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1987 Miami Hurricanes football team

The 1987 Miami Hurricanes football team represented the University of Miami during the 1987 NCAA Division I-A football season. It was the Hurricanes' 62nd season of football. The Hurricanes were led by fourth-year head coach Jimmy Johnson and played their home games at the Orange Bowl. They finished the season 12–0 overall. They were invited to the Orange Bowl where they defeated Oklahoma, 20–14, to win the school's second national championship.

1987 Miami Hurricanes football
Consensus national champion
Orange Bowl champion
Orange Bowl, W 20–14 vs. Oklahoma
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
APNo. 1
Record12–0
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorGary Stevens (5th season)
Offensive schemePro-style
Defensive coordinatorDave Wannstedt (2nd season)
Base defense4–3
Home stadiumMiami Orange Bowl
Seasons
← 1986
1988 →

1987 NCAA Division I-A independents football records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
No. 1 Miami (FL)       12 0 0
No. 4 Syracuse       11 0 1
No. 2 Florida State       11 1 0
No. 15 South Carolina       8 4 0
Pittsburgh       8 4 0
Penn State       8 4 0
No. 17 Notre Dame       8 4 0
Southern Miss       6 5 0
Rutgers       6 5 0
Southwestern Louisiana       6 5 0
Memphis State       5 5 1
Northern Illinois       5 5 1
West Virginia       6 6 0
Tulane       6 6 0
Army       5 6 0
Boston College       5 6 0
East Carolina       5 6 0
Akron       4 7 0
Cincinnati       4 7 0
Louisville       3 7 1
Temple       3 8 0
Tulsa       3 8 0
Virginia Tech       2 9 0
Navy       2 9 0
Rankings from AP Poll

Preseason edit

After taking over as head coach in 1984, Jimmy Johnson had a winning record, but some critics questioned whether he could gain a national championship.[citation needed]

In 1985, Miami finished the regular season 10–1, and had a chance to win the national title with Penn State's loss to Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. Needing a victory over Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl, Miami jumped out to a 7–0 lead. Tennessee then scored 35 unanswered to derail Miami's title hopes.

In 1986, Miami achieved a perfect 11–0 regular season record. Led by Heisman Trophy-winner Vinny Testaverde, a record breaking offense, and the 5th-ranked defense in the country, #1 Miami was a prohibitive favorite heading into its Fiesta Bowl matchup against #2 Penn State. However, Penn State was able to disrupt the Miami passing game and force the Hurricanes into seven turnovers. Penn State won the national championship with a 14–10 victory over Miami that was sealed when a Testaverde pass from the Penn State 6-yard line was intercepted in the endzone by linebacker Pete Giftopoulos with 0:18 left in the game.

Despite losing three key players (Testaverde, Alonzo Highsmith, and Jerome Brown) from the '86 squad who were selected within the first nine picks of the 1987 NFL Draft, 1987 was expected to be somewhat of a reloading year for Miami, which began the season ranked 10th in the nation by the AP poll.

By year's end, the Hurricanes had allowed a mere 125 points. Miami took down six ranked opponents that fall – including No. 20 Florida, No. 4 FSU, No. 10 Notre Dame and No. 1 Oklahoma. The Canes earned victories by an average of 23.9 points, scoring over 40 points on five different games.

