Streeter Lecka/Getty Images
Jameis Winston kept Florida State's national title hopes alive as the Seminoles improved to 6-0 over all for the first time since their 1999 championship season.
CLEMSON, S.C. — This was Jameis Winston's introduction to stardom: silencing Death Valley on Saturday night, quarterbacking Florida State to a signature win over Clemson and making a firm case for the Heisman Trophy.
Winston is electrifying college football as a redshirt freshman, just as Johnny Manziel did last season. Florida State fans call him Famous Jameis. Remember the name, they say.
On his first big stage, against his first big opponent, Winston showed why. He and No. 5 Florida State smashed No. 3 Clemson, 51-14. Winston threw for 444 yards and accounted for four touchdowns, giving him 23 total touchdowns on the season. All that was missing was his Heisman pose.
"He's not a freshman," Rashad Greene, a Florida State receiver, said, adding, "That's a grown man."
No opponent has ever scored more points at Memorial Stadium.
Winston kept Florida State's national title hopes alive. But he had plenty of help in lifting the Seminoles, who are 4-0 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, to 6-0 over all for the first time since their 1999 championship season. His receivers — Greene, Kelvin Benjamin and Kenny Shaw, as well as tight end Nick O'Leary — made spectacular catches. His team's defense was relentless and stingy.
Winston, though, outplayed Tajh Boyd, a Clemson fifth-year senior, on a night when their quarterback matchup took center stage.
ESPN's "College GameDay" was here. Lee Corso dressed up like Chief Osceola, and the actor Bill Murray, whose son attends Clemson, playfully tackled him.
Much was at stake, with two Heisman candidates at quarterback and two top-five teams from the A.C.C.
Much had been expected from Clemson and Florida State in recent years. They were the cream of the crop, the standard-bearers for the conference. They were supposed to compete with the teams from the Southeastern Conference for national titles and college football supremacy.
Neither did exactly that. But Boyd led Clemson to back-to-back wins over SEC powers, beating Louisiana State in the Chick-fil-A Bowl last season and Georgia in this season's opener. And Florida State had Winston, which by itself seemed to give the Seminoles a chance.
On Clemson's first play, Boyd connected with tight end Stanton Seckinger, who fumbled as he went down. Three plays later, Winston lofted a 22-yard pass toward the 6-foot-5 Benjamin at the goal line. Benjamin was tightly covered, but the throw was perfect, high and to the outside. Benjamin turned and snatched the ball for a touchdown. Winston jogged off the field nonchalantly.
After Boyd and the Clemson offense stalled, Winston led a 16-play, 77-yard drive that ended in a field goal. He looked like the senior, standing tall in the pocket.
Death Valley was already quiet. Then Boyd faked a handoff near midfield, was drilled by Lamarcus Joyner on a cornerback blitz and fumbled. Defensive end Mario Edwards Jr. scooped up the ball and rumbled for a 37-yard touchdown and a 17-0 Florida State lead.
Boyd tried to rally. He tossed a 3-yard touchdown pass to his star receiver, Sammy Watkins, and the Clemson defense intercepted Winston on the ensuing possession. But Winston responded, dumping a pass to Greene, who had found a pocket in the Clemson defense. As two defenders dived at Greene's feet, he turned upfield and took off, outrunning everyone else for a 72-yard touchdown.
Death Valley was silent by halftime, with Clemson (6-1, 4-1) trailing, 27-7. The night seemed reminiscent of Texas A&M's win over Alabama last season behind Manziel, its dynamic quarterback. The Tigers were not the Crimson Tide, but like Manziel, Winston held everyone's curiosity.
He was young and clearly talented. But he had been portrayed as the anti-Manziel. He was a polished pocket passer, confident and composed, unafraid to challenge his teammates or make a big throw. He asked to be reprimanded if he ever had what he called the "Manziel disease." Yet he was still every bit as exciting.
In his collegiate debut, he completed 25 of 27 passes in a rout of Pittsburgh. Against Boston College, he broke two tackles and threw for a score on a 55-yard heave just before halftime. The next week against Maryland, he wiggled out of a tackle, rolled right and fired a 12-yard touchdown pass to the corner of the end zone. The ball was placed perfectly over a defender, but low enough to keep his receiver inbounds.
It was a play typical of Manziel. Of course, the attention on Winston was only growing. T-shirts were made depicting him as Jesus, calling him "The Chosen One."
Winston is already the face of the Seminoles, and now, having throttled Clemson, he could be the best hope for the A.C.C. He will face two more real tests this season, in two weeks against Miami and in Florida State's regular-season finale, against Florida. He will have time to grow and learn even more by then. The attention will grow, too.
But it will surely be fun to watch. When Winston flipped a quick pass to Greene on their first drive of the second half and Greene scampered for a 17-yard touchdown, orange-clad fans started to file out of Memorial Stadium. They had seen enough.
Anda sedang membaca artikel tentang
No. 5 Florida State 51, No. 3 Clemson 14: Winston Solidifies Stardom by Overwhelming Clemson
Dengan url
https://dunialuasekali.blogspot.com/2013/10/no-5-florida-state-51-no-3-clemson-14.html
Anda boleh menyebar luaskannya atau mengcopy paste-nya
No. 5 Florida State 51, No. 3 Clemson 14: Winston Solidifies Stardom by Overwhelming Clemson
namun jangan lupa untuk meletakkan link
No. 5 Florida State 51, No. 3 Clemson 14: Winston Solidifies Stardom by Overwhelming Clemson
sebagai sumbernya
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar