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2001 Miami Hurricanes football team
American college football season
American college football season
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| year | 2001 | |
| team | Miami Hurricanes | |
| sport | football | |
| image | Miami Hurricanes logo.svg | |
| image_size | 125 | |
| conference | Big East Conference | |
| conference_link | Big East Conference (1979–2013) | |
| short_conf | Big East | |
| CoachRank | 1 | |
| APRank | 1 | |
| record | 12–0 | |
| conf_record | 7–0 | |
| head_coach | Larry Coker | |
| hc_year | 1st | |
| off_coach | Rob Chudzinski | |
| oc_year | 1st | |
| off_scheme | Pro-style | |
| def_coach | Randy Shannon | |
| dc_year | 1st | |
| def_scheme | [4–3](4-3-defense) Cover 2 | |
| stadium | {{Plainlist | |
| champion | {{Plainlist | |
| bowl | [Rose Bowl](2002-rose-bowl) (BCS NCG) | |
| bowl_result | W 37–14 vs. [Nebraska](2001-nebraska-cornhuskers-football-team) |
- Miami Orange Bowl
- (Capacity: 74,416)
- Consensus national champion
- Big East champion
- Rose Bowl champion
The 2001 Miami Hurricanes football team represented the University of Miami during the 2001 NCAA Division I-A football season. It was the Miami Hurricanes' 76th season of football and 11th as a member of the Big East Conference. The Hurricanes were led by first-year head coach Larry Coker and played their home games at the Orange Bowl. They finished the season 12–0 overall and 7–0 in the Big East to finish as conference champion. They were invited to the Rose Bowl, which served as the BCS National Championship Game, and defeated Nebraska, 37–14, to win the school's fifth national championship.
Eventually producing a record 38 NFL draft picks, the 2001 Hurricanes are widely considered to be one of the greatest college football teams of all time.
Schedule
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Rankings
Game summaries
At Penn State
The Hurricanes began the season with a nationally televised primetime win over Penn State in Beaver Stadium. With a 30-0 halftime Miami lead, Coker pulled his starters and Miami cruised in the second half to a 33–7 victory. The 26-point margin tied for Penn State's worst home loss under Joe Paterno.
Rutgers
Miami followed up the victory with wins over Rutgers, Pitt, and Troy State.
At Pittsburgh
Troy State
At Florida State
After building up a 4–0 record, Miami won over Florida State in Doak Campbell Stadium, 49–27, ending the Seminoles' 47-game home unbeaten streak.
West Virginia
The Hurricanes then defeated West Virginia, 45–3, and Temple, 38–0, before heading to Chestnut Hill to take on Boston College (BC).
Temple
At Boston College
Miami started with a 9–0 lead over the Boston College Eagles, but Miami's offense began to sputter as Dorsey struggled with the swirling winds, throwing four interceptions. The Hurricane defense picked up the slack by limiting BC to just seven points. However, in the final minute of the fourth quarter, with Miami clinging to a 12–7 lead, BC quarterback Brian St. Pierre led the Eagles from their own 30-yard line all the way down to the Hurricanes' 9-yard line. With BC on the verge of a momentous upset, St. Pierre attempted to pass to receiver Ryan Read at the Miami 2-yard line. However, the ball ricocheted off the leg of Miami cornerback Mike Rumph, landing in the hands of defensive end Matt Walters. Walters ran ten yards with the ball before teammate Ed Reed grabbed the ball out of his hands at around the Miami 20-yard line and raced the remaining 80-yards for a touchdown. Miami won 18–7.
Syracuse
After the close win over Boston College, Miami went on to win over #14 Syracuse, 59–0, and #12 Washington, 65–7, in consecutive weeks in the Orange Bowl. The combined 124–7 score is an NCAA record for largest margin of victory over consecutive ranked opponents.
