N.C. State still has hope. The Pack suddenly has a
shot at what, until Saturday, seemed a decided long
shot.
two-way tie (between teams a & b)
1. Team A defeats Team B and is ranked higher -- Team
A earns bid.
2. Team A defeats Team B and is ranked lower, but in
the top 10 --Team A earns bid (except if Team B is
ranked No. 1 or No. 2 in the Bowl Championship Series
Poll, then Team B earns bid).
3. Team A defeats Team B and is ranked lower, but is
ranked five or fewer positions below Team B -- Team A
earns bid.
4. Team A defeats Team B and is ranked lower, and more
than five positions below Team B -- Team B receives
the bid.
If two teams have the same ranking, or both are
unranked, the bid goes to the team that has won the
head-to-head game.
(ACC)
The Wolfpack's last-gasp chance of tying for an ACC
championship, and possibly squeezing into a Bowl
Championship Series game, hinged on Clemson being able
to upset Florida State. Few expected that to happen
with FSU ranked third in the national polls, third in
the BCS standings and itching to play for another
national championship.
But guess what? It happened.
Clemson won 26-10 Saturday, meaning the Seminoles
(8-2, 6-1 ACC) now must beat N.C. State this week to
prevent the Pack -- or maybe Maryland -- from possibly
grabbing a share of the championship, possibly
stealing the BCS berth.
Not that the Pack (7-3, 4-2) suddenly has an easy
path. The Wolfpack must beat the Noles in Tallahassee,
then top Maryland in its regular-season finale at
Carter-Finley Stadium to be the ACC co-champion.
For State, whose last ACC title came in 1979, that
means beating Florida State for the third straight
season. It means handing FSU a second consecutive ACC
loss. It means winning on the road -- the Pack is 1-3
in away games this year, its only victory at Duke.
Even with wins over FSU and the Terrapins, NCSU still
may not get a BCS game. Under the ACC's tiebreaking
rules, State would have to finish within five spots of
FSU in the final BCS standings. Otherwise, the Noles
still could go a major bowl game and leave the Pack
probably headed back to the Gator Bowl.
FSU tumbled from third to 11th in the USA Today/ESPN
coaches poll released Sunday while NCSU remains out of
the top 25 -- the Pack was second among "others
receiving votes." The Pack was fourth among other
teams receiving votes in the AP poll.
But should the Noles lose to State and then at Florida
in their finale, should NCSU win out, the "five or
fewer position" provision in the ACC tiebreaker
procedure could be interesting.
Should State knock off FSU and then stumble against
Maryland, the Seminoles could back into an outright
championship. Or it could be the Terps (6-3, 3-2)
doing the backing in. Maryland could win its last
three ACC games and share the title at 6-2 -- if, that
is, the Pack wins this week at Doak Campbell Stadium.
So much for all the unpredictables and permutations.
"This is a game we have to have," FSU coach Bobby
Bowden said Sunday.
The Wolfpack won 34-28 at Doak Campbell in 2001 -- the
Noles' first-ever ACC loss at home. State then stopped
FSU 17-7 last season at Carter-Finley, handing the
Seminoles their only ACC defeat of the year.
"We all look forward to playing Florida State," Pack
center Jed Paulsen said. "But after beating them the
last two years, we know they're not happy about that."
Nor are the Noles happy with their effort against
Clemson.
"I'm not in a good mood right now," Bowden said
Sunday. "Clemson had a good plan and took it to us. We
really took a licking, and it was everywhere."
FSU, coming off a big win at Notre Dame, had 11 net
yards rushing against the inspired Tigers, who had
been thrashed by Wake Forest in their last game and,
as Bowden put it, had an "attitude transplant." And
quarterback Chris Rix couldn't pass the Noles to
victory, facing a steady blitz and going 16-of-31 for
194 yards, with two interceptions and a lost fumble.
The Seminoles' defense also had its share of problems.
Clemson ran for 152 yards and Tigers quarterback
Charlie Whitehurst passed for 272 against a unit that
was 12th nationally in total defense.
"You can't point to one position," Bowden said. "It
all broke down at the same time. It was the whole
football team, not one man."
As for the quarterback position, Bowden appeared to
grow wearier Sunday fielding questions about whether
backup Fabian Walker might start this week. Walker, a
junior, came on in the fourth quarter Saturday and had
a 71-yard touchdown pass.
"I'm not happy with the way either of them played,"
Bowden said.
Bowden wouldn't rule out using Wyatt Sexton, the No. 3
quarterback, a freshman from Tallahassee and the son
of FSU assistant Billy Sexton.
NCSU also beat the Noles 24-7 in 1998, meaning the
Pack has won three of the last five in the series.
Does that rate as a rivalry?
"I think so," Bowden said. "What makes it a rivalry is
when both beat each other. When you start to get beat.
... "
It can make things interesting.