Schedule edit

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendanceSource
September 51:00 pmNo. 20 FloridaNo. 10TBSW 31–477,224[1]
September 264:00 pmat No. 10 ArkansasNo. 5ESPNW 51–755,310
October 32:30 pmat No. 4 Florida StateNo. 3CBSW 26–2562,561
October 107:30 pmMarylandNo. 3
  • Miami Orange Bowl
  • Miami, FL
W 46–1643,020
October 248:00 pmat CincinnatiNo. 3WPLGW 48–1020,011
October 3112:00 pmat East CarolinaNo. 3RaycomW 41–331,791[2]
November 77:30 pmMiami (OH)No. 3
  • Miami Orange Bowl
  • Miami, FL
W 54–340,128
November 147:30 pmVirginia Tech No. 3
  • Miami Orange Bowl
  • Miami, FL (rivalry)
W 27–1340,105
November 217:30 pmToledoNo. 3
  • Miami Orange Bowl
  • Miami, FL
W 24–1437,010
November 283:30 pmNo. 10 Notre DameNo. 2
  • Miami Orange Bowl
  • Miami, FL (rivalry)
CBSW 24–076,640
December 58:00 pmNo. 8 South CarolinaNo. 2
  • Miami Orange Bowl
  • Miami, FL
ESPNW 20–1663,317
January 18:00 pmvs. No. 1 OklahomaNo. 2
NBCW 20–1474,760

Personnel edit

 
Jimmy Johnson and the 1987 Miami Hurricanes team present President Ronald Reagan with a University of Miami jersey at The White House after winning the 1987 national championship, January 1988

Roster edit

1987 Miami Hurricanes football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos. # Name Class
QB 4 Steve Walsh So
FB 5 Melvin Bratton   Sr
QB 7 Craig Erickson   Fr
QB 8 Greg Jones   Fr
WR 9 Brian Blades Sr
WR 11 Dale Dawkins   So
WR 13 Bret Velde   Fr
RB 20 Shannon Crowell Fr
RB 21 Alex Johnson Fr
RB 24 Warren Williams Sr
RB 25 Hilton Mobley Fr
RB 28 Leonard Conley Fr
FB 30 Darius Frazier   So
FB 31 Freddy Highsmith   Jr
WR 33 Brett Perriman Sr
RB 43 Cleveland Gary Jr
WR 47 Michael Irvin Jr
OL 52 Darren Bruce Jr
C 64 Rod Holder So
OL 75 John O'Neill Jr
G 79 Mike Sullivan Fr
WR 84 Rob Chudzinski Fr
TE 87 Alfredo Roberts Sr
Defense
Pos. # Name Class
DB 3 Randal Hill Fr
DB 6 Kenny Berry   So
DB 15 Jason Hicks   So
DB 17 Trevor Weeks Fr
DB 18 Tolbert Bain   Sr
DB 19 Darrell Fullington Sr
LB 22 Randy Shannon   Jr
CB 23 Robert Bailey Fr
DB 27 Michael Johnson   Fr
DB 29 Donald Ellis   Jr
RB 32 Alex Johnson   Sr
DB 36 Bennie Blades Sr
LB 45 George Mira Jr. Sr
DB 48 Bubba McDowell So
DE 54 Bill Hawkins Jr
DT 67 Russell Maryland Fr
DL 86 Derwin Jones Sr
LB 91 Rod Carter Jr
DT 96 Cortez Kennedy So
DT 94 Greg Mark So
DL 97 Earnest Parish Jr
DE 96 Danny Stubbs Sr
Special teams
Pos. # Name Class
K 1 Edgar Benes So
K 2 Sung Kim Fr
K 25 Greg Cox So
TE 82 Charles Henry Sr
P 38 Jeff Feagles Sr
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  •   Injured
  •   Redshirt

Roster

Coaching staff edit

Support staff edit

Name Position Seasons Alma mater
Bill Foran Strength & conditioning 3rd Central Michigan (1977)
Steve Hoffman Graduate assistant 3rd Dickinson (1981)
Ron Meeks Graduate assistant 2nd Arkansas State (1977)
Tommy Tuberville Graduate assistant 2nd Southern Arkansas (1976)

[citation needed]

Rankings edit

Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking.
( ) = First place votes.
Week
PollPre1234567891011121314Final
AP107653 (4)3 (6)3 (6)3 (6)3 (7)3 (7)3 (9)3 (8)2 (4)2 (6)2 (9)1 (57)
Coaches9767 (1)3 (1)3 (4)3 (5)3 (2)3 (1)3 (1)3 (1)3 (1)2 (2)2 (5)2 (8)1 (47)

Game summaries edit

No. 20 Florida edit

Under the direction of sophomore quarterback Steve Walsh and a defense that returned nine starters, Miami opened the regular season with a win over rival Florida, 31–4. The game would prove to be the last in a series that had been played annually since 1944. The teams would not meet in the regular season again until the 2002 season.

