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FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC!

Posted: 1/5/2013 11:24 AM

FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


That January 2003 BCS championship game against Miami is being called the greatest football game ever played! I and my son, now 17 years old , remember it vividly. It gave him life-long heros, Krenzel and Cie Grant, and enabled me to give him a life lesson: if you try hard enough and do things the right way, success is yours! Thanks Buckeyes for such a great moment for our lives!

Here's a fantastic oral history of this greatest game from SI.com featuring comments from many of the key players at key moments in that game. I enjoyed reliving the game and I hope you will too!

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.c.../?sct=uk_t13_a6

GO BUCKEYES!
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Posted: 1/5/2013 12:48 PM

RE: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


Thanks Sacto great read and memories.I still remember your post after the game one of the best I've ever seen on this board.
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Posted: 1/5/2013 1:01 PM

RE: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


This before the game by Orlando sports writer

TEMPE, Ariz. -- The desert will be overrun with Ohio State fans. It will look like a Buckeyes home game. Miami fans will be outnumbered at least 5 to 1.

And you know what? It won't matter.

By the time the Fiesta Bowl is over, the scarlet on the shirts of the tens of thousands of Ohio State fans will match the color on their faces. The famous "Script Ohio" will look more like a "Scrapped Ohio." The traditional dotting of the "I" will be replaced by the burning of the game tape.

Mark my words: The Buckeyes players will get hit in the mouth so hard and so often, they'll think Woody Hayes still is coach.

These simple, poor, plodding people are getting ready to step into another realm beyond their comprehension. Maestro, cue the Twilight Zone music, please:

There is a sixth dimension beyond that which is known to Buckeyes. It is a dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light and shadow, and it lies between the pit of man's fears and the sunlight of his knowledge. This is the dimension of imagination. It is an area that might be called the . . . Hurricane Zone.

The Buckeyes will find out in the Fiesta Bowl this season what Nebraska found out in the Rose Bowl last season. They will learn that there is college football, and then there is Miami football. They will learn that there is intensity, and then there is angry, ratcheted-up, wild-eyed Miami intensity.

Miami football does not get intimidated when fans from bigger, more traditional college powerhouses pour into a stadium. When the 70,000 Nebraska fans flooded the Rose Bowl last year, you know how the 'Canes responded? They were so flustered they jumped out to a 34-0 lead.

When 86,000 Florida fans crammed into the Swamp earlier this season, you know what the 'Canes did? They beat the Gators like Ricky Ricardo's conga drum.

"We relish going on the road and playing in this type of atmosphere," Miami strong safety Maurice Sikes said after the 43-16 thrashing of Florida. "We're the 'Canes. We believe players create mystique, not stadiums and fans."

When more than 104,000 Tennessee fans jammed into Neyland Stadium earlier this season, you know what the 'Canes did? They scored on their first five drives and knocked three UT starters out of the game. Locals claimed it was the most devastating setback in Tennessee since a limit was placed on how many deer you could kill.

"What were there, 108,000 people here?" snickered Miami center Brett Romberg after the 26-3 victory over UT. "I'll give 'em this: They were loud for the first 35 or 40 seconds."

It doesn't matter how few are cheering for them and how many are cheering against them; the 'Canes remain unaffected. They've won national championships in the Orange Bowl, the Sugar Bowl, the Rose Bowl; this season, they'll win one in the Fiesta Bowl, too.

The 'Canes have won national championships with established coaches and they've won national championships under rookie coaches.

No matter what, no matter where, no matter when, no matter who, the 'Canes know how to win big games.

Ohio State's resurgence is a great story, but the story will end badly in the Arizona desert. The Buckeyes aren't going to come within three touchdowns of winning this game. Not with a quarterback who couldn't start for any of the five Division I-A teams in the state of Florida. The Buckeyes, bless their boring little Big Ten hearts, couldn't throw change into a tollbooth receptacle.

The Buckeyes run their offense to set up punts. Seriously. They punt, play phenomenal defense, get the ball back, then punt again -- this time a little deeper into enemy territory. This traditional field-position game might work against Michigan; it won't against Miami.

The Buckeyes of today play football like the Buckeyes of 30 years ago, when Woody Hayes said, "There are three things that can happen when you pass, and two of them ain't good."

Ohio State will find out that their old-school ways simply won't work against a program that wrote the book on new-age football. They will find out this isn't just a bowl trip; it's a trip into another sphere, another dimension.

Maestro, cue the music.

This highway leads to the shadowy tip of reality. You're on a through route to the land of the different, the bizarre, the unexplainable. Go as far as you like on this road, as far as you dare. It is a domain somewhere between sight and sound, a middle ground between science and superstition.

Next stop -- the Hurricane Zone!

Mike Bianchi can be reached at mbianchi@orlandosentinel.com.
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Posted: 1/5/2013 2:26 PM

Re: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


The best thing about winning that game other than winning the National Championship, is that Miami has not been relevant since.  The Buckeyes destroyed the "Miami Myth" on that night in the desert.
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Posted: 1/5/2013 2:30 PM

Re: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


QFT
ashcobucksfan wrote: The best thing about winning that game other than winning the National Championship, is that Miami has not been relevant since.  The Buckeyes destroyed the "Miami Myth" on that night in the desert.

"To suspect your own mortality is to know the beginning of terror; to learn irrefutably that you are mortal is to know the end of terror."

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Posted: 1/5/2013 9:10 PM

RE: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


EXCELLENT ARTICLE!!

