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1977 Florida State Seminoles football team

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1977 Florida State Seminoles football
Tangerine Bowl champion
Tangerine Bowl, W 40–17 vs. Texas Tech
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
CoachesNo. 11
APNo. 14
Record10–2
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorGeorge Haffner (2nd season)
Offensive schemeMultiple
Defensive coordinatorJack Stanton (2nd season)
Base defense4–3
Home stadiumDoak Campbell Stadium
Seasons
← 1976
1978 →
1977 NCAA Division I independents football records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
No. 1 Notre Dame       11 1 0
No. 5 Penn State       11 1 0
Colgate       10 1 0
North Texas State *       10 1 0
No. 16 San Diego State       10 1 0
Tennessee State       8 1 1
No. 14 Florida State       10 2 0
No. 8 Pittsburgh       9 2 1
East Carolina       8 3 0
Rutgers       8 3 0
Army       7 4 0
Louisville       7 4 1
Boston College       6 5 0
Cincinnati       5 4 2
Georgia Tech       6 5 0
Memphis State       6 5 0
Northwestern State       6 5 0
Syracuse       6 5 0
William & Mary       6 5 0
Southern Miss       6 5 0
Temple       5 5 1
Hawaii       5 6 0
Navy       5 6 0
West Virginia       5 6 0
South Carolina       5 7 0
Utah State       4 7 0
Villanova       4 7 0
Illinois State       3 7 1
Virginia Tech       3 7 1
Miami (FL)       3 8 0
Richmond       3 8 0
Tulane       3 8 0
Air Force       2 8 1
Holy Cross       2 8 0
Northeast Louisiana       2 9 0
  • North Texas State (originally 9–2) awarded a forfeit win after Mississippi State was found to be using an ineligible player.[1]
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1977 Florida State Seminoles football team represented Florida State University as an independent during the 1977 NCAA Division I football season. Led by second-year head coach Bobby Bowden, the Seminoles compiled a record of 10–2. Florida State was invited to the Tangerine Bowl, where the Seminoles defeated Texas Tech. The team played home games at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida.

Schedule

[edit]
DateOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendanceSource
September 10at Southern MissW 35–619,376[2]
September 17at Kansas StateW 18–1026,200
September 24Miami (FL)L 17–2340,060
October 1at No. 17 Oklahoma StateW 25–1746,500
October 8Cincinnati
  • Doak Campbell Stadium
  • Tallahassee, FL
W 14–033,755
October 22Auburn
  • Doak Campbell Stadium
  • Tallahassee, FL
W 24–342,464[3]
October 29North Texas StatedaggerNo. 20
  • Doak Campbell Stadium
  • Tallahassee, FL
W 35–1440,597
November 5at Virginia TechNo. 15W 23–2136,500[4]
November 12Memphis StateNo. 16
  • Doak Campbell Stadium
  • Tallahassee, FL
W 30–940,127
November 19at San Diego StateNo. 13L 16–4150,453
December 3at FloridaNo. 19ABCW 37–963,563[5]
December 23vs. Texas TechNo. 19MizlouW 40–1744,502
  • daggerHomecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game

[6]

Game summaries

[edit]

At Southern Miss

[edit]

Florida State settled down in the 2nd half and rolled to a 35–6 victory over a stunned Southern Mississippi. The Seminoles were scoreless until a minute remained in the first half, when Ron Simmons blocked a punt and Scott Warren picked up the ball and ran it 2 yards for a touchdown that put the Noles on top to stay at 7–3. Florida State stretched it out to 14–6 in the third period, then exploded for three fourth quarter touchdowns. Jimmy Jordan threw two touchdown passes, one to Greg Lazzaro (34 yards) and one to Kurt Unglaub (8 yards). Mark Lyles scored from 1 yards out and Greg Ramsey caught a 12-yard TD pass from Wally Woodham.