Washington
At Virginia Tech
The final hurdle to the Rose Bowl BCS National Championship Game was at Virginia Tech. Miami jumped on Virginia Tech early, leading 20–3 at halftime, and 26–10 in the fourth quarter. But despite being outgained by the Hurricanes by 134 yards and being dominated in time-of-possession, the Hokies never quit. After a Virginia Tech touchdown and two-point conversion cut Miami's lead to 26–18, the Hokies blocked a Miami punt and returned it for another score, cutting Miami's lead to just two points. But with a chance to tie the game with another two-point conversion, Virginia Tech sophomore Ernest Wilford dropped a pass in the endzone. Still, the resilient Hokies had one more chance to win the game late, taking possession of the ball at midfield and needing only a field goal to take the lead. But a diving, game-saving interception by Ed Reed sealed the Miami victory, 26–24. Defeating Virginia Tech earned the top-ranked Hurricanes an invitation to the Rose Bowl to take on BCS #2 Nebraska for the national championship.
Vs. Nebraska—Rose Bowl
Main article: 2002 Rose Bowl
Nebraska proved to be no competition for Miami, which opened up a 34–0 halftime lead en route to a 37–14 final score. Miami won its fifth national championship in the last 18 years, and put the finishing touches on a perfect 12–0 season. Dorsey passed for 362 yards and 3 touchdowns, while wide receiver Andre Johnson caught 7 passes for 199 yards and 2 touchdowns. Meanwhile, the stifling Miami defense shut down Heisman-winner Eric Crouch and the Huskers vaunted option offense, holding Nebraska 200 yards below its season average. Dorsey and Johnson were named Rose Bowl co-Most Valuable Players.
Legacy
The 2001 Miami Hurricanes are widely considered to be one of the greatest teams in college football history. The Hurricanes scored 512 (42.6 points per game) points while yielding only 117 (9.75 points allowed per game), for an average of 32.9 points a game, the largest in the school's history, and while they needed decisive plays late in the fourth quarter to secure victories over Boston College and Virginia Tech, Miami won every other game on its schedule by at least 22 points, and set the NCAA record for largest margin of victory over consecutive ranked teams (124–7). The offense set the school scoring record, while the defense led the nation in scoring defense (fewest points allowed), pass defense, and turnover margin. Additionally, the Hurricane defense scored eight touchdowns of its own, and those points would have been enough to give Miami an 8-4 record even if the offense had scored no touchdowns over the season. Six players earned All-American status and six players were finalists for national awards, including Maxwell Award winner, Ken Dorsey, and Outland Trophy winner, Bryant McKinnie. Dorsey was also a Heisman finalist, finishing third.
Among the numerous stars on the 2001 Miami squad were: quarterback Ken Dorsey; running backs Clinton Portis, Willis McGahee, Najeh Davenport, and Frank Gore; tight end Jeremy Shockey; wide receiver Andre Johnson; offensive tackle Bryant McKinnie; defensive linemen Jerome McDougle, William Joseph, and Vince Wilfork; linebackers Jonathan Vilma and D.J. Williams; and defensive backs Ed Reed, Mike Rumph, and Phillip Buchanon. Additional contributors included future stars Kellen Winslow II, Sean Taylor, Antrel Rolle, Vernon Carey, and Rocky McIntosh. In all, an extraordinary 17 players from the 2001 Miami football team were drafted in the first-round of the NFL draft (5 in the 2002 NFL draft: Buchanon, McKinnie, Reed, Rumph, and Shockey; 4 in 2003: Johnson, Joseph, McDougle, and McGahee; 6 in 2004: Carey, Taylor, Vilma, Wilfork, Williams, and Winslow; 1 in 2005: Rolle; and 1 in 2006: Kelly Jennings).
