| The Chronicle Online: Monday, November
21, 1994
At 8-3, Goldsmith-led Blue Devils have little to
regret
By Danny Sullivan
Has Duke football ever had a better loss than it did
on Saturday?
Giving up a late touchdown to lose a homecoming game
by one point to your arch-rival on Senior Day is usually not a good
thing. It happened to the Blue Devils in their 41-40 loss to North
Carolina this weekend.
But oh, what a loss it was. In the end, Duke finished
its regular season more in victory than in defeat.
"That was as good a college football game as you
would ever want to see," said Mack Brown, head coach of the Tar Heels.
"I want to give a lot of credit to Duke for a great comeback."
This was clearly the best game of the year in the
Atlantic Coast Conference. There were two arch-rivals, facing each other
with winning records on each side for the first time in 13 years. Both
squads were shoe-ins for bowl games for the first time ever in the same
season, but the stakes were for more than travel plans to Tampa,
Gainesville or Atlanta for a particular postseason trip.
This was North Carolina, the best ACC team in recent
years not indirectly sponsored by Foot Locker. Having established their
program as a perennial top-20 team, the Tar Heels suffered several early
injuries and stumbled a bit this season while trying to top the
Seminoles.
"I've said all along that the University of North
Carolina was the only one who had played with Florida State," Goldsmith
said. "They came and played well today."
This was Duke, the comeback story of the year in
college football, as its own Bobby Hurley has been in professional
basketball. Both were in critical condition, and both have supplemented
some good, old-fashioned luck with a large dose of good, old-fashioned
hard work, to play again with new life.
Wallace Wade was packed. Baby and royal blue hues
were everywhere. The Ram and Blue Devil mascots put on a good show
during timeouts, perhaps inspired by the play on the field and the
atmosphere of the entire day.
"This is what I came to Duke for," Duke red shirt
freshman receiver Corey Thomas said. "When I came to Duke, there were a
lot of empty seats. This was no miracle or anything. It was hard work.
Now hopefully we can bring this university a bowl victory. I want to win
this one. We lost the last two games, and I want to win a bowl."
To win a bowl, you must be in a bowl, and Duke will
be headed to some postseason party this year. A Peach Bowl flyer at
Saturday's game listed the preseason ACC standings. Duke stood dead
last, in ninth place. Did anyone think before the season that the Blue
Devils would be playing this winter?
"I don't think anybody -- you don't have one idea how
far these kids have come this year," Goldsmith said. "And I told them
that in [the locker room] after the game. They've come a long, long way.
To compete with the best people in the league, we had to come a long
way. We did that to a great extent."
Saturday was another chance for Duke to prove it had
arrived. It moved the ball up and down the field on North Carolina in
the first half, but a special teams breakdown and a late turnover kept
UNC close. The Tar Heels assumed control of the game in the third
quarter, grinding out two touchdowns on their way to a 10-point fourth
quarter lead.
The game may have been over for past Duke teams at
that point, but the Blue Devils battled back to retake the lead at
38-34. But just after an unthinkable Duke comeback victory seemed
likely, a 71-yard touchdown pass from Mike Thomas to Octavus Barnes with
2:01 to go put UNC back ahead for good.
"I'm just disappointed that we didn't play defense,
but I guess Carolina is too -- but not as disappointed as we are,"
Goldsmith said.
It was the second time in as many games that the Blue
Devils allowed a Triangle opponent to comeback in the fourth quarter to
beat them. North Carolina State rallied to nip Duke 24-23 last week in
Raleigh, making it two might-have-beens too many for Spence Fischer, the
Duke quarterback.
"It's a shame," Fischer said. "These two games just
slipped away. I think we're a 10-1 caliber football team.
"We silenced a lot of critics. You have to respect
Duke football now. I think Carolina does. They barely escaped today."
Bailey Luetgert started the Duke rally that almost
crushed UNC. He blocked a Tar Heel punt with just over seven minutes
left in the fourth quarter, giving the Blue Devils possession of the
ball at the North Carolina 21-yard line. Two plays later, Corey Thomas'
first catch of the day for a 12-yard touchdown brought Duke back to
within three.
After forcing UNC to punt, a good return by Adam Geis
set up the Duke offense for the go-ahead score. Receiver Jon Jensen
accounted for 34 yards on the 48-yard drive, capped off by another
Thomas TD catch. Duke couldn't answer the final UNC touchdown with so
little time left, but Jensen's career day-- 14 catches, 174 yards --
shouldn't be overlooked.
"When it's your last shot, you just want to make it
your best," Jensen said. "I don't think we have anything to be ashamed
of. It's not like we beat ourselves. They made plays, and we made plays.
Unfortunately, we didn't make the last play."
Or did they? Rewind to four weeks ago. Duke was 7-0,
fresh off a 51-26 drubbing of Wake Forest. What was everyone talking
about? Florida State, and how getting crushed by the Seminoles would
send the Blue Devils reeling. Duke would lose its last four games and
limp into a bowl. If it was lucky.
The prognosticators were very close. Duke went 1-3
those last four games. The prognosticators were also very far off.
"The first goal was to have a winning season,"
Goldsmith said. "We accomplished that early. Everybody said we'd lose
the last four, and we did lose three out of the last four. But I don't
think we did that quite the way anybody thought we would.
"I don't think anybody thought we'd beat Virginia.
Nobody thought we'd be leading Carolina and leading State the way we did
before losing at the wire. We put ourselves in position to win in
November, and I'm proud of the football team that did that."
But for the players, it's still too soon after that
second experience of losing at the wire to feel too good about the
regular season.
"I'd rather get blown out than to lose by one point,"
Thomas said. "But then again, I think it showed the heart of both
teams."
Duke has come a long way in a very short time, and it
proved that once and for all with its play on Saturday. Duke lost the
game, and that's what made it a sad day for the Blue Devils.
"This was a tough one, yet at the same time, I don't
think anybody has anything to hold their heads down about," Abdul-Aleem
said. "Who would have thought we would make it this far?"
Nobody. That's what made it so great.
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