Miami to Honor the 1987 National Champion Football Team
June 11, 2012
CORAL GABLES, Fla. –As part of its 25th Anniversary celebration, the University of Miami will honor the 1987 National Champion football team at halftime of the Canes’ homecoming game against rival Florida State on Oct. 20 at Sun Life Stadium. It was is arguably the most popular of the Hurricanes’ five national champion teams, the 1987 squad went a perfect 12-0 under head coach Jimmy Johnson, defeating top-ranked Oklahoma, 20-14, in the Orange Bowl for the program’s second national title. The Hurricanes were supposed to be rebuilding. Reloading was more accurate. This Miami team was supposed be the lull before the storm of 1988 and 1989. After all, the Hurricanes had lost five starters on offense from a team that had come within a whisper of a national title in 1985 and a 1986 squad that was considered among the best ever, only to lose its title shot in the Fiesta Bowl. But this team was more offensively balanced than the previous season’s juggernaut and, with nine starters returning to an underrated defense, the Hurricanes were a more well-rounded team altogether. Ranked 10th in the preseason Associated Press rankings, this team quickly showed it would be better than advertised. Miami ripped rival Florida in the season opener, then embarrassed Arkansas on the Razorbacks’ home field. The season’s third game was a classic. Being dominated by fourth-ranked Florida State, 19-3, late in the third quarter, Miami launched one of its greatest comebacks. The Hurricanes scored three lightning-quick touchdowns: a 49-yard bomb from Steve Walsh to Melvin Bratton, a 26-yarder from Walsh to Michael Irvin (plus a two-point conversion to tie it at 19), then a 73-yard strike from Walsh to Irvin for the lead with 2:22 remaining. Miami would have to stop an FSU two-pointer to hold for a 26-25 victory. There seemed to be no stopping these Hurricanes after that. Miami rolled through the remainder of the regular season, ripping 10th-ranked Notre Dame (24-0) and surviving a scare from eighth-ranked South Carolina (20-16) to set up a matchup with top-ranked Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl Classic on New Year’s Day. The Hurricanes bottled up OU’s wishbone attack, holding the Sooners to just 179 yards on the ground (OU came in averaging 428.8). Elation for Miami was frustration for OU — the Sooners only three losses over the last three seasons had come to the Hurricanes. “We played our way to this championship,” said Johnson. “We have the best record versus anybody in the country . . . We beat Oklahoma three in a row, Florida State and Notre Dame three in a row, Florida a couple . . . What is sweetest is that we did it as a team. We lost starters and had other guys come in and played magnificently.” |
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1987 (12-0-0)
Head Coach: Jimmy Johnson
Date | UM Rank | Opponent | Result | Score |
Sept. 5 | 10 | (20) Florida | W | 31-4 |
Sept. 26 | 5 | at (10) Arkansas | W | 51-7 |
Oct. 3 | 3 | at (4) Florida State | W | 26-25 |
Oct. 10 | 3 | Maryland | W | 46-16 |
Oct. 24 | 3 | at Cincinnati | W | 48-10 |
Oct. 31 | 3 | at East Carolina | W | 41-3 |
Nov. 7 | 3 | Miami (Ohio) | W | 54-3 |
Nov. 14 | 3 | Virginia Tech | W | 27-13 |
Nov. 21 | 3 | Toledo | W | 24-14 |
Nov. 28 | 2 | (10) Notre Dame | W | 24-0 |
Dec. 5 | 2 | (8) South Carolina | W | 20-16 |
Jan. 1 | 2 | vs. (1) Oklahoma* | W | 20-14 |
* – Orange Bowl Classic, Miami