   3   4   FMiami Fla (23)  0   0   7   24  31Boston College  14  7   7   0   28

First Quarter BC-Arndt 17 pass from Hasselbeck (Matich kick) BC-Green 2 run (Matich kick)Second Quarter BC-Rowe 7 run (Matich kick)Third Quarter BC-Washington 3 run (Matich kick) UM-Mcpartland 8 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick)Fourth Quarter UM-Jackson 32 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick) UM-Jackson 6 run (Crosland kick) UM-Franks 10 pass from Kelly (Crosland kick) UM-FG Crosland 30

Miami Fla Boston College First downs 20 26Rushed-yards 33-178 48-237Passing yards 218 139Sacked-yards lost 1-9 0-0Return yards 61 34Passes 20-36-0 18-35-1Punts 9-37.1 8-35.0Fumbles-lost 1-1 2-1Penalties-yards 7-76 3-15Time of possession 23:40 36:20

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING: Miami Fla-Jackson 22-134, Kelly 7-32, Portis 3-6,Mcpartland 1-6. Boston College-Washington 29-183, Hasselbeck 8-29, Rowe10-23, Green 1-2.
PASSING: Miami Fla-Kelly 20-36-0-218. Boston College-Hasselbeck18-35-1-139.
RECEIVING: Miami Fla-Franks 6-78, Moser 4-40, Jackson 3-40, King3-19, Wayne 2-30, Mcpartland 1-8, Fulcher 1-3. Boston College-Arndt 4-42,Dewalt 4-33, Washington 4-19, Daniels 2-26, Burke 1-14, Burch 1-7, Rowe 1-0,Palaza 1-minus 2.

Att: 44,084

PLAYERS TO WATCH:

Kenny Kelly
Quarterback, 6-2, 195, Sophomore
Tampa, FL (Tampa Catholic)

Has completed 99 of 175 pass attempts for 1,271 yards and 11touchdowns…also has one rushing touchdown…directed the ‘Canes greatestcomeback in school history, coming back from a 28-0 deficit to defeat BC31-30…over the last two games is 47-77 (61%) for 588 yards, sixtouchdowns, and one interception…led the Hurricanes in a 31-30come-from-behind win over BC with three TD passes, no interceptions and 218yards passing…had best outing of career vs. FSU, completing 27 of 41attempts for 370 yards and three touchdowns…output at Florida State wasthe best ever by a UM quarterback against the Seminoles…performance vs.Florida State was the best by a UM quarterback since Nov. 27, 1993 (RyanCollins vs. Memphis State, 32-54-392, 3 TD)…vs. Penn State recorded onetouchdown completion, passing for 160 yards…also rushed for 26 yardsagainst the Nittany Lions…passed for two touchdowns in win over FloridaA&M (57-3)…went 9 for 15 for 119 yards vs. FAMU…made his first careerstart vs. Ohio State and led the ‘Canes to a 23-12 win…was 17-for-25 for245 yards and touchdown connecting on a 67-yard pass to Santana Moss witheight seconds remaining in the 1st half to give UM a 23-9 lead going intothe half…named Most Valuable Player of the Kickoff Classic for his effortsvs. Ohio State…served as the No. 2 QB in 1998, appearing in eight games…was 23-of-43 for 433 yards and five touchdowns in 1998.

Kelly Game-by-Game Passing

Opp     Att Comp    Int Yds     TD  LgOSU     25  17      2   245     1   67FAMU    15  9       1   119     2   32PSU     21  11      4   160     1   40ECU     37  15      1   159     1   21FSU     41  27      1   370     3   80BC      36  20      0   218     3   32Total   175 99      9   1271    11  80

James Jackson
Running Back, 5-11, 210, Junior
Belle Glade, FL (Glades Central/Fork Union)

