I made a half-facetious comparison of Lovie Smith and Jimmy Johnson in the Bears section today. Frank correctly pointed out that Johnson won two NFL championships and a college national championship, and so the comparison wasn't really apt. Fair enough, and as I acknowledged, I was mostly being a smartass.
But I spent the day thinking a little bit more about Johnson's time at the U. Johnson coached in Miami for five seasons. In those five seasons, he lost nine games, and he only lost four games in his final four seasons there.
That's pretty amazing in and of itself, and "did you know Jimmy Johnson lost only nine games as coach at Miami?" is one of those fun little facts you can throw out at parties or bar mitzvahs if so inclined. But maybe even more impressively, many of the games Johnson lost were absolute events--the sorts of games where a single phrase or sentence will get old-time fans nodding from nostalgia. "Ah yes,
that game. Who could forget?"
Here are some of the nine games:
Hail Mary: Doug Flutie wins the Heisman, etc. One of the five games Johnson lost in 1984, and maybe the best remembered.
The Most Hated Team of All Time: the Fiesta Bowl game against Penn State. Joe Pa wins his second MNC. Miami was undefeated headed into Tempe and was heavily favored. Players showed up to official events in camo, badmouthed Penn State players, and acted like heels. Five interceptions from Vinny Testaverde killed the Hurricane's chances.
Catholics vs. Convicts: Perhaps the most written-about college football game of the past 25 years. Miami fans still think they got hosed on a fumble call in the fourth quarter.
There were memorable wins in there too (obviously, since there were so many more wins than losses). But every loss was an event. "Were you there when
Miami lost a game!" There really is almost no comparison in team sports. New England went 18-1 in 2007, while Miami went 1-15. In Week Three the next season, Miami beat New England 38-13. That's really amazing, when you think about it, but that game will never be considered a milestone in NFL history like Hail Mary or Catholics vs. Convicts. It's just another quirky upset.
I have a historian's attitude towards those games, since I was too young to appreciate them when they happened (I wasn't even alive for all of them). But I remember growing up in the age of Nebraska--a Nebraska team that went 36-1(!!!) from 1993-1995...and that one loss was to #1 Florida State*....by two points...in Florida in the Orange Bowl.
*
Asterisk because, as we all remember, Notre Dame beat Florida State that year.When Nebraska lost, it was an
event, an occasion. Sometimes, you'd watch, and you'd think you had it, until... Flea Kicker! (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flea_Kicker). It wasn't that Nebraska were villains, necessarily, just that they were unbeatable. Nebraska never lost, never lost, never lost, never lost, for years upon years. But you had to watch, just in case.
The names change, but the game stays the same. Alabama goes almost 30 regular season games until South Carolina. Vince Young runs around USC. Ohio State gets pass interference against, yes, Miami again. Even when the linesmakers say the upsets aren't that big, damn it, they feel like they are. And then sometimes, the upsets really are that big, like when a 36 point underdog Stanford team goes into USC and does the unthinkable.
Johnson went to the NFL to coach the Cowboys, and did great things while there (his Cowboys teams were one of those few professional teams that combined hatred with inevitability as well as his Hurricane teams). But Johnson lost 15 games in his first season, six more than during his tenure in Coral Gables. Nebraska lost 16 games during the 1990s. Not every one of those losses was memorable, I'm sure. But enough of them were to keep me hooked.