1990 Georgia Tech vs. Virginia football game
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Toe Meets Leather refers to the 1990 United States college football game between Georgia Tech and the University of Virginia, won by Georgia Tech 41-38. The game, between #1 Virginia and #16 Georgia Tech, concluded with a 37-yard field goal by Scott Sisson with 7 seconds remaining.[1] With the win, Georgia Tech would go on to claim the 1990 ACC championship and a share of the 1990 NCAA Division I-A national football championship.
Background
Georgia Tech football and basketball radio play-by-play announcer Al Ciraldo coined the phrase "Toe meets leather", with which he led off every football game; current Tech radio play-by-play announcer Brandon Gaudin continues this tradition with his pregame show.
The conference matchup of two undefeated teams in midseason drew great national interest. The game was televised nationally by CBS with Jim Nantz handling play-by-play duties. The night before the game, vandals broke into Scott Stadium and set fire to the Astroturf surface, burning a large midfield patch. The morning of the game, school officials questioned holding the game that day. Field personnel took spare turf from Virginia's baseball field and, after cutting out the burned sections, stitched it into the field as patches, enabling the game to be played as scheduled.[2]
Game recap
Virginia took 10-0 lead in 1st quarter, and then UVA had 28-14 lead by half time. However, Georgia Tech took advantage of two 3rd quarter errors by Virginia to tie the game with score of 28-28. First, Tech scored 4 plays after recovering UVA fumble on opening possession of 3rd quarter. Then Georgia Tech Linebacker Calvin Tiggle's interception at the Yellow Jacket's 10-yard line stopped ensuing UVA drive. Georgia Tech gained field position for quarterback Shawn Jones' 26 yard scoring pass to wide receiver Emmett Merchant. Virginia's quarterback Shawn Moore then countered with long touchdown pass to Herman Moore, but GT running back William Bell tied the game again with score of 35-35 with 8-yard run late in 3rd quarter. Tech took its first lead 38-35 with Scott Sisson's 35-yard field goal kick with 7:17 minutes left. Virginia came back, obtaining 1st-and-goal achieved by 48 yard Moore-to-Moore pass. However, Virginia was penalized twice during next 5 plays, once nullifying tight end Aaron Mundy's touchdown catch. Virginia had to settle for Jake McInerney's tying field goal kick with 2:30 minutes left and score 38-38. The Yellow Jackets then went 56 yards in 5 plays to position Sisson for game-winning field goal with 7 seconds left. Key plays in that drive included Jones-to-Bell 23-yard pass, Bell's 13-yard run on which he fell on his own fumble, and Jones-to-wide receiver Greg Lester 15-yard pass completion. Georgia Tech quarterback Shawn Jones finished the game with 17 pass completions with 29 attempts for 257 yards and 2 touchdowns. Virginia quarterback Shawn Moore set UVA school record with 344 yards passing on 18 completions with 28 attempts.[3][4]
Effects
Georgia Tech would win its remaining games with Virginia Tech (also with a last second Sisson field goal), Wake Forest, and arch-rival Georgia to complete its fifth undefeated regular season in school history at 10-0-1.[5] Virginia's season spiraled downhill from the game, going 1-3 to finish 8-4 and ranked #22 (AP) at the season's end. As ACC champion, Georgia Tech received the then-automatic bid to the 1991 Florida Citrus Bowl in Orlando against Nebraska. Tech would dominate the Cornhuskers and win the game 45-21.
Georgia Tech finished the 1990 season with a record of 11–0–1 (eleven wins, no losses, and one tie), while the Colorado Buffaloes' record was 11–1–1, (eleven wins, one loss, and one tie). Georgia Tech tied North Carolina 13-13 on October 20. Colorado tied Tennessee 31-31 on August 26 and lost to Illinois 23-22 on September 15 of that year. On October 6, Colorado controversially defeated Missouri 33-31 on the game's last official play - a "fifth down". Referees in that game lost count of the downs at the end of the game and inadvertently awarded the Buffaloes a fifth down and goal that resulted in the game's deciding touchdown. Due to its result - and its effect on the 1990 national championship voting - the 1990 Fifth Down Game has subsequently been viewed as one of the most controversial game endings in college football history.[6][7]
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) governs American football as played by the teams representing the largest universities in the United States, termed Division I-A (Changed in 2006 to FBS — Football Bowl Subdivision). Although smaller schools participate in formal NCAA tournaments to determine the national college football championships in Divisions I-AA, II, and III, Division I-A lacks such a tournament.
During this time frame, before the College Football Playoff system was implemented, the "mythical national championship" of Division I-A was determined by polls of coaches and/or sportswriters. In the early 1990s, two such polls were regarded as authoritative: A poll of sportswriters conducted by the Associated Press (AP) called the AP Poll, and a poll of college football coaches conducted by the United Press International (UPI) called the Coaches Poll. These polls are conducted weekly during the football season, and the final polls (in January, after all bowl games) determine the championship.
Because 1990 was a year in which no single college football team was dominant, the Fifth Down controversy played a role in determining the Division I-A national champion for the 1990 season. The Missouri game caused Colorado's ranking to decline to 14th. However, most of the top teams lost in subsequent weeks, while the Buffaloes won their remaining games, including a 27-12 victory in Lincoln over highly rated Nebraska and a squeaker over Notre Dame. The Orange Bowl victory over Notre Dame was considered very controversial as well, due to a clipping call on Notre Dame on a punt return touchdown late in the game by Raghib Ismail when Colorado held a 10-9 lead, which would be the final score after Notre Dame was assessed the penalty. A blocked extra point by Colorado turned out to be the winning margin.
Colorado would be crowned 1990 national champion in the AP poll of sportswriters. By one vote, Georgia Tech would be crowned 1990 national champion in the UPI poll of college football coaches, its fourth national title in school history (after 1917, 1928, and 1952). Tom Osborne, then Nebraska head coach (the only school that played both schools that season), cast the deciding vote in favor of the Yellow Jackets.
References
- ^ "Sisson Kick vs. UVA - 1990". YouTube. 2006-06-15. Retrieved 2009-10-07.
- ^ "The Brawl For It All". Georgia Tech Athletic Association. 2007-09-21. Retrieved 2009-10-07.
- ^ Bill C. (2011-05-28). "What I Love: The 1990 Virginia-Georgia Tech Game". SBNation. Retrieved 2012-12-23.
- ^ Detroit, Johnny (2007-07-01). "Greatest Ending in College Football #36". pregame.com. Retrieved 2013-01-05.
- ^ "Georgia Tech Historical Data". College Football Data Warehouse. 2009-10-07. Retrieved 2009-10-07.
- ^ "College football's best of the last 20 years". USA Today. 2002-11-19. Retrieved 2006-11-21.
- ^ Ted Mandell (2005-09-25). "HEART STOPPERS AND HAIL MARYS" (Book/CD). Hardwood Press. Retrieved 2006-11-21.