Doak Walker Award (nation’s best running back) candidate…scored twotouchdowns, 22 seconds apart in the come-from-behind win vs. BC…recordedhis seventh career 100 yard rushing game against the Eagles, amassing 134yards, a season best…111 of his 134 yards came in the second half as UMstaged its greatest comeback in school history vs. the Eagles…is the onlyrunning back in the last 18 games (as of Oct. 17) to rush for over 100 yardsvs. Penn State…rushed for 74 yards on 22 carries vs. FSU with a long rushof 45 yards…rushed for 129 yards against the Nittany Lions including twotouchdowns…also recorded a 21-yard reception…33 rushing attempts wasthird on UM’s all-time list for rushes in a game…in the win over FAMU,Jackson recorded his fifth career 100 yard rushing game with 103 net yardsand two touchdowns…43 yard TD run marked the sixth time Jackson hasrushed for more than 40 yards on one carry in his career…vs. Ohio Staterushed for 89 yards on 24 carries including a touchdown on his 2nd carry ofthe game…also snagged a Kenny Kelly toss for a two-point conversion vs.OSU…1999 pre-season first-team All-BIG EAST selection by fivepublications…named number two overall talent in the BIG EAST by Lindy’smagazine…as a sophomore, was second on the squad with 545 yards on 82carries.

Jackson Game-by-Game Rushing

Opp     Carries Yds Avg TD  LgOSU     24      89  3.7 1   44FAMU    19      103 5.4 2   43PSU     33      129 3.9 2   39ECU     9       38  4.2 0   13FSU     22      74  3.4 0   45BC      22      134 6.1 1   21Total   129     567 4.4 6   45

Richard Mercier
Offensive Line, 6-3, 290, Senior
Montreal, Quebec (Vanier College)

Named number one offensive guard in the nation by The Sporting News in thepublication’s pre-season annual…named #12 overall offensive lineman in thecountry by College Football News…pre-season first team All-American byfive publications (The Sporting News, Preview Sports, Street & Smith,Football News, and Sportsline/Lindy’s)…is once again contending forAll-America and All-Conference honors after being selected All-BIG EASTFirst Team as a junior and named to Sports Illustrated All-Bowl Team…atenacious run blocker…paved the way for James Jackson’s 134 yards (111 inthe second half) in Miami’s comeback win over BC…played every down in1998…Miami offense has rushed for an average of 165 yards per game and 10touchdowns over six games in 1999 behind solid run blocking led byMercier…on pace to tie the Hurricanes’ all-time record for games started(48), currently at 41 career games started…’Canes are 30-11 all-time withMercier in the lineup.

Santana Moss
Wide Receiver, 5-10, 175, Junior
Miami, FL (Carol City)

Candidate for Biletnikoff award…leads team in receptions (27), yards(512), and receiving yards per game (85.3)…two-time winner of ChevroletPlayer of the Game for his nationally televised performances against OhioState and Florida State…leads the ‘Canes in receiving with 27 catches for512 yards including 5 TD’s…recorded 67 yards on four receptions includinga TD vs. Penn State…gained 73 yards on 4 catches and a TD vs.FAMU…against Ohio State led the Hurricanes with 115 yards on 3 catchesincluding a late 1st half 67 yard TD reception.

Moss Game-by-Game Receiving

Opp     Recept  Yds Avg     TD  LgOSU     3       115 38.3    1   67FAMU    4       73  18.25   1   32PSU     4       67  16.75   1   40ECU     3       37  12.3    0   15FSU     9       180 20.0    2   80BC      4       40  10.0    0   16Total   27      512 19.0    5   80

Daniel “Bubba” Franks
Tight End, 6-6, 260, Junior
Big Spring, TX (Big Spring)

Has 21 receptions 210 yards for an average catch of 10.0 yards…led the’Canes in receiving vs. Boston College…recorded a season-high 78 yards ona career-high six catches including a TD against the Eagles…vs. FSU,gained 36 yards on five catches…had two receptions for 14 yards vs. theNittany Lions…caught two passes for 19 yards vs. FAMU including a threeyard touchdown pass from Kelly…snagged five catches for 52 yards in winover OSU…named one of the Top Ten NFL prospects by SportsIllustrated…named All-BIG EAST First Team in 1998 after starting 10 of 11games…pre-season first-team All-American by College Sports News andSportsline/Lindy’s pulled down 13 catches for 179 yards and threetouchdowns…rated the nation’s No. 2 tight end by The Sporting News andCollege Football News.

