Florida's defense held NC State senior Anthony Barbour to a season-low 50 yards in the 1992 Gator Bowl. |
© Tim Peeler,
2018
NOTE: If you enjoy reading "One Brick Back" and would like to help offset research expenses for stories such as this, please make a small donation to the cause and help keep these posts free of ads.
NOTE: If you enjoy reading "One Brick Back" and would like to help offset research expenses for stories such as this, please make a small donation to the cause and help keep these posts free of ads.
The dense fog that rolled in off the St.
Johns River on New Year’s Eve 1992 was not exactly biblical. It didn’t come in
low to the ground.
So maybe it’s a stretch to say that
every first-born son in the crowd of 71,233 at Jacksonville’s Gator Bowl
Stadium was scared on that Thursday night, but not one of them would have been
surprised if Charlton Heston or the late Yul Brynner showed up for halftime
entertainment.
All day long, a winter low-pressure front covered the
city of Jacksonville in a dull gray mist. When the game between NC State and Florida
began that evening, visibility was fine, though neither of the high-scoring teams could find
the end zone in the scoreless first quarter.
By the second quarter, neither team
could see the end zone, as the odorless miasma settled in over the top of the stadium.
“It was real foggy,” says Anthony
Barbour, the Wolfpack’s leading rusher that season and now the head coach at
Durham’s Jordan High School. “It affected everything we wanted to do in the
game.”
How foggy was it?
“By the second half, we couldn’t see the
fans at all from the field,” Barbour says.
Likewise, few in the stadium that night
saw what happened after halftime. NC State’s assistant coaches left the press box
at halftime and never returned, making all play calls from the sidelines the
rest of the night.
The commentary of the TBS crew of Gary
Bender and Pat Haden should have come with a “inspired by real events” message,
because their account of what happened was as fictionalized as the ticker-reading radio
broadcaster calling road games in “Bull Durham.”
When a smoke bomb was thrown from the
stands onto the field late in the game, Haden said “I couldn’t tell.”
The low visibility gave press box wags,
unencumbered by seeing actual plays of the game, the opportunity to wax poetic
in their next morning editions.
“A thick fog tumbled over the north
stands and began filling the stadium in the first quarter,” wrote Orlando Sentinel columnist Larry Guest. “From
the press box, the players on the field soon became hazy wisps, and the far side
of the stadium was a rumor.”
Maybe that’s a good thing.
Dick Sheridan’s No. 12 Wolfpack, looking
to become the first team in school history to reach double-digit victories and
finish in the top 10 of the final polls, were favored going into the game
against the No. 14 Gators. It had a staunch defense, a high-scoring offense led
by low-rumbling Barbour and a coach that was 2-1 against third-year
Florida coach Steve Spurrier, back in the days when the two neighbors played regularly.
Sheridan’s Wolfpack had beaten
Spurrier-coached Duke two out of three years in the latter's ACC days.
On this night, however, not even the
Cape Hatteras Lighthouse would’ve helped the Wolfpack against the home-standing
Gators.
Spurrier’s team came out for the game
dressed in all-blue uniforms, looking more like a slow-pitch softball team than
a Southeastern Conference power. However, the Gator defense, for the first time
all season, played like it had an additional hitter, holding the Wolfpack
scoreless in the first half for the first time all season.
Barbour entered the game as the ACC’s
top rusher, with 1,204 yards in the regular season. He managed a season-low 50
yards on the ground against a Gator defense that had been ranked ninth in the
SEC.
Meanwhile, a Gator offense that had
relied all season long on the arm of senior quarterback Shane Matthews turned
to a different source of power: junior tailback Erict Rhett.
Rhett had led the SEC in rushing the
year before, but had been hampered all season by a sore ankle and inexperienced
offensive line. He rushed for a career-low 3.6 yards per carry and a total of 903
yards on the ground, more than 200 yards fewer than the year before.
That night in Jacksonville, however,
Rhett rolled in silently like the fog and slipped through the Wolfpack defense
throughout the game.
The Galloping Ghost carried the ball 39
times and gained 182 yards, which is still the second most ever given up by the
Wolfpack to an opposing player in a bowl game. He caught a team-high seven
passes for another 60 yards. He was the obvious choice as the game’s Most
Valuable Player.
"I've never carried the ball that many times in my career," an exhausted Rhett said after the game. "I felt it, too."
Meanwhile, the Wolfpack scored twice in
the second half, thanks both times to Florida turnovers, though its lone
touchdown (an 11-yard pass from Terry Jordan to Aubrey Shaw) in the 27-10
defeat affected the betting line, but not the game’s outcome.
State finished the year 9-3-1 and ranked
No. 15 in the final coaches’ poll and No. 17 in the final Associated Press
poll. It wasn’t until nine years later that the Pack finally got its first
10-win season, when Chuck Amato’s team beat Notre Dame in the Gator Bowl to
finish 11-3 on the year.
One last thing disappeared into the fog
that night: Dick Sheridan, though no one would know for another six months that
it was his last game with the Wolfpack.
Sheridan waited through spring practice
and most of the off-season before announcing his retirement for health reasons
on June 30, barely a month before his team began preparing for the 1993 season.
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