[3][4]

At No. 10 Arkansas edit

1 234Total
No. 5 Hurricanes 14 24310 51
No. 10 Razorbacks 0 007 7
Scoring summary
1MiamiWilliams 2-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 7–0
11:14MiamiWilliams 49-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 14–0
2MiamiConley 16-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 21–0
210:10MiamiBratton 1-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 28–0
2MiamiIrvin 21-yard pass from Walsh (Cox kick)Miami 35–0
20:22MiamiCox 28-yard field goalMiami 38–0
3MiamiCox 44-yard field goalMiami 41–0
412:59MiamiCox 47-yard field goalMiami 44–0
46:46MiamiA. Brown 4-yard pass from Erickson (Cox kick)Miami 51–0
43:02ArkansasRouse 7-yard run (Trainor kick)Miami 51–7

The victory over Florida was followed by a 51–7 victory over #10 Arkansas Razorbacks in Little Rock, which would catapult Miami to a #3 ranking.[5]

At No. 4 Florida State edit

1 234Total
No. 3 Hurricanes 3 0815 26
No. 4 Seminoles 0 1096 25
Scoring summary
12:58MiamiGreg Cox 29-yard field goalMiami 3–0
2FSUD. Williams 1-yard run (Schmidt kick)FSU 7–3
22:37FSUDerek Schmidt 36-yard field goalFSU 10–3
37:50FSUWilliams blocked punt return (kick failed)FSU 16–3
32:37FSUDerek Schmidt 25-yard field goalFSU 19–3
3MiamiBratton 49-yard pass from Walsh (Brian Blades pass from Walsh)FSU 19–11
4MiamiIrvin 26-yard pass from Walsh (Williams pass from Walsh)Tied 19–19
42:22MiamiIrvin 73-yard pass from Walsh (Cox kick)Miami 26–19
40:42FSULewis 18-yard pass from McManus (pass failed)Miami 26–25

[6][7][8]

Miami's rigorous early season schedule continued the next week with a showdown with #4 Florida State at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee. The October 3 game featured not only high drama, but also an astounding 56 players who would go on to play in the NFL. Miami scored first with a second-quarter field goal, but Florida State, fielding a team many consider to be the best in school history, took control of the game after that. A 67-yard run by Florida State running back Sammie Smith was followed by a 1-yard touchdown run from Dayne Williams, giving FSU a 7–3 lead. A 36-yard field goal from Derek Schmidt pushed the Seminoles' lead to 10–3 at the half.

After Schmidt missed a third-quarter field goal wide right, Miami took over, but went three-and-out and was forced to punt. The ensuing punt by Jeff Feagles was blocked and returned by Florida State for a touchdown, increasing the Florida State lead to 16–3 (Schmidt missed the extra point). Miami was forced to punt again, and a big return by FSU's Deion Sanders put Florida State in position to add another Schmidt field goal to make the score 19–3.

With Miami having been unable to mount any offense to that point, the Hurricanes looked to be in dire straits late in the third quarter. Spurred on by an impassioned speech from receiver Michael Irvin, the Hurricanes were able to keep their focus and climbed back into the game when Walsh found a streaking Melvin Bratton for a 49-yard touchdown. Miami went for two, which they converted when Walsh was able to hook up with receiver Brian Blades, trimming the FSU lead to 19–11 heading into the fourth quarter.

