Clemson–Florida State football rivalry

Clemson–Florida State football rivalry
First meeting November 7, 1970
Florida State 38, Clemson 13
Latest meeting November 11, 2017
Clemson 31, Florida State 14
Next meeting October 27, 2018 in Tallahassee
Statistics
Meetings total 31
All-time series Florida State leads, 20–11
Largest victory Florida State, 57–0 (1993)
Longest win streak Florida State, 11 (1992–2002)
Current win streak Clemson, 3 (2015–present)

The Clemson–Florida State football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Clemson Tigers football team of Clemson University and Florida State Seminoles football team of Florida State University. The schools have played each other annually since 1992. Both universities are members of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), and since the ACC initiated divisional play in 2005, both teams have competed in the ACC's Atlantic Division. For several years in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the matchup was known alternatively as the Bowden Bowl for the father, former head coach Bobby Bowden of the Seminoles, and the son, Tommy Bowden, formerly head coach of the Tigers.

Similar to a period in the late 1980s, the now annual football game has recently seen a resurgence with national implications as both programs have returned to the national spotlight. In 2016, CBS Sports named the Clemson–Florida State matchup as "the best annual game in college football", stating "Clemson–Florida State has supplanted Alabama–LSU as the one annual game you can bank on needing to watch to figure out the postseason."[1] Both programs have accounted for over 30 ACC titles, and have represented the Atlantic Coast Conference consistently in the post season since 2011.

Series history

Clemson and FSU first played in 1970, predating Florida State's membership in the ACC. The actual rivalry started to emerge in 1988 when the No. 3 Clemson Tigers hosted the No. 10 Seminoles in a "clash of styles" marked by FSU's highly touted skill talent and passing attack, versus Clemson's well regarded option, linemen and linebackers, that was ultimately decided by Leroy Butler's 78-yard "puntrooskie" run, costing Clemson the victory and dashing their national title hopes.[2] Clemson avenged the loss in 1989, dominating the trenches, with a 34–23 victory in Tallahassee, marked by a 73-yard scoring run by Terry Allen and a 73-yard interception return by Wayne Simmons.[3] The Seminoles and Tigers finished the 1989 season with 10–2 records, and ranked No. 3 and No. 12 in the final AP poll, respectively. The series also marked the only two games coached by Danny Ford and Bobby Bowden, who were the 3rd and 9th ranked coaches in winning percentage in college football at the time.

Unfortunately for alumni, sports writers, and football fans, the 1988 and 1989 series would be but a brief glimpse of a potential rivalry between two growing, nationally recognized programs, with divergent styles, that would not begin to be realized again for over another decade. Prior to FSU's arrival, Clemson was a dominant team in the ACC winning 6 of 10 ACC titles from 1981 to 1991. However, after the departure of Clemson's national championship winning coach Danny Ford in 1989, Clemson's program went into decline for a decade, as Florida State's success continued for much of the 1990s.[4] The potential rivalry began to pick up again, when Tommy Bowden, son of FSU coach Bobby Bowden was hired at Clemson University in 1999, in an attempt to secure facility upgrades, and help rebuild the program.

Bowden Bowl: Tommy vs. Bobby

When Tommy Bowden was named head coach of Clemson on December 2, 1998, the opportunity arose for the first ever meeting between a father and his son as opposing head coaches on the football field. The series became known as the "Bowden Bowl" (1999–2007).[5] Florida State and Clemson have faced each other on a yearly basis since Florida State joined the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1992. In 2005, when the ACC expanded to twelve teams, Clemson and Florida State were placed together in the Atlantic Division; this allowed the teams to continue to face each other without interruption. The first meeting in 1999 was the largest crowd ever to watch a game at Memorial Stadium at Clemson University with an attendance of 86,200 which Florida State won 17-14 on their way to a perfect, wire-to-wire national championship.[6] Bobby won the all-time series, with five wins and four losses. Tommy Bowden's first win came in 2003 on his father's birthday, defeating then third-ranked FSU, damaging their prospects for a national championship. During the Bowden Bowl era, FSU won five conference championships.[7] Tommy Bowden's Tigers beat two of those ACC champions: in 2003 and 2005. The Bowden vs. Bowden editions of the series ended when Tommy resigned as head coach six games into the 2008 football season.

New Era

The rivalry lives on past the departure of Tommy Bowden, who was replaced mid-season by Wide Receivers and Interim Head Coach Dabo Swinney in 2008. The games in 2008 and 2009 both came down to the 4th quarter with the home teams winning respectively, and influencing the Atlantic Division standings. During the 2009 season, Clemson went on to clinch the Atlantic Division after a 40–24 win in Death Valley, while similarly, Florida State won the division after a 16–13 down to the wire decision the following year in Tallahassee despite being without starting quarterback Christian Ponder.[8] At the end of the 2009 season Bobby Bowden retired from Florida State University leaving his Offensive Coordinator and Head Coach in Waiting Jimbo Fisher as head coach of the team. In 2011, Clemson brought the ACC Championship back to the Atlantic Division with a win over Virginia Tech in the ACC Championship Game.

