© Tim Peeler, 2017
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For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction: That’s how an NC State backup quarterback gave the world “Smokey and the Bandit.”
His name was Ernie Driscoll, which sounds more like a
character in a car-chase movie than a college football player. But there he was
on Oct. 12, 1957, trotting on the field, taking the place of starting
quarterback Tom Katich in the final moments of the first half.
The Wolfpack offense, which featured soon-to-be All-American
halfback Dick Christy and Dick “Spook” Hunter, couldn’t get anything going that
afternoon at Doak Campbell Stadium against Florida State. That wasn’t unusual
that season, as head coach Earle Edwards built his early program around defense
and this senior-laden squad posted a school-record five shutouts during the
year.
In this particular game, the Pack as a little road weary,
having also played its first three games on the road at Chapel Hill, at Maryland, and at Clemson, with another trip back to Florida the following week in a
Friday night game at Miami.
The good news was that Edwards and his team were 3-0 heading
into the non-conference game against the Seminoles and were surprisingly in the
driver’s seat for the first Atlantic Coast Conference football championship in
school history.
Nothing that happened in these back-to-back trips to the
Sunshine State would change that, since this was long before either the
Seminoles or the Hurricanes joined the ACC.
Late in the first half against the Seminoles, there was no
score in this contest, and Edwards was itching to make something happen. So he
sent Driscoll in to throw a bomb.
This was an era, of course, where down-the-field passes were
still pretty rare, when undersized quarterbacks struggled to throw for first
downs, let alone stretching out the defense half the length of the field.
Driscoll could do it, though, so Edwards sent Christy streaking down the
sideline. What happened next is still a bit of a dispute.
Christy outran his man, made a quick cut and sailed
untouched into the end zone—this was the official version from everyone on the
Wolfpack sideline.
Or he slipped down the sidelines, went out of bounds and
around the Seminole bench, then darted back onto the field in time to catch a
wobbly throw against a gimpy cornerback named Buddy—that’s how the Seminoles
saw it.
“Oh, he ran out of bounds,” the cornerback recalled 50 years
after the game was over. “I think he ran behind the bench and came back on the
field. He disappeared out of my eye line and then he was behind me, which is my
side of the story and I’m sticking to it.”
Christy caught Driscoll’s pass in stride and went untouched
into the end zone, scoring the only points in what turned out to be a 7-0
Wolfpack victory.
Florida State coach Tom Nugent stormed over to the sidelines
to give his cornerback an earful, one that all but ended the player’s football
career.
“I did come back out for the second half and I did play a
little,” said the one-time highly touted recruit who had been an all-state
fullback as a high school senior in West Palm Beach, Florida. “But some of the
things that were said to me at halftime, I didn’t like a lot. I was playing on
one leg. I had had a tremendous freshman year [in 1955 when freshmen were
eligible to play]. Then I got hurt my sophomore season and had a knee
operation. Then I was in a terrible automobile accident and lost my spleen and
had my other knee operated on.
“The [defensive back] that played against Dick Christy that
afternoon was not the same player I was as a freshman.”
He was so different, in fact, that he had to change his
name: the Monday after losing to the Wolfpack, young Buddy Reynolds, the
double-limping cornerback from Florida State, quit the football team to
concentrate on his student acting career. After a summer of stock theater in
New York, Reynolds shoved $80 into his sock, went back to a shortened form of
his given name “Burton Leon” and lit out for Hollywood.
Soon after, Burt Reynolds began what turned out to be a
six-decade career that included 80 feature films and some 300 television
episodes, from “Deliverance” to “Evening Shade.” He turned down chances to be
both James Bond and Han Solo, but he did manage to pick up an Academy Award
nomination for his role in “Boogie Nights” and starred in two
of the greatest football movies of all time, The Longest Yard and Semi-Tough.
Reynolds was one of a
string of football players who crossed over to acting after and during
their careers, a list that includes NC State’s own Roman Gabriel while he was
with the Los Angeles Rams. Reynolds was the biggest star, obviously, but
Gabriel, Merlin Olsen, Rosey Grier, Joe Namath and O.J. Simpson all spent time
in front of a camera, along with former NFL players Jim Brown, Fred Williamson,
Carl Weathers, Fred Dryer, Bubba Smith, Ed Marinaro and Terry Bradshaw. [Most
recently tight end Tony Gonzalez made his movie debut in xXx: The Return of
Xander Cage.]
None of whom, obviously, ever reached the zenith of the
profession in the way that former defensive lineman Alex Karras did when he
uttered the immortal words in the movie Blazing
Saddles: “Mongo just pawn in game of life.”
Gabriel never worked with Reynolds on screen, but they were
tangentially connected in their college careers.
After NC State beat Florida State and ended Reynolds’ career,
it ended up tying both Miami and Duke, losing to non-conference foe William
& Mary, then beating South Carolina on Christy’s heroic effort of scoring
all 29 points, including his first career field goal after time had expired in
a 29-26 victory that gave the Wolfpack its first ACC championship.
That day, soon after the team buses pulled into Raleigh from
Columbia, Gabriel called Edwards and told him he was coming to NC State to play
football, basketball and baseball. By the time his career ended, he was a
two-time All-American and a two-time ACC Player of the Year.
Reynolds, after a decade of smaller movie and television
roles, made his big-screen break-through in 1972’s Deliverance and went on to
become one of Hollywood’s favorite leading men during the 1970s and ‘80s. He remained close with the Seminole program, even getting a Hollywood friend to design FSU's famous gold pants.
He was frequently on the sidelines in Tallahassee, including on the afternoon of Nov. 10, 2001, when the Wolfpack--and Reynolds old friend Chuck "Chesty" Amato--became the first team to win an ACC game at Doak Campbell Stadium behind the arm of sophomore quarterback Philip Rivers.
Still spinning gems! Great work, Tim!
ReplyDeleteGreat writer, announcer too! RIP Quint!
ReplyDelete