Overall, 38 members of the team would be selected in the NFL draft. As of 2013, they had earned a combined total of 43 trips to the Pro Bowl: Ed Reed (9), Andre Johnson (7), Frank Gore (5), Vince Wilfork (5), Jeremy Shockey (4), Jonathan Vilma (3), Willis McGahee (2), Chris Myers (2), Clinton Portis (2), Antrel Rolle (2), Sean Taylor (2), Bryant McKinnie (1), and Kellen Winslow II (1). In addition, Vilma, Shockey, Wilfork, Joseph, Rolle, McKinnie, and Reed have won the Super Bowl. It has been estimated that the 2001 Hurricanes would cost nearly $120 million as an NFL team as early as 2009.
Prior to the 2006 Rose Bowl, ESPN's SportsCenter ran a special in which the 2005 USC Trojans, led by stars Matt Leinart, Reggie Bush, and LenDale White, were compared with the greatest college teams of the past 50 years, as picked by sports fans voting on ESPN.com, to determine their place in history. The 2001 Miami Hurricanes were the only team picked by fans to defeat the '05 Trojan squad, reflecting the esteem with which the 2001 Hurricanes are held by fans. This was before the Texas Longhorns defeated USC. However ESPN analyst Mark May placed the 2005 Trojans only behind 1995 Nebraska. Stewart Mandel of Sports Illustrated later observed that, although the 05 team "may have had the greatest set of skill players in history," "ESPN spent the better part of Christmas season comparing that Trojans squad to some of the most acclaimed teams of all time only to find out that they weren’t even the best team that season
The team's first-, second- and third-string running backs all later became running backs with a start in the NFL, a feat only done six other times. It has only been achieved by the 2010, 2012, 2013 and 2014 Alabama Crimson Tide football teams. They remain the only team to have its first-, second-, third- and fourth-string running backs all later become running backs to start in the NFL.
Personnel
Roster
- Rob Chudzinski (OC/TE)
- Randy Shannon (DC)
- Vernon Hargreaves Jr. (LB)
- Curtis Johnson (WR)
- Art Kehoe (OL)
- Greg Mark (DL)
- Don Soldinger (ST/RB)
- Mark Stoops (DB)
- Dan Werner (QB)
Starting lineup
;Offense
| Position | Name |
|---|---|
| QB | Ken Dorsey |
| HB | Clinton Portis |
| HB | Najeh Davenport |
| TE | Jeremy Shockey |
| WR | Andre Johnson |
| WR | Kevin Beard |
| LT | Bryant McKinnie |
| LG | Sherko Haji-Rasouli |
| C | Brett Romberg |
| RG | Martin Bibla |
| RT | Joaquin Gonzalez |
;Defense
| Position | Name |
|---|---|
| RE | Andrew Williams |
| DT | Matt Walters |
| DT | William Joseph |
| LE | Jerome McDougle |
| OLB | D.J. Williams |
| MLB | Jonathan Vilma |
| OLB | Chris Campbell |
| RCB | Mike Rumph |
| FS | Ed Reed |
| SS | James Lewis |
| LCB | Phillip Buchanon |