Franks Game-by-Game Receiving

Opp     Recept  Yds Avg     TD  LgOSU     5       52  10.4    0   15FAMU    2       19  9.5     1   16PSU     2       14  7.0     0   11ECU     1       11  11.0    0   11FSU     5       36  7.2     0   10BC      6       78  13.0    1   26Total   21      210 10.0    2   26

Damione Lewis
Defensive Tackle, 6-3, 285, Junior
Sulphur Springs, TX (Sulphur Springs)

Has 26 tackles and a team-high five sacks on the season…against FloridaState had 6 stops including a sack for a loss of eight yards…vs. PennState recorded eight tackles, three for a loss of six yards including a QBsack…in win over FAMU he recorded three total tackles including aquarterback sack…in season opener vs. Ohio State, managed five tackles andtwo sacks for a loss of twenty yards…started every game at right tackle asa sophomore and led all defensive linemen with 52 tackles…pre-seasonsecond-team All-American by Sportsline/Lindy’s…pre-season first-teamAll-BIG EAST selection by Preview Sports and Sportsline/Lindy’s.

Lewis Game-by-Game Totals

Opp     Tckl    Solo    Asst    TFL     BrUp    Sk/YdsOSU     5       2       3       2-20    0       2-20FAMU    3       3       0       2-7     0       1-6PSU     8       2       6       3-6     0       1-1ECU     1       1       0       1-2     0       0-0FSU     6       2       4       1-8     0       1-8BC      3       0       3       0       0       0Total   23      10      13      9-43    0       5-35

Dan Morgan
Linebacker, 6-3, 225, Junior
Coral Springs, FL (Taravella)

Butkus Award (nation’s top linebacker) semi-finalist…semi-finalist for theBronco Nagurski Award given to the nation’s best overall defensiveplayer…ranks 10th on the UM career tackles chart with 313…has 58 tacklesfor the year including three sacks…vs. ECU had twelve tackles, includingfive solo…in season opener vs. Ohio State, totaled twelve tackles, sevensolo…regained Hurricane possession when recovered a Buckeyefumble…pre-season first-team All-American by College Sports News andStreet & Smith’s…pre-season first-team All-BIG EAST choice by sevenpublications…was All-BIG EAST First Team last year after leading theHurricanes in tackles with 150, the third most by a Hurricane since1983…also led UM in tackles as a freshman with 105.

Morgan Game-by-Game Totals

Opp         Tckl    Solo    Asst    TFL     BrUp    Sk/YdsOSU         12      7       5       3-5     0       0FAMU        2       1       1       0       0       0PSU         14      7       7       3-6     1       2-3ECU         12      8       4       1-5     0       1-5FSU         3       2       1       0       0       0BC          15      9       6       1-1     0       0Total       58      34      24      8-17    1       3-8

Ed Reed
Defensive Back, 6-0, 190, Sophomore
St. Rose, LA (Destrehan)

Has 44 tackles on the year including five for a total loss of 27yards…had six tackles and one for a loss vs. Florida State…had two passbreak-ups against East Carolina…against the Nittany Lions made a mark invirtually every defensive category…recorded six solo tackles including onefor a loss of seven yards on a QB sack…forced two fumbles and intercepteda Nittany Lion pass and returned it for 16 yards…vs. FAMU, the defensiveback had 3 tackles and a sack for a loss of eleven yards…in the win overOhio State he had a sack for a loss of seven yards and seven tackles on theday…named honorable mention pre-season All-American by FootballNews…pre-season first-team All-BIG EAST selection by The Sporting News,Athlon’s and Football News…had a breakthrough season as a freshman in 1998that earned him Football News Freshman All-American honors

Reed Game-by-Game Totals

Opp     Tckl    Solo    Asst    TFL     BrUp    Sk/YdsOSU     7       2       5       1-7     0       1-7FAMU    3       2       1       2-12    0       1-11PSU     9       6       3       1-7     0       1-7ECU     8       5       3       0       2       0FSU     6       4       2       1-1     0       0BC      11      8       3       1-1     0       0Total   44      27      17      6-28    2       3-25

Nate Webster
Linebacker, 6-0, 225, Junior
Miami, FL (Northwestern)

Semi-finalist for the Bronco Nagurski Award given to the nation’s bestoverall defensive player…leads team in total (75) and solo (46)tackles…collected 16 tackles vs. Florida State and an interception …vs.Penn State made a total of 20 stops, 14 solo…managed a sack for afour-yard loss…in win over FAMU tallied four tackles, twosolo…registered fourteen tackles in win over Ohio State…pre-seasonthird-team All-American by College Sports News…named to pre-season All-BIGEAST first team by seven publications…named nation’s seventh bestlinebacker in pre-season by College Football News…was second in tackleslast season with 134 tackles….named to All-BIG EAST First Team as asophomore.

