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College football’s forgotten rivalry: Revisiting Washington’s 2000 upset over mighty Miami

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College football’s forgotten rivalry: Revisiting Washington’s 2000 upset over mighty Miami


It’s impossible to find two power-conference college football programs farther apart geographically than Miami and Washington.

They have faced each other only three times, but the Hurricanes and Huskies have a unique bond. Before they ever squared off, they split the 1991 national title, with 12-0 Miami crowned by the AP poll and 12-0 Washington getting the nod from the coaches poll.

Then, in 1994, Washington traveled to Miami as a 14-point underdog and snapped the Hurricanes’ NCAA-record 58-game home winning streak. The Huskies’ 38-20 win became known as “The Whammy in Miami.”

What no one could’ve imagined when No. 4 Miami visited No. 15 Washington in 2000 was the impact that game would have on both programs, particularly the Hurricanes, who were looking for revenge but maybe got something bigger from the showdown in Seattle.

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Marques Tuiasosopo, Washington QB, 1997-2000: I don’t think either side liked sharing the national title. Then, they go to Miami and beat them and end their record home winning streak. From our side of things, we knew they still wanted to make amends for that, and they still had that chip on their shoulder from 1990. It was a big deal.

Larry Tripplett, Washington, DT, 1997-2001: I remember the speech (UW defensive line) coach (Randy) Hart gave before that game. I think it was the Thursday before the game. He talked about the history of Husky football and the tradition. He was coaching back when they had the Whammy in Miami and showed the video of that. I remember feeling like this game was much more than just a game, that it meant a lot for Husky history, that I wasn’t just playing for myself, I was playing for the guys who were in that Whammy in Miami and all the guys who ever wore the purple and gold.

Rick Neuheisel, Washington coach, 1999-2002: Miami was so star-studded. You needed to know where (safety) Ed Reed was at all times. Their corners were fabulous. Their receivers were Reggie Wayne and Santana Moss, and (Jeremy) Shockey was the tight end. Their third-string running back was Clinton Portis. James Jackson was the starter. They had Najeh Davenport, and (Willis) McGahee was the guy who didn’t get to play. They were phenomenal.

Brent Myers, Washington OL coach, 2000-02: They jumped off the film when we watched them, especially (linebacker) Dan Morgan.

Tuiasosopo: We knew it was gonna be tough, but we thought we were good too. I don’t think anyone knew who we were, though. We knew we had to put up a fight. We knew we were gonna have to scratch and claw and be more physical.

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Tripplett: Our meeting room was in the tunnel, so when they were coming out pregame, they were barking and yelling and totally disrespectful. This was told to me, and I don’t know if it was actually true, but I’d heard that some of their players had urinated on the middle of our field. The amount of disrespect and swag that they came in there with was off the charts.

Tuiasosopo: They tried to intimidate us. They knew we liked to do a lot of barking. I remember in the pregame, walking down the tunnel, and a couple of their guys were walking up and they would just yelp, like a whupped dog. I just thought, OK, these guys don’t know what they’re walking into. They were making fun of us, and we didn’t like it. That kind of set our jaw a little bit. That pissed us off. We knew they didn’t respect us.

Tripplett: They were very arrogant, but they had every right to feel very confident. But I know this, that before that game, you could look in our guys’ eyes, Tui, Jeremiah Pharms, Pat Conniff — we all had this look like, no words needed to be said. We just knew what we were about to do. I felt that way. One of the beautiful things about football is the team aspect, and we all came together.

One other similarity between the two programs: They each had iconic home stadiums known for raucous atmospheres. Husky Stadium, with its overhanging roof on each side of the field, held the highest recorded decibel record for a college stadium for over 30 years. It was set in 1992 against Nebraska at 133.6, a record that stood until 2023 when Tennessee’s Neyland Stadium registered 137 dBs against Georgia. But to the players on the field on Sept. 9, 2000, Husky Stadium — or any other football stadium — never sounded any louder. And considering the Canes quarterback, Ken Dorsey, was making his first start on the road, that made a big difference.

Tripplett:  It was deafening. Dude, it was so crazy loud. I felt as if Miami was really shell-shocked as far as how loud it was and how aggressively we were playing.

