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1993 Florida State Seminoles football team
American college football season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 1993 Florida State Seminoles football team represented Florida State University as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) during the 1993 NCAA Division I-A football season. Led by 18th-year head coach Bobby Bowden, the Seminoles compiled an overall record of 12–1 with a mark of 8–0 in conference play, winning the ACC title for the second consecutive season. Florida State was invited to the Orange Bowl, the Bowl Coalition's national championship game, where the Seminoles defeated Nebraska to capture the programs first consensus College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS. The team played home games at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida
Quarterback Charlie Ward became the first Florida State player to win the Heisman Trophy, as college football's most outstanding player. Ward, who threw for 3,032 yards and completed 70 percent of his passes, became the first player to win the Heisman Trophy and the national championship in the same season since Pittsburgh's Tony Dorsett in 1976. The Seminoles topped college football in both scoring defense and scoring offense, with its offense scoring an average of 43.2 points a game and the defense giving up an average of 9.4 points per game.[1]
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Rankings
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Season summary
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FSU beat its first five opponents by an average score of 46–3, during which linebacker Derrick Brooks outscored the Noles' first five opponents combined. These victories included a 57-0 win over #17 Clemson and a 33-7 win over #13 North Carolina. The Seminoles' first competitive contest didn't come until October 9, when the third-ranked Miami Hurricanes came to Tallahassee with a 31-game regular season win streak. That game was sealed when FSU safety Devin Bush picked off a Frank Costa pass and ran it back 40 yards for a Florida State touchdown, making the score 28–10 with 4:59 to play.
On November 13, 1993, Florida State played Notre Dame in a matchup of unbeaten teams. FSU was ranked #1 and Notre Dame was ranked #2. In a matchup hailed as the "Game of the Century", the Seminoles' bid for a perfect season fell short as Notre Dame prevailed, 31–24. The Irish had leads of 24–7 and 31–17 before the Seminoles scored late to cut the final margin to seven. The Noles then regained possession at their own 37-yard line with just 51 seconds left in the game.[16] Three consecutive passes by Ward quickly led Florida State to the Notre Dame 14.[16] On the last play of the game, Ward rolled out and had his pass attempt batted down in the end zone, leaving the Irish with a 31–24 victory. After that game, Notre Dame was voted #1 and FSU was voted #2.[17]
The following week, #1 Notre Dame lost at home to #17 Boston College 41–39 on a 41-yard field goal as time expired, while the Seminoles beat NC State 62-3. The voters returned the Seminoles to the #1 spot in the AP poll, and they rose to #2 in the coaches' poll while Notre Dame fell to a ranking of fourth in both polls. The week afterwards, FSU travelled to Gainesville to face the 7th-ranked Florida Gators -- that season's SEC champions -- and defeated them 33-21. FSU finished the regular season #1 and was matched against #2 Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. In a hard-fought contest, Florida State rallied late to defeat Nebraska 18–16 after the Cornhuskers tried and missed a 45-yard field goal on the game's final play.[18] After the bowl games, 12–1 Florida State was voted #1 and 11–1 Notre Dame #2 in both polls.
During the 1993 season, the Seminoles faced four teams in the top seven of the AP rankings when FSU played them -- #3 Miami in week 6, #2 Notre Dame in week 11, #7 Florida in week 13, and #2 Nebraska in the Orange Bowl -- and they went 3-1 against those teams, while playing only one home game in those four contests. The Noles also defeated three other top 25 teams that filled out their schedule, with Clemson ranked 17th, North Carolina ranked 13th, and Virginia ranked 15th when the Noles played them. By the end of season, FSU had faced six of the teams in the final AP top 25 poll, going 5-1 against them. These teams were #2 Notre Dame, #3 Nebraska, #5 Florida, #15 Miami, #19 North Carolina, and #23 Clemson. By the end of Notre Dame's season, the Irish had faced two teams ranked in the final AP top 25: #1 Florida State and #19 Michigan. In their Cotton Bowl meeting with #7 Texas A&M, Notre Dame won 24-21.
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Game summaries
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Kansas
At Duke
Clemson
At North Carolina
Georgia Tech
Miami (FL)
No. 3 Miami (FL) Hurricanes (4–0) at No. 1 Florida State Seminoles (5–0)
Virginia
Wake Forest
At Maryland
At Notre Dame
Florida State at Notre Dame
- Date: November 13
- Location: Notre Dame Stadium, Notre Dame, Indiana
- Game start: Kickoff 1:47pm EST
- Game attendance: 59,075
- Game weather: pregame showers, temp near 60, wind from south 20 to 30 mph
- TV announcers (NBC): Charlie Jones, Todd Christensen, Bob Costas (studio host), John Dockery (sideline) and O. J. Simpson (sideline)
NC State
At Florida
No. 1 Florida State Seminoles (10–1) at No. 7 Florida Gators (9–1)
Vs. Nebraska (Orange Bowl)
Florida State vs Nebraska
- Date: January 1
- Location: Miami Orange Bowl, Miami
- Game attendance: 81,536
- Referee: John Soffey
- TV announcers (NBC): Dick Enberg, Bob Trumpy and O. J. Simpson
Q2 | 7:54 | FSU | Scott Bentley 34-yard field goal | FSU 3–0 |
Q2 | 5:59 | Neb | Reggie Baul 34-yard pass from Tommie Frazier (Byron Bennett kick) | Neb 7–3 |
Q2 | 0:29 | FSU | Scott Bentley 25-yard field goal | Neb 7–6 |
Q3 | 12:50 | FSU | William Floyd 1-yard run (pass failed) | FSU 12–7 |
Q3 | 3:06 | FSU | Scott Bentley 39-yard field goal | FSU 15–7 |
Q4 | 14:55 | Neb | Lawrence Phillips 12-yard run (run failed) | FSU 15–13 |
Q4 | 1:16 | Neb | Byron Bennett 27-yard field goal | Neb 16–15 |
Q4 | 0:21 | FSU | Scott Bentley 22-yard field goal | FSU 18–16 |
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Personnel
Roster
Starting lineup
Offense

Defense
Special teams
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Awards and honors
- Charlie Ward, Heisman Trophy[19]
- Charlie Ward, Johnny Unitas Award
- Charlie Ward, James E. Sullivan Award[20]
- Charlie Ward, Walter Camp Award
- Charlie Ward, Maxwell Award
- Charlie Ward, Davey O'Brien Award
1993 team players in the NFL
The following were selected in the 1994 NFL draft.
The following played in the NFL in later years:
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References
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