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Recount? No, rematch
Weinke, Heupel to meet in another 1-2 showdown
Posted: Sunday December 10, 2000 4:57 PM
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Josh Heupel battled Chris Weinke all season for the Heisman. They will duke it out for the national title in the Orange Bowl. AP |
NEW YORK (AP) -- In winning the Heisman Trophy, Florida State's
Chris Weinke captured the individual awards race over Oklahoma's
Josh Heupel.
But the real race, both quarterbacks know, won't finish up until
Jan. 3 -- when the Seminoles play the Sooners in the Orange Bowl
with the national championship on the line.
"In the end, there was a lot made of the Heisman being a
head-to-head race between me and Josh," Weinke said Sunday. "But
what I have been focusing on is facing each other in the Orange
Bowl."
With the 28-year-old Weinke edging Heupel by 76 points in the
Heisman balloting on Saturday night, the Orange Bowl has an added
subplot -- it will be just the third time the Heisman winner and
runner-up will play against each other in a postseason game.
The 1975 Rose Bowl matched '74 Heisman winner Archie Griffin of
Ohio State against runner-up Anthony Davis of Southern California.
The Trojans won 18-17 and claimed a share of the '74 national title
-- Oklahoma was the AP media poll champion; USC won the coaches
poll.
In 1980, Heisman winner George Rogers of South Carolina opposed
Pittsburgh's Hugh Green, the runner-up, in the Gator Bowl. Pitt won
37-9.
For Heupel, a win would mean a perfect season and national
championship for his top-ranked Sooners. Weinke, though, is
confident his third-ranked Seminoles (11-1) will find a way to win.
"They are a good football team, and whether this will be
motivation for them I don't know," Weinke said after becoming the
oldest player to win the Heisman. "Nobody has found a way to beat
them yet, but I'm sure we'll give it our best shot."
Heupel told Sooners fans not to be discouraged about his
second-place Heisman finish.
"I would tell them to put a smile on their face and get ready
for a trip to Miami," Heupel said.
In the seventh-closest voting in Heisman history, Weinke
overcame an age issue that had some voters leaving his name off the
ballot claiming he had an unfair advantage over his younger rivals.
"Everything that's happened is because of the experience I've
gained, not the age I attained," Weinke said in an acceptance
speech in which he periodically swallowed hard. "When I went back
to football at Florida State, I was no better a quarterback at 24
than I was at 18."
Weinke, who led the nation with a school-record 4,167 yards
passing and threw 33 touchdowns with 11 interceptions, totaled
1,628 points -- 369 first-place votes, 216 for second place and 89
for third. Heupel, who threw for 3,392 yards and 20 TDs, collected
1,552 points -- 286 first-place votes, 290 for second and 114 for
third.
Of the 922 eligible Heisman voters, only 796, or 86.3 percent,
cast ballots. Voters were asked to list their top three choices,
with 3 points going for a first-place vote, 2 for second and 1 for
third.
Weinke was left off 122 ballots, while Heupel was not among the
top three on 106 ballots.
Purdue quarterback Drew Brees was a distant third with 619
points; and TCU running back LaDainian Tomlinson was fourth with
566 points.
Prior to the Heisman, Heupel was voted player of year by The
Associated Press, Walter Camp Foundation and The Sporting News and
also took the Maxwell Award; Weinke won the Johnny Unitas Golden
Arm Award and the Davey O'Brien Award.
For now, the 6-foot-5, 229-pounder from St. Paul, Minn., has the
edge by winning college football's most coveted individual award,
but a national title is the biggest prize of all.
"That's what matters most," Weinke said.
Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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