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Joaquin Gonzalez, Miami, offensive tackle, 1997-2001: It’s the loudest place I’ve ever played, college and pros. The two overhangs on either side of the stadium, it was just this bellowing and a resonating sound. If you look at the first part of the film, the offensive line was late off the ball. Bryant McKinnie and I were late off the ball quite a bit early on, even though we had practiced a silent count and all of that. It was hard to even get the play calling in from (QB Ken) Dorsey. The very next year, we opened up at Penn State against a record-setting crowd (109,313), and we didn’t freaking bat an eye. That place was pretty freaking loud, but not as loud as that (Husky Stadium).

Mike Rumph, Miami, cornerback, 1998-2001: We had never been to the West Coast before. We all were like, in awe, like, “Holy s—, we’re on West Coast.” We’re like, “All those f—ing mountains in the background.” We never seen no mountains and no hills. They got Mount Rainier, like a f—ing snow cap in the backdrop. So, not saying we weren’t focused, but we were really impressed with the fact that we’re on the West Coast, and we had never been there before. We weren’t fully locked in.

Gonzalez: I didn’t expect the game to be as difficult as it was. Not from a football standpoint, but from all of the other stuff, having to travel the six hours and the time change. The impact of traveling out there, the stadium conditions in terms of the noise and stuff. You live and you learn.

Tuiasosopo: Husky Stadium was electric that day. When our defense was on the field, it was like an earthquake.

Rumph: It’s my top five loudest places, honestly. And I played against the Seattle Seahawks as a Niner.

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Tripplett: I probably had a very ignorant confidence. When I played in Husky Stadium, I used to feel like Superman. I’m gonna be honest, I felt invincible there, so I was not intimidated by them at all. That’s just the ignorance of youth I guess.

Rich Alexis, Washington, running back, 2000-03: Neuheisel was just cool. He was just being Neuheisel. Very encouraging. Just smiling. He’s got a pretty smile, nice hair, he was just ready. He felt confident. I don’t know why. He probably knew something we didn’t know. We took his lead, and then everybody was just calm and cool. Because if the coach would have spazzed out or freaked out, I think everybody would have got that message too. But that day, he was just chill.

Miami’s defense handled Washington on its first series, but the Huskies responded by forcing a turnover on the ensuing punt return.

Tuiasosopo: One of our guys puts his helmet on the ball, and Santana Moss coughed it up. Then, we went down and scored. We were gonna need plays like that, and it happened.

Alexis: There was a bad rep about the West Coast teams — that we were soft, weren’t physical enough. That fumble on the punt return set the tone.

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Marques Tuiasosopo finished eighth in the Heisman vote in 2000. (Otto Greule Jr. / Allsport)

Washington was determined to lean on its seasoned offensive line and Tuiasosopo, its star QB. A year earlier, Tuiasosopo had run for 207 yards and passed for 302 against Stanford. Miami coach Butch Davis compared him to former Syracuse first-round pick Donovan McNabb, who had gashed the Canes in 1998 for 99 rushing yards to lead an attack that ran for 318 yards in a 66-13 victory for the Orangemen. The Huskies and offensive coordinator Keith Gilbertson also had a few surprises prepared for the Canes’ vaunted defense. 

Tuiasosopo: Coach Gilbertson made sure that we had a wrinkle to take advantage of. We put that weakside mid-line option in. I think we held that back for them.

Myers: We were an I-option offense. They weren’t overly multiple on defense. They were so athletic, they didn’t have to play many defenses. Greg Schiano was their DC. Miami’s had always been known as a 4-3, quarters team, but Schiano had some good third-down blitz packages. He’s a really good defensive coach. But they didn’t face many option teams. Back then, Syracuse was an option team, a little like us. We studied them quite a bit.

The Huskies weren’t running all over Miami, but Tuiasosopo was moving the ball. He led them on a nine-play, 80-yard touchdown drive that he capped off with a 12-yard run on an option keeper that featured three broken tackles. He later connected with Washington’s standout tight end Jerramy Stevens for a 23-yard TD pass to give the Huskies a 21-3 halftime lead.

Myers: We did a lot of motion from the backfield to empty and threw the ball on them because we knew what they would check to. Our empty passing game was really effective in that game. We knew they would check to two-deep, so we threw option routes to Jerramy Stevens and Joe Collier and Willie Hurst, our tailback, who would be a slot receiver in our formation. It was very effective for us. I didn’t recall seeing Miami play against much empty back in those days.

