IN MY OPINION
Win against Bucs is Miami Dolphins' gutsiest ever
After as possum-ugly a game as the NFL will cringe to see, the Dolphins showed the one thing that would save their Sunday.
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Don't be misled by the 34-16 size of Miami beating Duke. The Blue Devils had the Hurricanes in deep trouble with eight minutes left. Miami blew it all out only in the last part and finally, at 8-3, looks like the best batch of Canes in at least four seasons.
After as possum-ugly a game as the NFL will cringe to see, the Dolphins showed the one thing that would save their Sunday.
What a lot of people can't figure out today is how Virginia ever won three games this season. The closest thing to an answer is that they weren't playing anybody like Miami those days.
Take your pick. The Dolphins choked. Or they played brilliantly and courageously before yielding to a superior force.
Crazyball!
Possibly we have had wilder games than Clemson beating Miami 40-37 in overtime. Just don't waste any energy trying to look one up online. There certainly hasn't been one since the Internet was born.Just dial it up, folks, Put the Dolphins and Jets on Monday Night Football and stand back and watch them bruise each other. Just don't call it a night too early, or you miss Ronnie Brown's triumphant 2-yard touchdown burst for this 31-27 classic victory with six seconds left.
Florida A&M collected a fat $600,000 paycheck Saturday night, but I don't know that you can put a price on the humiliation the Rattlers paid.
By any standard, this was a laugher, except NFL teams never laugh at anyone for fear of the inevitable biteback. Anyway, Sunday was as easy as they come for the Dolphins, who bludgeoned the Buffalo Bills 38-10 with 250 yards rushing to the hated invaders' frail 46.
After an opening 30 minutes that was more of a public flogging than a major-college football game, the main question became: Was the first half only an illusion, or is that really a thunderbolt traveling in the disguise of the Miami Hurricanes?
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- And so they came to sudden death, an incongruous designation for a Masters Tournament as lively as any ever played. And then Chad Campbell putted his chance away. And Kenny Perry, who at 48 years 8 months would have been the oldest man ever to win a Masters, knocked a bad drive on the second playoff hole, and there was only Argentina's Angel Cabrera to step into the green coat that is sports' most-sought-after haberdashery.
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Dreams are busting up all over the place. Tiger Woods probably isn't going to win his fifth Masters. Not Sunday, anyway. Phil Mickelson won't nail his third. Paddy Harrington can forget taking his third consecutive major.
AUGUSTA, GA. -- Tiger Woods' last hole Friday told his 2009 Masters Tournament story as well as anything. He hit into a bunker and then two-putted. That gave him an un-Tigerlike total of 61 putts for these first two Masters rounds.
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- What did it? Was it this onrush of heat after early week conditions that would have given polar bears chilblains? Was a suddenly lovely Thursday the nature's trick that rolled back the years for two Masters, 50-year-old Larry Mize and 54-year-old Greg Norman?
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- He is the greatest athlete the world has never known. And never will. Sure, a sizable chunk of Western civilization will take it in with cheers if Tiger wins his fifth Masters tournament starting Thursday. It would be his 15th major tournament championship, three short of Jack Nicklaus' record.
Blam! It was tennis' smash of the year -- the century, for that matter. In coming years when countless great shots are mentally played and replayed by the freakiest of Key Biscayne tennis freaks, Roger Federer's smash was the one that will never be forgotten.
Serena Williams has whacked out five singles championships in the Sony Ericsson Open, but for 25 minutes of a sauna-like Wednesday she couldn't win even one lousy game.
It's a little different inside Butch Buchholz's office in Key Biscayne than it was when he first stepped up as patron saint of tennis of South Florida and a good piece of the rest of the world 25 years ago.
This little gang of golfheads had gathered at Doral while Tiger Woods was marching back into his personal paradise of stroke play after two-thirds of a year on the physical fritz.
TAMPA -- Talk Ben Roethlisberger. Talk Santonio Holmes. They teamed on a last-minute, mob-surrounded pass that enabled Pittsburgh to beat Arizona 27-23. But you will never talk enough, or hear enough, about the James Harrison masterpiece that turned into the greatest play in one of the greatest games in 43 Super Bowls.
TAMPA -- Bobby Hayes, ''The World's Fastest Human'' who never could run into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, made it at a gallop Saturday.