Cont
On the sideline, Temple couldn’t even watch. “This ball may not get there,” Bevelhimer thought as he looked up. Then he watched the ball crawl over the crossbar.
The Bulldogs’ sideline exploded. Half the team was off the sideline and out to the numbers with helmets off. Day looked at the clock and began screaming. There were four seconds left on the clock. He was instantly transported back to Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga., on Oct. 1, 2016. On that afternoon, Georgia quarterback Jacob Eason hit Riley Ridley for a 47-yard touchdown with 10 seconds remaining to give the Bulldogs a lead. Rodrigo Blankenship’s extra point put Georgia up 31–28, but the celebration after the touchdown had been flagged, so the Bulldogs would have to kick off from the 20-yard line. Tennessee’s Evan Berry caught the kickoff on the Tennessee 32 and returned it to the Georgia 48. An offsides penalty on the Bulldogs on that play moved the ball to the 43.
On the next play, Tennessee quarterback Joshua Dobbs
found Jauan Jennings for a touchdown as time expired. Georgia fans call their 2001 win at Tennessee the “Hobnail Boot” game because of
Larry Munson’s iconic radio call. In Tennessee lore, the win created by the Dobbs-to-Jennings Hail Mary is called the Dobb-nail Boot game.
Day didn’t want his Bulldogs to suffer the same fate as Georgia’s Bulldogs did. Butler coaches herded players back to the sideline, and no penalty was called. Next came the question of what to do on the kickoff. Day figured that after Bevelhimer made the field goal, the kicker’s adrenaline would be spiking. He’d kick the ball through the end zone. The defense would stop one play from the 25, and the Bulldogs could ride out of Youngstown with their upset.
Bevelhimer figured the same until his foot hit the ball. After he booted the kickoff, he could only hear one thing: Voris screaming “He mishit it!”
Penguins freshman Natavious Payne fielded the kickoff at the three-yard line. On the sideline, Temple still refused to watch. Had he been looking, he would have seen something curious. Payne didn’t cut. He didn’t lateral the ball to a teammate. He got driven out of bounds at the Youngstown State 33, and that was that.
Wait. What?” Bevelhimer thought. “We just won the game. I can’t believe we just did this.”
On the bus ride home, the players watched
Big Daddy and
The Waterboy. Butler coaches, meanwhile, discussed
Miracle. Specifically, they talked about how the Soviets didn’t pull their goalie to try to make up their deficit against the Americans. The Soviets never expected to be down, so they didn’t know how to respond. Perhaps Youngstown State players had reacted the same way.
That probably was a point Penguins coach Bo Pelini made at practice this week as his team prepares to face West Virginia. After losing to Butler, Pelini was thoroughly disgusted. “We didn’t deserve to win the football game. We didn’t,” Pelini said. “It would have almost been a shame if we did. Because that team outplayed us.”
For Voris, it felt as if everything aligned for the perfect upset. “Our guys played a near-flawless game,” the coach says. “No turnovers. No penalties. It was one of those days.”
Maybe they’ll make a movie about it someday. We already know Hinkle Fieldhouse makes for a fine setting.