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Neuheisel: We hit a touchdown on an unbalanced scheme, and we had post-post-wheel and hit the wheel. It was good stuff.

Rumph: They kept running the speed option. They found the wrinkle. They ran the speed option weak against us, and we couldn’t figure it out because they kept pulling the guard with the twist. We were one man short a lot. I remember that adjustment.

Tripplett: Tui was doing Tui Magic. He just makes stuff happen. And he was our leader. He was the type of leader that everybody on the team would run through a wall for. That year, we just knew as long as Tui was out there, we had a chance to win, and it proved to be true because we had some crazy comebacks that year.

Alexis: The guy just had swagger about him. Just calm, cool. It doesn’t matter what the moment was like. He would just be himself, calm, cool, just a born leader out there. He’d make sure everybody was not nervous. He was like that consistently all year. Those Samoan boys are different, man.

Rumph: He was a real good quarterback. He could run, he could throw. He was physical.

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Gonzalez: We basically played like s— for a half. Santana fumbled, Dorsey fumbled. One of our other running backs fumbled as well. We had a field goal blocked. We definitely didn’t start great.

Miami woke up in the second half. The Canes scored their first of three third-quarter touchdowns on a 21-yard pass from Dorsey to Wayne, but the Huskies answered when Neuheisel inserted Alexis, a true freshman running back from South Florida, and called an option play with the ball at midfield. 

Alexis: I didn’t even know if I was gonna get in the game or not, but Neuheisel told me he wanted to just throw me in the game so my parents could see that I’m doing well. He threw me in the game, and I’m looking at Dan Morgan. I’m like, dang, everybody I looked up to was against me.

I wanted to be a Hurricane all along. It came down to Miami and Washington. Neuheisel told me if I came out there, I’d play running back. He needed a big running back. Miami was already loaded at running back. You got James Jackson and Clinton Portis. Me and Willis McGahee were in the same recruiting class. Greg Schiano wanted me to play safety. The only thing I knew how to do is just run the football.

Myers: We called 43-veer. That meant offensive tackle Elliot Silvers was to release inside and veer through to the first backer in the box, which would be the weakside backer, and they had taken their defensive ends and put them head up on the tackles. On the second or third series, we went to that arc option part of the scheme (reading Miami’s defensive end) so that we could get their defensive end to tackle (fullback) Pat Conniff. And, if he didn’t, then Conniff was to get the ball in the option, and we wouldn’t end up pitching the ball. Elliot is a really, really smart kid. Their guy was really squeezing down. Elliot and (guard) Chad Ward said to me, “Coach, we need to arc this stuff because we can’t get through.” We ended up optioning the safety, the corner was being blocked and we went right down the sideline. It was awesome.

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Tuiasosopo: The option kept them on their heels and off-guard. It was gonna be a quick pitch. I got nailed. I was lying on the ground, but I saw him get around the corner and make that first guy miss, and I looked at their end who was on top of me and I smiled. “That’s a touchdown!”

Alexis: I really didn’t think he was going to pitch it. I went to the left with him, till he dove in with a quick dive, and he just pitched it to me, and I just took off. I couldn’t believe I made the touchdown. I mean, I was just in shock. You watch the replay, I froze. I didn’t know what to do. I was holding onto the ball. I didn’t even know how to celebrate. I just ran by Mike (Rumph), the late Al Blades, I saw all these guys, and I couldn’t believe I just scored. I was just so overwhelmed with joy.

Washington led 27-9 with a little over six minutes remaining in the third quarter, but Miami started to heat up offensively as Portis broke some big plays and Morgan recovered a Tuiasosopo fumble to set up another UM touchdown to make it 27-22 with 3:50 left in the third. Washington, though, never wilted and kept responding. On defense, Tripplett was a menace. He had two sacks, blocked a field goal and recovered a fumble in the fourth quarter. Miami had one last chance to rally, getting the ball back with 20 seconds left at their own 20 down 34-29, but Dorsey couldn’t rescue the Canes. 

Neuheisel: We ended up beating them because we played some slight of hand with some option and had some decent concepts to trick them in the red zone. We were able to run the ball against them some, which not very many people could.

Gonzalez: I think if we have probably eight to 10 more seconds at the end of that game, we win it. There was a moment in that game where things kind of just started clicking.