At Kansas State

[edit]

Larry Key ran for 120 yards and became the first Florida State football player ever to go over the 2,000 mark in career yardage. It was defense that did it as the Seminoles struggled to an 18–10 victory over Kansas State. The defense held K-State to just seven first downs and 173 total yards. Jimmy Jordan passed nine yards to a wide open Mike Shumann for a touchdown. The Seminoles went for two points, Jordan again hitting Shumann, making it 8–7. In the early going of the last quarter K-State regained the lead, 10–8 on a 19-yard field goal by Kris Thompson. With 6:58 to go in the game the Seminoles capped an 80-yard drive with Dave Cappelen's 27 yard field goal, moving back up 11–10. Then, with 2:27 left, Jordan hit Shumann at the goal line for a 26-yard touchdown.

[7]

Miami (FL)

[edit]

Down 17–10, Miami ripped off 13 points in the final nine minutes and ended the Seminoles' five-game winning streak 23–17. Behind 10-0 after the 1st quarter, the Seminoles rallied to go ahead 11–10, then 17–10. Kenneth McMillian threw a 3-yard TD pass to Karl Monroe. Chris Dennis tied it 17–17 with 8:46 left. The next series saw a Jordan pass intercepted and Dennis kick the first of two 47 yard field goals for a 20-17 Miami lead as the clock showed 5:02. Then, with 4:11 remaining, Florida State gambled with a fourth-down pass at its 40. The pass missed. Miami took over, and got another Dennis field goal, for 23–17 with 2:09 left. Miami's fifth interception of the game spoiled FSU's last possession of the football.

At Oklahoma State

[edit]

With Larry Key and Wally Woodham leading the way, Florida State patched-up its tattered offense and stuck it to Oklahoma State 25–17. Down 17–3 in the early minutes of the last half, the surprising Seminoles erupted for 22 point in a hurry. Key ran a school-record 32 times, including 14 times in the closing quarter. Key gained 127 yards running, 72 more on three pass receptions, and 60 on his single kickoff return. Woodham took over for starter Jimmy Jordan at quarterback late in the first half, the Seminoles trailing 10–0. With Woodham in, Florida State got points on the board four out of the five times it had the football. He completed nine of his 16 passes for 145 yards. Dave Cappelen kicked 36 and 30 yard field goals, the last one put FSU ahead to stay 18–17 with 6:36 left. Mark Lyles ran 2 yards for a touchdown and Wally Woodham ran 2 yards for a touchdown and threw a 18-yard TD pass to Larry Key.

Cincinnati

[edit]

The Seminoles put down a rather pedestrian Cincinnati team 14–0. Wally Woodham threw for 265 yards and two touchdown passes, one to Mike Shuman (15 yards) and one to Roger Overby (36 yards) to lead the Seminoles to victory. The Seminole defense forced six turnovers, 4 interceptions and 2 fumble recoveries.

Auburn

[edit]

Auburn traveled to Tallahassee to play #18 ranked Florida State at Doak Campbell Stadium. The Seminoles led 10–3 at halftime as the Tigers had trouble holding on to the ball. Larry Key led the charge in the 2nd half as the Noles held on for a 24–3 victory. Key had 170 yards rushing and ran for two touchdowns.

With Ron Simmons and Willie Jones putting the spurs to a spectacular clutch defense, Florida State rolled over North Texas State 35–14. Florida State had driven 78 yards to a 7–0 lead on the game's opening series, Wally Woodham scoring from the one. North Texas tied it 7–7 in the second quarter as Mike Jones scored from the one, capping an 85-yard drive. The Seminoles scored two touchdowns within a span of 44 playing seconds without a single offensive play from scrimmage. With 3:08 left in the first half, Bobby Butler blocked a punt that Ivory Joe Hunter picked up and took 19 yards for a touchdown. That made it 14–7. Ken Smith came in at quarterback for the Mean Green and on the first play, an attempted draw, saw a bobbled handoff at the goal line, and Willie Jones claimed the ball in the end zone for an FSU touchdown that brought it to 21–7 at halftime. Simmons sacked the quarterback five times during the game for a total yardage loss of 51.

At Virginia Tech

[edit]

A 29-yard field goal by Dave Cappelen finally beat Virginia Tech 23–21 on a wet, grey homecoming afternoon before 36,500 folks at Lane Stadium in Blacksburg. Just moments before, Tech had driven 77 yards, all on the ground, for a 21–20 lead. A 39-yard pass by Mike Shumann off a reverse set up the winning 3 pointer, with Roger Overby on the receiving end. Cappelen had three field goals for the afternoon, the other two coming from 42 and 26 yards out. Trailing 14–3, Wally Woodham threw a 10-yard TD pass to Mike Shuman. Woodham sneaked in from the one yard line to give the Noles a 17–14 lead. Cappelen kicked two field goals, the game winner coming with 4:57 remaining in the game.