;Special teams
| Position | Name |
|---|---|
| K | Todd Sievers |
| P | Freddie Capshaw |
| KR | |
| PR | Phillip Buchanon |
Depth chart
| WR |
|---|
| Andre Johnson |
| Ethenic Sands |
| Jason Geathers |
| Alex Duk |
|
| LT | LG | C | RG | RT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bryant McKinnie | Sherko Haji-Rasouli | Brett Romberg | Martin Bibla | Joaquin Gonzalez |
| Carlos Joseph | Ed Wilkins | Joel Rodriguez | Joe Fantigrassi | Vernon Carey |
| Rashad Butler | Scott Puckett | Jim Wilson | Chris Myers | |
| Joe McGrath | James Sikora | Tariq Vlaun | Robert Bergman | |
| Tony Tella | Alex Garcia | Brad Kunz |
|
| TE |
|---|
| Jeremy Shockey |
| Robert Williams |
| Kellen Winslow |
| Enis Crafton |
| Kevin Everett |
| Aaron Greeno |
| Brandon Sebald |
| David Williams |
| WR |
|---|
| Daryl Jones |
| Kevin Beard |
| Roscoe Parrish |
| Nate Smith |
|- |
| QB |
|---|
| Ken Dorsey |
| Hunter Lefler |
| Tony Prasek |
| Jeff Malley |
| Buck Ortega |
|- |
| FB |
|---|
| Najeh Davenport |
| Jarrett Payton |
| Frank Bayless |
| Kyle Cobia |
| Jarvis Gray |
|- |
| TB |
|---|
| Clinton Portis |
| Willis McGahee |
| Frank Gore |
| Quadtrine Hill |
| } |
|---|
| - |
| CB |
|---|
| Phillip Buchanon |
| Markese Fitzgerald |
| Antrel Rolle |
| Marcus Maxey |
| Jair Clark |
| Michael Langley |
| DE | DT | DT | DE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jerome McDougle | William Joseph | Matt Walters | Andrew Williams |
| LaVaar Scott | Santonio Thomas | Vince Wilfork | Cornelius Green |
| Jamaal Green | Orien Harris | Larry Anderson | John Square |
| Kyle Morgan | Jarvis Gray | Thomas Carroll | Miguel Robede |
| CB |
|---|
| Mike Rumph |
| Alfonso Marshall |
| Kelly Jennings |
| Carl Walker |
| Jean Leone |
|-
| FS |
|---|
| Ed Reed |
| Sean Taylor |
| Jermell Weaver |
| WLB | MLB | SLB |
|---|---|---|
| D.J. Williams | Jonathan Vilma | Chris Campbell |
| Darrell McClover | Howard Clark | Jarrell Weaver |
| Leon Williams | Ken Dangerfield | Roger McIntosh |
| Steve Adzima | Javon Nanton |
| SS |
|---|
| James Lewis |
| Maurice Sikes |
|} |}
Statistics
(From 1937 to 2001, bowl games did not count towards season statistics)
- QB Ken Dorsey: 184/318 (57.9%) for 2,652 yards (8.3) with 23 TD vs. 9 INT
- RB Clinton Portis: 220 carries for 1,200 yards (5.5) with 10 TD. 12 catches for 125 yards and 1 TD.
- RB Frank Gore: 62 carries for 562 yards (9.1) with 5 TD.
- RB Willis McGahee: 67 carries for 314 yards (4.7) with 3 TD.
- TE Jeremy Shockey: 40 catches for 519 yards (13.0) and 7 TD.
- WR Andre Johnson: 37 catches, 682 yards (18.43) and 10 TD.
- WR Kevin Beard: 25 catches for 409 yards (16.4) and 2 TD.
- K Todd Sievers: 21/26 FG (80.8%).
- S Ed Reed: 9 INT, 12 TD.