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Rumph: They had like 800 recruits there, and their head coach looks at us as we’re leaving the field, and he goes, “You don’t want to go play there. You want to play here. You don’t want to go to Miami. Play here.” I vividly remember that. And as we exited through that tunnel, their players were barking at us. We were actually trying to fight them a little bit, but they were barking.


Miami’s trip to Washington in 2000 was Ken Dorsey’s first road start. (Otto Greule Jr. / Allsport)

 

 

Gonzalez: It was just a s—-y situation to start the season. When you start off the season, you have all of these hopes and aspirations for all of these big things that you’re going to do. You never want to start off, in any sport — no matter if you’re playing Pee Wee or whatever — you never want to start off 1-1. More so in college sports at that time, one loss in any part of your season meant that you weren’t a contender anymore for the national championship. You fast forward to the end of the year, and we get screwed, even after beating Florida State head to head. Because of us, really, that’s why they changed the BCS.

Miami finished the regular season 10-1 with wins over No. 1 Florida State and No. 2 Virginia Tech (by 20 points), but those were the Canes’ only wins over ranked opponents. Washington also went 10-1, with its lone loss coming at Oregon, three weeks after beating UM. The Huskies also had just two Top 25 victories, with their other win over No. 23 Oregon State. The Noles ended up getting the title shot against No. 1 Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl, even though the Canes were ranked No. 2 in the coaches and AP polls. They were ranked third in the BCS.

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Delvin Brown, Miami, DB, 1997-2000: What happened that year that people don’t remember is Georgia Tech and Virginia Tech had a game that was canceled because of lightning. Lee Corso’s car got struck by lightning, and because Virginia Tech didn’t play Georgia Tech, our strength of schedule was actually weak. If we would have had a stronger strength of schedule, even despite our loss to Washington, we would have played in the national championship game. The good news is we still got to put a spanking on Florida (in the Sugar Bowl) that year. That was the year we fought them on Bourbon Street. Alex Brown ended up being a first-round pick for Chicago. We beat him up in the bar. He was in the postgame with a black eye.

Gonzalez: I remember walking out this white painted tunnel with pictures of Washington greats all around, in pain with my f—ing ribs, and just f—ing sitting there and saying, “All this f—ing work wasted.” But I think that sparked the fire in us.

To get slapped in the f—ing face the way that we did by Washington, it could have been very easy for us to go the other way. How did that become the turning point? It’s hard for me to kind of verbalize. I just think that we had all worked so hard that we weren’t going to let that define us. We really busted our ass that summer. UM had always had the offseason workouts. The test for stamina was always 16 110s. That’s what you had to run to make sure that you were ready for the season. If you didn’t, you had to run it every day until you passed it. But that offseason was the first offseason that the guys on the team said, “No, 16, is not good enough. We gotta run 20 110s now.” Then, my senior year, we said, “It’s not 20 anymore. It’s 24 110s.”

Davis left the Canes after the season to become the Cleveland Browns coach. Offensive coordinator Larry Coker was promoted after Miami’s veteran leaders, who had opted to stay in Coral Gables, lobbied the school’s AD, Paul Dee, to make that move for continuity’s sake. The Canes opened the 2001 season at Penn State and destroyed the Nittany Lions, 33-7. They pounded Rutgers 61-0 with the rematch against Washington, who had beaten No. 11 Michigan, up next. But then 9/11 happened. Like most games that weekend, it was postponed. The game was tentatively rescheduled for Thanksgiving weekend, when both schools had open dates. 

Neuheisel: We had just beaten Washington State. We were beat up. We were 8-2. I told (Washington AD) Barbara (Hedges), “Barbara, just tell them that we’ll do it another year. We don’t need to go.” She said, “Oh, we have to.”

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I said, “No, we don’t. Other people have turned it down. We’ll play ’em another year.” We went and got waxed.

Myers: I can remember sitting in the staff room and Rick was adamant about not playing that game because we didn’t need to. A lot of people around the country weren’t replaying that game they’d missed early in the season because of 9/11. Rick was not happy about it.

In addition to beating Michigan, Washington had defeated No. 10 Stanford and No. 9 Washington State. Miami had blown out No. 13 Florida State on the road and beat No. 15 Syracuse 59-0. The Canes — and their fans — were primed for the Huskies. 