Memphis State

[edit]

With a stinging defense that threw Memphis State backs for losses at least 15 times, Florida State ground out a 30–9 victory. Nose Guard Fred Igaz sacked Memphis quarterbacks three times. Just before halftime the Noles struck for a 10–0 lead. Dave Cappelen capped an 83-yard drive with a 30-yard field goal. Moments later, Willie Jones tackled a Memphis back and Jimmy Heggins hopped on the fumble at the Tiger 30. Woodham passed 27 yards to Mike Shumann for the touchdown. In the early moments of the fourth quarter, Bowden inserted Jimmy Jordan at quarterback. Jordan promptly directed a 50-yard drive for a touchdown. Mark Lyles scored from the four for a 20–3 lead. With Jordan still in there, the Seminoles got points on their next two series, Cappelen booting a 21-yard field goal and Greg Lazzaro grabbing a 13-yard TD pass, extending it to 30–3.

At San Diego State

[edit]

Unable to cope with the brilliant dropback passing of Joe Davis, error-ridden Florida State fell to San Diego State 41–16. In the first half, a mishandled punt, a fumble, a blocked punt and an interception gave San Diego the football at FSU's 13, 12, 17 and 48. That led to 24 Aztec points. Florida State got a 22-yard field goal from Dave Cappelen late in the first quarter to cut the score to 14–3. Early in the second period Wally Woodham threw a 42-yard TD pass to Mike Shumann to narrow it to 21–10. But later Woodham fumbled at his 12 when blind-sided, and the Aztecs moved to a quick TD to make it 28–10. Trailing 41–10, Jimmy Jordan threw a 19-yard TD pass to Roger Overby for the final points of the game.

At Florida

[edit]
Florida State at Florida
1 234Total
No. 19 Seminoles 10 7713 37
Gators 0 900 9

Florida hosted the Seminoles at Florida Field and Bobby Bowden and his Seminoles broke a 9-game losing streak to Florida with a 37-9 thumping of the Gators. The Seminoles rolled up 578 yards of total offense while holding the Gators to 200 yards of total offense. Berj Yepremian kicked three field goals for all of the Gators points. The Noles quarterbacks, Wally Woodham and Jim Jordan operated the FSU offense with smooth efficiency all game as they combined to pass for 344 yards. The pair was affectionately known as the Seminoles two-headed quarterback, Wally Jim Jordham.


Texas Tech (Tangerine Bowl)

[edit]
Texas Tech vs. Florida State
1 234Total
Red Raiders 0 368 17
No. 19 Seminoles 3 131113 40

Jimmy Jordan threw 18-of-25 for 311 yards and three touchdowns on the way to an MVP effort. Florida State had 22 first downs to Texas Tech's 21 first downs. Tech had 99 rushing yards (on 44 carries) while the Seminoles had 85 (on 37 carries). Florida State threw for 455 passing yards while the Red Raiders threw for 379. The Seminoles had two turnovers, but the Red Raiders turned it over four times. While Florida State had 10 penalties for 130 yards, they managed to convert their opportunities into points, whereas Tech did not do as such, at least until the second half where it was too late. Roger Overby caught two touchdown passes and Larry Key returned a kickoff 93 yards for a touchdown for the Seminoles.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/years/1977-standings.html
  2. ^ "Seminoles crank up, roll 35–6". Tallahassee Democrat. September 11, 1977. Retrieved March 25, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "Seminoles trounce Auburn Tigers, 24–3". Panama City News-Herald. October 23, 1977. Retrieved October 29, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ "Florida State escapes Virginia Tech 23–21". The Decatur Daily Review. November 6, 1977. Retrieved December 14, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Seminole air attack swamps Gators". The Commercial Appeal. December 4, 1977. Retrieved October 29, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ "1977 Football - Year in Review".
  7. ^ Ocala Star-Banner. 1977 Sep 18. Retrieved 2018-Oct-06.