Webster Game-by-Game Totals

Opp     Tckl    Solo    Asst    TFL     BrUp    Sk/YdsOSU     14      6       8       2-6     1       0FAMU    4       2       2       0       1       0PSU     20      14      6       4-16    0       1-4ECU     9       5       4       0       0       0FSU     16      11      5       0       0       0BC      12      8       4       3-3     0       0Total   75      46      29      9-25    2       1-4

DEPTH CHART:

OFFENSE

SE  87  Reggie Wayne (6-1, 195, Jr*)    84  Andre King (6-0, 200, Jr*)    TE  88  Daniel Franks (6-6, 260, Jr)        86  Ivan Mercer (6-7, 230, Jr*) or  82  Dan Smith (6-4, 240, So*)    RT  73  Joaquin Gonzalez (6-5, 275, So)    72  Ed Wilkins (6-4, 300, Fr)

RG 65 Martin Bibla (6-4, 285, So) 56 Eric Schnupp (6-5, 280, Sr)

C 64 Ty Wise (6-3, 280, Sr) 63 Scott Puckett (6-3, 265, So)

LG 62 Richard Mercier (6-3, 290, Sr) 66 Brett Romberg (6-3, 280, So*) LT 79 Greg Laffere (6-5, 305, Jr*) 77 Robert Hall (6-3, 280, Sr) FL 6 Santana Moss (5-10, 175, Jr*) 26 Aaron Moser (5-11, 180, Jr) FB 18 Mondriel Fulcher (6-4, 250, Sr) 35 Will McPartland (6-0, 230, Jr) TB 21 James Jackson (5-11, 210, Jr) 28 Clinton Portis (5-11, 180, Fr) or 32 Jarrett Payton (6-2, 205, Fr) QB 15 Kenny Kelly (6-2, 195, So) 11 Ken Dorsey (6-5, 180, Fr*)

SPECIALISTS

KR  26  Aaron Moser (5-11, 180, Jr)    32  Jarrett Payton (6-2, 205, Fr)     PR   6  Santana Moss (5-10, 175, Jr*)    22  Leonard Myers (5-11, 200, Jr*)    

DEFENSE

RE  93  Michael Boireau (6-5, 260, Sr*)    95  Brian Stinson (6-3, 260, Jr)or  99  Clint Hurtt (6-3, 3-5, So)

RT 92 Damione Lewis (6-3, 285, Jr) 91 Matt Walters (6-5, 250, Fr) LT 98 Matt Sweeney (6-3, 275, Sr) 96 Adrian Wilson (6-2, 315, Jr*) LE 94 William Joseph (6-5, 285, Fr) 90 Quincy Hipps (6-4, 260, Jr)or 55 Jamaal Green (6-2, 250, Fr)

WLB 44 Dan Morgan (6-3, 225, Jr*) 45 Howard Clark (6-1, 220 Fr)

MLB 52 Nate Webster (6-0, 225, Jr*) 41 Sheven Marshall (6-1, 230, So*) SLB 48 Chris Campbell (6-2, 200, So*) 51 Rod Mack (6-1, 225, Sr)or 47 Ken Dangerfield (6-2, 215, Fr) RC 22 Leonard Myers (5-11, 200, Jr*) 27 Markese Fitzgerald (5-11, 180, So)

FS 7 Al Blades (6-2, 200, Jr) 23 James Lewis (5-11, 190, So*) SS 20 Edward Reed (6-0, 190, So) 24 Delvin Brown (6-0, 210, Jr*) LC 8 Mike Rumph (6-2, 195, So*) 31 Phillip Buchanon (5-11, 175, Fr)

SPECIALISTS

KO  17  Andy Crosland (6-3, 220, Sr)    16  Todd Sievers (6-3, 215, So*)

PK 17 Andy Crosland (6-3, 220, Sr) 16 Todd Sievers (6-3, 215, So*)

P 13 Freddie Capshaw (5-11, 180, Fr) 17 Andy Crosland (6-3, 220, Sr) LS 69 Pat Del Vecchio (6-2, 240, Sr)

HO 33 Jeff Popovich (5-11, 190, Sr*)

* Denotes players who have not used redshirt season