Myers: As soon as we got down there to the Orange Bowl parking lot, they were throwing oranges at our bus. The fans were ready for us. That was crazy.

Tripplett: They were throwing oranges at us. Little kids were giving us the finger. They were really pissed at us.

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On the second play of the game, Miami linebacker Jonathan Vilma intercepted Washington QB Cody Pickett. Miami needed one play, a Portis run, to score its first touchdown. In the next series, UW went on a 15-play drive. Alexis broke a 31-yard run up the middle to the 2, but the Canes stiffened and stuffed four successive runs. 

Myers: From then on, we didn’t move the ball hardly at all. It was like we poked the bear. They just bludgeoned us after that. We couldn’t move the big man from the Patriots, (Vince) Wilfork, at all.

Gonzalez: We beat them up and down every f—ing which way, and every facet, every metric that you could imagine in the f—ing game. And I remember that the athletic director for Washington said that they would never play us again. I do remember Larry Coker calling a timeout only to allow the seniors to come out of the game because we’re already winning by a lot. And I do have a beautiful picture of me and (offensive lineman Martin) Bibla in the center of the Orange Bowl with our helmets up, walking off the field in the middle of the fourth quarter, whatever it was.

But I do remember at some point in that game, I don’t know when that was in the second or the third quarter, I remember standing up on top of the bench and calling the whole team together and (saying), “Don’t you ever f—ing forget what these guys did to us last year. You f—ing shove it down their f—ing throat and you f—ing make them feel the f—ing pain that we felt last year.” Those were the exact words that I used. I remember that. My hands are shaking. I’m ready to f—ing run through a f—ing wall right now. I remember telling the guys that.”

Miami led Washington 37-0 at halftime and won 65-7. Pickett fumbled twice and was sacked four times. The Canes intercepted six passes. Miami went on to win the national title, with the 2001 team regarded as one of the greatest in college football history.

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Tripplett: I don’t know if they felt this way or not, that cross-country flight is a beast. That was a challenge. I’m not using that as an excuse, but it definitely plays a role, and I wonder if it played a role at their end as well. They had a different mindset. They were trying to beat us down, and that’s exactly what they did. We were not ready. We had Cody Pickett, he was young. Reggie Williams was a freshman. This was not the Tui-led Huskies in that game.

Rumph: Damien Lewis, Dan Morgan, feel bad for those guys. I mean, the 2000 team was probably just as good or better than the 2001 team. But we lost that game.

Tripplett: I remember when I got into the league, I played with Reggie Wayne (with the Colts), and I’d joke that they were basically an all-star team. They had so many first-rounders (15) and the only first-rounder we had was our tight end, Jerramy Stevens.

Many of the players in the 2000 and 2001 Miami-Washington games now have sons who are college recruits themselves. Miami head coach Mario Cristobal was a grad assistant on the UM staff in 2000 when the Canes lost but wasn’t on staff when Miami got its revenge in 2001 because he’d taken the O-line job at Rutgers when Schiano became the Scarlet Knights head coach. One of Cristobal’s big recruits in the 2026 class is a South Florida kid whose family knows all about the Washington-Miami rivalry — running back Javian Mallory, the nephew of Rich Alexis.

Alexis: It was a full circle moment because we had a lot of people amongst our family who are Canes at heart. Now, you got one that’s actually going to be a Cane. We got one, at least.

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(Top photos of Rick Neuheisel, Reggie Wayne: Otto Greule Jr. / Allsport)



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Bengals Dismantle Dolphins 45-21 | POSTGAME RECAP, NOTES & QUOTES

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Bengals Dismantle Dolphins 45-21 | POSTGAME RECAP, NOTES & QUOTES


MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — The Bengals’ defense shut down the Dolphins’ vaunted running game and then set it sights on rookie quarterback Quinn Ewers with four straight turnovers (one a fourth-and-one stop) to begin the second half in Sunday’s 45-21 victory over Miami at Hard Rock Stadium.

Quarterback Joe Burrow’s offense turned the four turnovers into four touchdowns, three of them for running back Chase Brown in a stunning third quarter that included the first career interceptions for rookie linebacker Barrett Carter and fifth-year cornerback Jalen Davis.