- LB Jonathan Vilma: 73 tackles
- DT William Joseph: 10 sacks
Awards and honors
[[College Football All-America Team|First Team All-Americans]]
Main article: 2001 College Football All-America Team
- Phillip Buchanon, PR
- Joaquin Gonzalez, RT
- Bryant McKinnie, LT (consensus)
- Ed Reed, SS (consensus)
- Jeremy Shockey, TE
- Todd Sievers, K
All-Conference Selections (First Team)
- Martin Bibla, LG
- Phillip Buchanon, CB
- Freddie Capshaw, P
- Ken Dorsey, QB
- Joaquin Gonzalez, RT
- Jerome McDougle, DE
- Bryant McKinnie, LT
- Clinton Portis, RB
- Ed Reed, SS
- Brett Romberg, C
- Jeremy Shockey, TE
- Todd Sievers, K
- Jonathan Vilma, MLB
Awards Finalists
Bold indicates winners
- Larry Coker, Coach - Paul "Bear" Bryant Award
- Phillip Buchanon, PR - Mosi Tatupu Award
- Freddie Capshaw, P - Ray Guy Award
- Ken Dorsey, QB - Maxwell Award, Heisman Trophy (3rd), Big East Offensive Player of the Year
- Joaquin Gonzalez, RT - Academic Heisman
- Bryant McKinnie, LT - Outland Trophy, Heisman Trophy (8th)
- Ed Reed, SS - Jim Thorpe Award
- Brett Romberg, C - Rimington Trophy
- Jeremy Shockey, TE - John Mackey Award
- Todd Sievers, K - Lou Groza Award (4th)
[[Jack Harding]] University of Miami MVP award
- Ken Dorsey, QB and Ed Reed, SS
NFL draft selections
| Player | Position | Round | Pick | Year | NFL team |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andre Johnson | Wide Receiver | 1 | 3 | 2003 | [Houston Texans](2003-houston-texans-season) |
| Sean Taylor | Defensive Back | 1 | 5 | 2004 | [Washington Redskins](2004-washington-redskins-season) |
| Kellen Winslow II | Tight End | 1 | 6 | 2004 | [Cleveland Browns](2004-cleveland-browns-season) |
| Bryant McKinnie | Tackle | 1 | 7 | 2002 | [Minnesota Vikings](2002-minnesota-vikings-season) |
| Antrel Rolle | Defensive Back | 1 | 8 | 2005 | [Arizona Cardinals](2005-arizona-cardinals-season) |
| Jonathan Vilma | Linebacker | 1 | 12 | 2004 | [New York Jets](2004-new-york-jets-season) |
| Jeremy Shockey | Tight End | 1 | 14 | 2002 | [New York Giants](2002-new-york-giants-season) |
| Jerome McDougle | Defensive Line | 1 | 15 | 2003 | [Philadelphia Eagles](2003-philadelphia-eagles-season) |
| Phillip Buchanon | Defensive Back | 1 | 17 | 2002 | [Oakland Raiders](2002-oakland-raiders-season) |
| D. J. Williams | Linebacker | 1 | 18 | 2004 | [Denver Broncos](2004-denver-broncos-season) |
| Vernon Carey | Tackle | 1 | 19 | 2004 | [Miami Dolphins](2004-miami-dolphins-season) |
| Vince Wilfork | Defensive Line | 1 | 21 | 2004 | [New England Patriots](2004-new-england-patriots-season) |
| Willis McGahee | Running Back | 1 | 23 | 2003 | [Buffalo Bills](2003-buffalo-bills-season) |
| Ed Reed | Defensive Back | 1 | 24 | 2002 | [Baltimore Ravens](2002-baltimore-ravens-season) |
| William Joseph | Defensive Line | 1 | 25 | 2003 | [New York Giants](2003-new-york-giants-season) |
| Mike Rumph | Defensive Back | 1 | 27 | 2002 | [San Francisco 49ers](2002-san-francisco-49ers-season) |
| Kelly Jennings | Defensive Back | 1 | 31 | 2006 | [Seattle Seahawks](2006-seattle-seahawks-season) |
| Rocky McIntosh | Linebacker | 2 | 35 | 2006 | [Washington Redskins](2006-washington-redskins-season) |
| Clinton Portis | Running Back | 2 | 51 | 2002 | [Denver Broncos](2002-denver-broncos-season) |
| Roscoe Parrish | Wide Receiver | 2 | 55 | 2005 | [Buffalo Bills](2005-buffalo-bills-season) |
