University of Miami

Miami collapses in final minutes, snaps win streak vs. FSU after Noles mount comeback

In a game reminiscent of Miami-Florida State old-time battles, the Seminoles came roaring back — after Miami had come roaring back — to score a touchdown with 26 seconds left Saturday and defeat the Hurricanes 31-28 at Doak Campbell Stadium.

FSU (4-6, 3-4 Atlantic Coast Conference) snapped Miami’s four-game win streak in the rivalry series and three-game overall win streak that began with UM victories over then-top-20 NC State and Pitt.

With the loss, the Hurricanes (5-5, 3-3) are eliminated from ACC title-game contention and still need to win one of their last two regular-season games to qualify for a bowl.

“Tough one to swallow there,’’ UM coach Manny Diaz said. “Another classic Miami-Florida State game. This time we ended up on the wrong side of it. Proud of the way our team fought.”

The way we played in the second half — the guys just battled. Battled. But you gotta give [FSU] credit. They battled, too.”

Added Diaz in what has become a common refrain this season: “There’s a lot of hurt in that locker room now.’’

Miami had scored three consecutive touchdowns on Tyler Van Dyke pass plays to take a 28-20 lead with 11:04 left in the game before FSU’s 29-yard field goal with 4:43 made it 28-23.

Winning drive

Florida State took over at its own 20 with 2:19 left after Diaz opted to punt on fourth-and-1 from the Miami 46-yard line instead of attempting the first down and running down the clock.

On first down, FSU quarterback Jordan Travis fired a 59-yard completion to Ja’Khi Douglas. Fast forward to fourth-and-14 from the UM 25, and Travis’ 24-yard completion down the middle of the field to Andrew Parchment gave FSU a first-and-goal from the 1.

Miami took a timeout with 50 seconds left, but not before Diaz had let 12 precious seconds tick down. FSU came back with an unsuccessful quarterback sneak and Miami called its last timeout.

After an offside call on UM, this time, on second-and-goal from the 1, Travis plunged in for the touchdown, the crowd of 71,917 went wild and FSU went ahead 29-28 — then sealed its stirring victory with a 2-point Travis conversion run.

UM had 26 seconds to do what would be impossible from its own 25-yard line, the game ending after a 20-yard completion from Van Dyke to Charleston Rambo left the Canes stranded and done for the day on the 45.

“Frustrated, sad, especially for those guys who were in their last year,’’ said Canes tight end Will Mallory, whose 4-yard touchdown catch on fourth down with 14:56 left put UM ahead, 21-20, for the first time all game. “This one sucks.

“This was a must win for us. We have to beat FSU. It didn’t happen.’’

Sloppy Canes

A big reason it didn’t happen was because the Canes, despite their own eventually futile comeback, were horribly sloppy and mistake-ridden in the first half. They finished the game with a season-high 14 penalties for 105 yards, including five penalties in the first drive, eight in the first quarter and nine by halftime.

UM’s Van Dyke threw two interceptions and lost a fumble that led to an FSU touchdown. He finished 25 of 47 for 316 yards and four touchdowns. He was 9 of 21 for 96 yards and a touchdown the first half, with the two picks and fumble.

Travis finished 18 of 26 for 274 yards. His star defensive end, FSU’s Jermaine Johnson, finished with five tackles for loss, three sacks and a forced fumble..

Down 20-7 at the half, the Canes finally took advantage of an FSU mistake when Seminoles running back Jashaun Corbin fumbled the quarterback exchange and UM defensive tackle Nesta Silvera recovered.

UM rallies

Miami took over at the FSU 38-yard line with 9:51 left in the third quarter and scored seven plays later on Van Dyke’s bizarre, third-down pass. The line-drive throw bounced off Key’Shawn Smith’s hands near the goal line and skipped into the back of the end zone, where teammate Mike Harley was waiting for the touchdown. FSU’s lead was cut to 20-14 with 8:07 left in the third quarter.

After FSU punted, the Canes drove 97 yards, converting two fourth downs along the way, including the 4-yard touchdown to Mallory for UM’s one-point lead four seconds into the final quarter.

UM struck again with three huge plays in a six-play, 73-drive drive. In the first, Van Dyke scrambled to buy time and completed a 15-yard pass to Charleston Rambo. The quarterback followed it with a 19-yard scramble. Then, after losing 9 yards on a sack, Van Dyke dumped a short pass off to Jaylan Knighton, who bounced off FSU and former Carol City cornerback Jarvis Brownlee and ran 35 yards into the end zone.

UM had its 28-20 cushion with 11:04 left.

But it wasn’t cushiony enough, and Ryan Fitzgerald’s 29-yard field goal began FSU’s comeback with 4:43 left made it 28-23.

The Canes have taken one step back as they head home to face Virginia Tech on Nov. 20 in their final 2021 game at Hard Rock Stadium. After that it’s the regular-season finale at Duke the Saturday after Thanksgiving.

This story was originally published November 13, 2021 at 8:15 PM.

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Susan Miller Degnan
Miami Herald
Miami Herald sports writer Susan Miller Degnan has been the Miami Hurricanes football beat writer since 2000, the season before the Canes won it all. She has won several APSE national writing awards and has covered everything from Canes baseball to the College Football Playoff to major marathons to the Olympics.
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