Thanks for posting Sacto!!
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Posted: 1/5/2013 9:34 PM

Re: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


Isn't that article's writer in post 3, Mike Bianchi, the same guy that was voting us 11th in the polls this year when most of the country had us in the top 5?

Last edited 1/5/2013 9:35 PM by LordBuckeye

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Posted: 1/5/2013 9:48 PM

Re: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 


Bianchi shouldn't be writing about anything other than "how to be a douchebag" after that article.
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Posted: 1/6/2013 8:39 PM

RE: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 



bigtim1960 wrote: This before the game by Orlando sports writer

TEMPE, Ariz. -- The desert will be overrun with Ohio State fans. It will look like a Buckeyes home game. Miami fans will be outnumbered at least 5 to 1.

And you know what? It won't matter.

By the time the Fiesta Bowl is over, the scarlet on the shirts of the tens of thousands of Ohio State fans will match the color on their faces. The famous "Script Ohio" will look more like a "Scrapped Ohio." The traditional dotting of the "I" will be replaced by the burning of the game tape.

Mark my words: The Buckeyes players will get hit in the mouth so hard and so often, they'll think Woody Hayes still is coach.

These simple, poor, plodding people are getting ready to step into another realm beyond their comprehension. Maestro, cue the Twilight Zone music, please:

There is a sixth dimension beyond that which is known to Buckeyes. It is a dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light and shadow, and it lies between the pit of man's fears and the sunlight of his knowledge. This is the dimension of imagination. It is an area that might be called the . . . Hurricane Zone.

The Buckeyes will find out in the Fiesta Bowl this season what Nebraska found out in the Rose Bowl last season. They will learn that there is college football, and then there is Miami football. They will learn that there is intensity, and then there is angry, ratcheted-up, wild-eyed Miami intensity.

Miami football does not get intimidated when fans from bigger, more traditional college powerhouses pour into a stadium. When the 70,000 Nebraska fans flooded the Rose Bowl last year, you know how the 'Canes responded? They were so flustered they jumped out to a 34-0 lead.

When 86,000 Florida fans crammed into the Swamp earlier this season, you know what the 'Canes did? They beat the Gators like Ricky Ricardo's conga drum.

"We relish going on the road and playing in this type of atmosphere," Miami strong safety Maurice Sikes said after the 43-16 thrashing of Florida. "We're the 'Canes. We believe players create mystique, not stadiums and fans."

When more than 104,000 Tennessee fans jammed into Neyland Stadium earlier this season, you know what the 'Canes did? They scored on their first five drives and knocked three UT starters out of the game. Locals claimed it was the most devastating setback in Tennessee since a limit was placed on how many deer you could kill.

"What were there, 108,000 people here?" snickered Miami center Brett Romberg after the 26-3 victory over UT. "I'll give 'em this: They were loud for the first 35 or 40 seconds."

It doesn't matter how few are cheering for them and how many are cheering against them; the 'Canes remain unaffected. They've won national championships in the Orange Bowl, the Sugar Bowl, the Rose Bowl; this season, they'll win one in the Fiesta Bowl, too.

The 'Canes have won national championships with established coaches and they've won national championships under rookie coaches.

No matter what, no matter where, no matter when, no matter who, the 'Canes know how to win big games.

Ohio State's resurgence is a great story, but the story will end badly in the Arizona desert. The Buckeyes aren't going to come within three touchdowns of winning this game. Not with a quarterback who couldn't start for any of the five Division I-A teams in the state of Florida. The Buckeyes, bless their boring little Big Ten hearts, couldn't throw change into a tollbooth receptacle.

The Buckeyes run their offense to set up punts. Seriously. They punt, play phenomenal defense, get the ball back, then punt again -- this time a little deeper into enemy territory. This traditional field-position game might work against Michigan; it won't against Miami.

The Buckeyes of today play football like the Buckeyes of 30 years ago, when Woody Hayes said, "There are three things that can happen when you pass, and two of them ain't good."

Ohio State will find out that their old-school ways simply won't work against a program that wrote the book on new-age football. They will find out this isn't just a bowl trip; it's a trip into another sphere, another dimension.

Maestro, cue the music.

This highway leads to the shadowy tip of reality. You're on a through route to the land of the different, the bizarre, the unexplainable. Go as far as you like on this road, as far as you dare. It is a domain somewhere between sight and sound, a middle ground between science and superstition.

Next stop -- the Hurricane Zone!

Mike Bianchi can be reached at mbianchi@orlandosentinel.com.
This article, and the ignorant attitudes behind it, set the stage for the Buckeye victory and made it all the more special! No one picked Ohio State to win. AFter Cir Granbt threw the Miami QB to the ground on the game's final play, my then seven-year-old son turned to me and said "wasn't Miami supposed to win, Daddy?" And that gave me a a special teaching moment to convey to my son the virtues of hard work, heart, and doing things the right way. He still has a picture of Krenzel on his bedroom wall!

The SactoSpartan family will never forget that magnificent win by the Buckeyes! You are still the best!

Always,

SactoSpartan, Mrs. SactoSpartan, and Son of SactoSpartan
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Posted: 1/6/2013 9:00 PM

Re: FROM SAN JOSE STATE: Happy 10th anniversary of the 2002 NC! 



ashcobucksfan wrote: The best thing about winning that game other than winning the National Championship, is that Miami has not been relevant since.  The Buckeyes destroyed the "Miami Myth" on that night in the desert.
It was no myth. Miami '02 was a great team who got beat.
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