In leading the Bengals to their most points in a dozen years, Burrow sifted his second-best passer rating of his career at 146.5 on four touchdowns and 309 yards generated by 25 of 32 passing. And that was with 11:22 to go in the game, when he was relieved by Joe Flacco.

The turning point came on the first drive of the second half when Dolphins running back De’Von Achane’s 31-yard screen pass on third-and four was negated by an offensive pass interference call. On the next play, Bengals safety Jordan Battle put his helmet on the ball after tight end Greg Dulicich caught a 10-yarder. The ball popped out and defensive end Myles Murphy recovered at the Dolphins’ 34-yard line.

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The offense delivered in six plays, capped by a Burrow flip to Chase Brown for a nine-yard touchdown pass that made it 24-14 less than six minutes into the half.

Brown caught it at the five-yard line and spun inside to leave Dolphins linebacker Jordyn Brooks, the NFL’s leading tackler, in the lurch on his way to scoring both through the air and ground in the same game for the third time this season.

The Bengals took a 17-14 lead late in the first half when Burrow engineered a one-minute touchdown drive, keeping it alive on third-and-10 from the Miami 38 when he escaped Dolphins defensive tackle Zach Sieler and then flung it short across his body to tight end Drew Sample for a 27-yard gain.

Halfback Samaje Perine hammered home a four-yard touchdown run with 1:24 left in the half, and the Bengals’ defense snuffed out any hope of Miami doubling up when they received the second-half kickoff.



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Texas A&M takeaways: Aggies offense sputters in playoff loss to Miami

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Texas A&M takeaways: Aggies offense sputters in playoff loss to Miami


Battered Aggie Syndrome strikes again.

Texas A&M football’s season ended in the first round of the College Football Playoff, falling Saturday to Miami 10-3. The Aggies’ offense stood on the 5-yard line with 24 seconds left and a chance to tie the game when Hurricanes defensive back Bryce Fitzgerald intercepted quarterback Marcel Reed, ending the dream of a CFP quarterfinal against Ohio State.

MORE: Recap from Texas A&M’s College Football Playoff loss to Miami

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Texas A&M outgained Miami 326-278 in total yards of offense and ran 26 more plays. However, the Aggies lost the turnover battle three to one and failed to take advantage of the opportunities presented to them.

Here are some takeaways from Texas A&M’s loss:

Texas A&M’s inability to capitalize

After tying the game 3-3 to start the fourth quarter, Texas A&M found momentum when safety Dalton Brooks ripped the ball out of Malachi Toney’s hands with 7 minutes, 11 seconds left. The Aggies recovered the fumble at their own 47-yard line, but were unable to make anything of the field position, punting after a single first down.

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The defense had held firm for all of three quarters, allowing a field goal and holding Hurricanes quarterback Carson Beck to 80 passing yards. But the offense was a different story, as untimely turnovers and inaccurate passes from Reed kept the unit from ever finding a rhythm. 

Reed’s best drive of the day came after Miami went up 10-3. With just under two minutes remaining, he led the Aggies 70 yards in 10 plays. He made quick decisions, used his legs effectively and connected with wide receiver KC Concepcion for a 14-yard completion to set up first-and-goal. But the Aggies couldn’t close out the drive.

Texas A&M quarterback Marcel Reed (10) is tackled during the round one College Football Playoff game against Miami at Kyle Field on Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025 in College Station, Texas.

Texas A&M quarterback Marcel Reed (10) is tackled during the round one College Football Playoff game against Miami at Kyle Field on Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025 in College Station, Texas.

Aaron E. Martinez/Austin American-Statesman

Aggies’ run defense collapses

The Aggies allowed 38 yards rushing in the first half, stonewalling the Hurricanes’ offensive line and running back Mark Fletcher Jr. But Miami began to get its run game churning in the third quarter, rushing for 47 yards on nine attempts. An injury at the end of the period to Aggies defensive lineman Albert Regis —  one of their best run defenders — exacerbated the issue. Fletcher proceeded to rip off a 56-yard run with 4:01 remaining, which set up the game-winning 11-yard jet sweep pass to Miami wide receiver Malachi Toney.

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The Aggies allowed 91 rushing yards in the fourth quarter, despite holding the Hurricanes to 85 yards for the rest of the game.

A special teams spectacle

With winds gusting up to about 30 mph, each team’s kickers struggled to find the uprights in Kyle Field.