In the decade prior, the series was evenly split, with each team winning 5 games. Both teams in 2012 were ranked in the Top 10 for the first time since 2000, where an early 14-point Clemson lead thanks to trick plays ended, in a game that was also decided in the 4th quarter with FSU winning 49–37.[9] In a primetime marquee top 5 matchup in 2013, after 4 Clemson turnovers in the first half, including a fumble returned by Mario Edwards, FSU pulled away and went on to win decisively 51-14 in Death Valley, scoring the most points ever by an opponent, while also notching their first victory in Death Valley since 2001. The Tigers failed to break a noise record they set out to break during that game.[10] Their 2013 meeting marked the first time both teams were ranked simultaneously in the Top 5.[11] FSU went on to have a perfect season winning the BCS National Championship over Auburn, while Clemson finished with an 11 win season and a victory over Ohio State in the 2014 Orange Bowl. The 2014 matchup was also a Top 25 classic as No. 22 Clemson controlled the line of scrimmage by holding No. 1 Florida State to 13 yards rushing in regulation, but came up short with critical red zone errors in a 23–17 overtime loss.[12] The Seminoles rallied behind Sean Maguire, and were without Heisman winning quarterback Jameis Winston, who was suspended for the game for yelling an obscene expression on campus a few days before the game.[13]

In 2015 in yet another marquee matchup, after giving up a 75-yard touchdown to Dalvin Cook on the game's second snap, Clemson's defense showed toughness, allowing just two field goals the rest of the way thanks in part to two FSU turnovers, as the Tigers stopped Cook on third and fourth down runs in the fourth quarter with the Seminoles a yard from a first down. Clemson's Heisman finalist quarterback Deshaun Watson threw a go-ahead TD to Deon Cain, and Wayne Gallman came through with a game-sealing scoring as No. 3 Clemson held off No. 17 Florida State, opening a path for the Tigers to the ACC Championship, College Football Playoff, and the 2016 National Championship Game.[14]

In 2016, undefeated #3 Clemson traveled to Tallahassee to play the #12 Seminoles. Although the Tigers jumped out to a 14–0 lead in the first quarter, Florida State rallied back strong in the second half. Dalvin Cook exploded for 169 yards and 4 touchdowns, almost all in the second half of the game, to pull the Seminoles ahead 34–29 with less than four minutes to play in a game that saw four total lead changes. Deshaun Watson, who threw for 378 yards and two touchdowns, led Clemson down the field and pulled the Tigers ahead with a 34-yard touchdown strike to tight end Jordan Leggett. The two-point conversion put Clemson ahead, 37–34. FSU came within field goal range to tie the game, but two sacks by the Clemson defense on quarterback Deondre Francois sealed the victory for the Tigers.[15]

Conference championships

Clemson and Florida State have combined to win 32 ACC titles, with Clemson currently achieving 17 and Florida State having 15. Clemson's 8th ACC championship came in 1981 with a perfect season and a consensus national title, while going on to win six ACC titles in a decade. After the departure of their national title winning coaching staff in 1989, Clemson's program went into a slight decline, as Florida State entered the conference, on the rise, winning nine straight conference titles. Recently, the Tigers won their 17th ACC title with a 12–1 regular season and a 38-3 win over Miami in the ACC Championship Game. Since 2009, the winner of the Clemson–Florida State game has ended up representing the Atlantic Division in the ACC Championship Game.

Game results

Clemson victoriesFlorida State victories

See also

References

  1. Solomon, Jon (July 26, 2016). "Why Clemson–Florida State has become college football's best annual game". CBS Sports. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  2. "Florida State Trips Clemson, 24–21". The Philadelphia Inquirer. September 18, 1988. Archived from the original on February 6, 2015. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  3. "Clemson Surprises Both Its Coach and Florida State, 34–23". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. September 10, 1989. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  4. Peter, Josh (December 4, 2015). "How Danny Ford went from Clemson legend to out of college football". USA Today. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  5. Mandel, Stewart (October 18, 2013). "Florida State–Clemson finally the rivalry the Bowdens envisioned". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  6. "Florida State Football - 1999 Year In Review". nolefan.org. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  7. "ACC College Football Champions". collegefootballpoll.com. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  8. "Florida St. 16, Clemson 13". Fox Sports. November 14, 2010. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  9. Hayes, Matt (September 22, 2012). "Florida State vs. Clemson: Seminoles make bold statement with win". Sporting News. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  10. "Tigers fall short in attempt to break decibel record". tigernet.com. TigerNet. October 20, 2013. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  11. Volk, Pete (October 17, 2013). "Is Florida State-Clemson the biggest ACC game ever? Here are the top 10 others". SB Nation. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  12. Copeland, Kareem (September 21, 2014). "No. 1 Florida St survives against No. 22 Clemson". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Associated Press. Archived from the original on September 23, 2014. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  13. Jason Hanna, CNN (20 September 2014). "FSU benches Winston over vulgar comment; beats Clemson - CNN.com". CNN. Retrieved October 30, 2016.
  14. "Clemson clamps down on Florida State to clinch berth in ACC title game". ESPN.com. November 8, 2015. Retrieved August 10, 2016.
  15. http://www.espn.com/college-football/boxscore?gameId=400869473
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