| Frank Gore | Running Back | 3 | 65 | 2005 | [San Francisco 49ers](2005-san-francisco-49ers-season) |
| Andrew Williams | Defensive Line | 3 | 89 | 2003 | [San Francisco 49ers](2003-san-francisco-49ers-season) |
| Rashad Butler | Tackle | 3 | 89 | 2006 | [Carolina Panthers](2006-carolina-panthers-season) |
| Leon Williams | Linebacker | 4 | 110 | 2006 | [Cleveland Browns](2006-cleveland-browns-season) |
| Martin Bibla | Guard | 4 | 116 | 2002 | [Atlanta Falcons](2002-atlanta-falcons-season) |
| Jamaal Green | Defensive Line | 4 | 131 | 2003 | [Philadelphia Eagles](2003-philadelphia-eagles-season) |
| Orien Harris | Defensive Line | 4 | 133 | 2006 | [Pittsburgh Steelers](2006-pittsburgh-steelers-season) |
| Najeh Davenport | Running Back | 4 | 135 | 2002 | [Green Bay Packers](2002-green-bay-packers-season) |
| Matt Walters | Defensive Line | 5 | 150 | 2003 | [New York Jets](2003-new-york-jets-season) |
| Marcus Maxey | Defensive Back | 5 | 154 | 2006 | [Kansas City Chiefs](2006-kansas-city-chiefs-season) |
| James Lewis | Defensive Back | 6 | 183 | 2002 | [Indianapolis Colts](2002-indianapolis-colts-season) |
| Chris Myers | Guard | 6 | 200 | 2005 | [Denver Broncos](2005-denver-broncos-season) |
| Darrell McClover | Linebacker | 7 | 213 | 2004 | [New York Jets](2004-new-york-jets-season) |
| Alfonso Marshall | Defensive Back | 7 | 215 | 2004 | [Chicago Bears](2004-chicago-bears-season) |
| Daryl Jones | Wide Receiver | 7 | 226 | 2002 | [New York Giants](2002-new-york-giants-season) |
| Joaquin Gonzalez | Tackle | 7 | 227 | 2002 | [Cleveland Browns](2002-cleveland-browns-season) |
| Ken Dorsey | Quarterback | 7 | 241 | 2003 | [San Francisco 49ers](2003-san-francisco-49ers-season) |
| Carlos Joseph | Tackle | 7 | 254 | 2004 | [San Diego Chargers](2004-san-diego-chargers-season) |
References
References
- https://www.saturdaydownsouth.com/news/college-football/espns-mike-greenberg-explains-why-lsu-had-the-greatest-season-ever-in-cfb-history/
- https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2871563-2019-20-lsu-tigers-put-together-the-greatest-season-in-college-football-history
- "Hurricanes Roll Past Penn State, 33-7 :: Ken Dorsey throws three touchdown passes to lead Miami.".
- (September 8, 2001). "No. 1 Miami Rolls Over Rutgers, 61-0".
- (September 27, 2001). "No. 1 Miami Crushes Pittsburgh, 43-21".
- (October 6, 2001). "Hurricanes Flatten Troy State, 38-7".
- (October 13, 2001). "No. 1 Miami Trounces 'Noles, 49-27".
- (October 25, 2001). "No. 1 Hurricanes Stomp West Virginia, 45-3".
- (November 3, 2001). "No. 1 Miami Blanks Temple, 38-0".
- (November 10, 2001). "Hurricanes Survive Eagles' Last Gasp".
- (November 17, 2001). "No. 1 Miami Flattens No. 14 Syracuse, 59-0".
- (November 24, 2001). "No. 1 Hurricanes Roll Over Washington, 65-7".
- (December 1, 2001). "Hurricanes Are Runnin' For The Roses".
- (January 3, 2002). "Perfect!".
- Murphy, Austin. (January 7, 2002). "Cane Whuppin': Unbeaten Miami Flogged Nebraska Early and Often to Win an Undisputed National Title".
- "2001 football national championship". University of Miami.
- (2025-05-21). "The 2001 Miami Hurricanes are Listed As the Greatest College Football Team Since 2000".
- "Top Sports Searches - ESPN".
- "Historical Depth Charts – 2001 Miami".
- "A Handy List of College Football's Heisman Trophy Winners".
- "2002 NFL draft".
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