Aggies kicker Jared Zirkel began the day by mis-hitting a 22-yard attempt, allowing Hurricanes defensive lineman Rueben Bain to block the low-driven kick. Miami’s Carter Davis, who’d missed only two kicks all season, saw his 47-yard field goal in the second quarter fly wide right of the post. He missed attempts from 40 and 35 yards as well.

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Instead of sticking with Zirkel, A&M head coach Mike Elko turned to former starter Randy Bond, who was 11-for-18 entering the game. The kicker took advantage of his opportunity, tying the game on a 35-yard field goal despite a bad hold.

Elko dug into his bag of tricks toward the end of the second half. Aggies punter Tyler White faked a punt with less than two minutes remaining in the half, but defensive back Marcus Ratcliffe failed to bring in White’s pass.



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Why did Carson Beck transfer to Miami? Revisiting ex-Georgia QB’s move

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Why did Carson Beck transfer to Miami? Revisiting ex-Georgia QB’s move


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This time last year, Carson Beck had his first College Football Playoff start taken away from him due to a season-ending elbow injury in the SEC Championship game.

Fast forward a year and the veteran quarterback is set to make that long-awaited start against No. 7 Texas A&M at noon ET inside Kyle Field in College Station, Texas.

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Only, it isn’t happening with the team he led to the CFP last season.

Instead, it comes with No. 10 Miami, which, just like Beck, is making its debut in college football’s biggest stage.

“It’s honestly unreal to just kind of step back and look at the whole of everything that’s happened,” Beck said in a Dec. 17 interview. “And it’s surreal to get to this point, honestly and to realize everything I’ve been through and realize the adversity that I’ve had to face and overcome.”

Beck has led the Hurricanes to a 10-2 record this season and is looking to lead the program to its first CFP win. Should Miami pull off the upset against Texas A&M, the Hurricanes will advance to the Cotton Bowl CFP quarterfinal against No. 2 Ohio State on New Year’s Eve.

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Here’s a look back at why Beck transferred to Miami:

Where did Carson Beck transfer from?

Beck transferred from Georgia. He spent five seasons with the Bulldogs, with his final years coming as the starting quarterback.

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Why did Carson Beck transfer to Miami?

The decision by the ex-Georgia quarterback to enter the portal was a head-scratching one to an extent, largely because he announced on Dec. 28 on his social media he was declaring for the NFL draft.

“I will forever cherish the memories that have been made,” Beck wrote in that initial NFL declaration post. “Thank you Dawg Nation for the time I’ve been here and to those who’ve supported and believed in me, thank you. It’s been an incredible journey and all these moments have ultimately led me to take the next step in my football career.”

He officially announced on Jan. 9 he was entering his name into the NCAA transfer portal. He announced his decision to return home to the state of Florida to play for the Hurricanes on Jan. 10. As noted by USA TODAY Sports’ Matt Hayes, Georgia wanted to keep Beck in Athens. One of the Bulldogs’ SEC rivals, Alabama, also showed an interest in Beck before he committed to Miami.

As for the reason behind Beck’s decision to transfer, that can likely be pointed to his season-ending elbow injury that he sustained during the SEC championship. Since he needed surgery to repair his UCL in his throwing arm, Beck wouldn’t have been able to throw during the heart of the NFL draft workout schedule with teams.

“This is my future, and I think that this decision is one of the better decisions I’ve made,” Beck said at ACC Kickoff in July. “Just trying to develop those relationships and that camaraderie, it’s just reinforced my decision in a positive way.”

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Carson Beck stats

Here’s a look at Beck’s career stats at Georgia and Miami:

  • 2021 (Georgia): 10 of 23 passing (43.5%) for 176 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions
  • 2022 (Georgia): 26 of 35 passing (74.3%) for 310 yards with four touchdowns
  • 2023 (Georgia): 302 of 417 passing (72.4%) for 3,941 yards with 24 touchdowns and six interceptions; 116 rushing yards and four rushing touchdowns on 60 carries
  • 2024 (Georgia): 290 of 448 passing (64.7%) for 3,485 yards with 28 touchdowns and 12 interceptions; 71 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown on 55 carries
  • 2025 (Miami): 263 of 353 passing (74.7%) for 3,072 yards with 25 touchdowns and 10 interceptions; 39 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown on 38 carries





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