The final quarter was filled with back-and-forth drama. Irvin started things off when he was on the receiving end of a 26-yard touchdown pass from Walsh. With the score now at 19–17, Miami again went for two, which Miami, again, converted, this time on a pass from Walsh to Warren Williams. With the game now tied at 19–19 and its 16-point lead evaporated, Florida State staged a drive of its own, taking the ball down to the Miami 17-yard line before quarterback Danny McManus fumbled the snap, which was recovered by Bennie Blades. Miami wasted little time in capitalizing on the miscue, as four plays later Walsh hooked up with Irvin for one of the most famous plays in University of Miami history.[citation needed] Walsh walked to the line, read the FSU defense, and called an audible for Irvin, who was appropriately nicknamed "The Playmaker" due to his penchant for making big plays. Walsh took a quick three-step drop and hung the ball up perfectly for Irvin on a fly route. Irvin was in double coverage, but was able to get behind the coverage, catch the pass, and take it 73-yards for a Miami touchdown. With 2:22 left to play, Miami led 26–19.

Florida State would not go meekly, though, as the Seminoles valiantly fought back after taking possession on their own 25-yard line. Before long, the Seminoles were in the endzone when McManus hit Ronald Lewis on a perfect corner route for 18-yards. With college football not having overtime at the time, Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden was faced with a decision: attempt the extra point and settle for a 26–26 tie, or attempt a two-point conversion and go for the win. Complicating matters was the fact that Schmidt, FSU's kicker, had looked shaky on this day, already missing on a field goal attempt and on an extra point attempt. Nevertheless, Bowden initially had decided to kick the extra point and settle for the tie, as he had stated[citation needed] when asked before the game what he would do if he found himself in this exact predicament. But after the FSU offense protested and urged their coach to go for the win, Bowden changed his mind and decided to go for the two, betting both FSU's and Miami's national championship hopes on the outcome. FSU called a pass play. McManus took the snap, looked for a receiver, and then threw into the right corner of the endzone. The ball was underthrown and broken up by Miami defensive back Bubba McDowell before it could reach its intended target. With Miami up 26–25, Florida State attempted an onside kick on the ensuing kickoff, but Miami recovered the ball with 0:42 left and was able to run out the clock, sealing the Hurricane victory.

Maryland edit

Having successfully negotiated its brutal early season schedule, Miami won its next four games with ease, beating Maryland (46–16), Cincinnati (48–10), East Carolina (41–3), and Miami (Ohio) (54–3).

[9]

At Cincinnati edit

[10]

At East Carolina edit

[11]

Miami (OH) edit

[12]

Virginia Tech edit

1 234Total
Hokies 0 1030 13
#3 Hurricanes 3 7314 27

The Hurricanes, a 38-point favorite, broke a 13–13 tie with 4:51 remaining on a 1-yard TD run by Melvin Bratton. Miami put the game out of reach by scoring the final touchdown with 34 seconds left to win 27–13.[13] This was Frank Beamer's first year as head coach at Virginia Tech. [14]

Toledo edit

[15]

No. 10 Notre Dame edit

1 234Total
No. 10 Fighting Irish 0 000 0
No. 2 Hurricanes 0 1077 24
Scoring summary
211:39MiamiBratton 2-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 7–0
23:09MiamiCox 30-yard field goalMiami 10–0
33:18MiamiBratton 1-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 17–0
45:04MiamiConley 6-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 24–0

Next up for the now 2nd-ranked Hurricanes was a date with #10 Notre Dame in Miami. Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz brought an upset minded Irish squad to the Orange Bowl, but they proved to be little match for Daniel Stubbs and a relentless Hurricane defense. Miami continued its dominance over Notre Dame, shutting out the Irish, 24–0, and beating them for the fourth straight time. It was also the first time Notre Dame had been shutout since 1983, when they were also shutout at the hands of the Hurricanes.

[16]

No. 8 South Carolina edit

1 234Total
No. 8 Gamecocks 6 703 16
No. 2 Hurricanes 7 760 20
  • Date: December 5, 1987
  • Location: Miami Orange Bowl,
    Miami
  • Game start: 8:00 PM
  • Game attendance: 76,640
  • Game weather: 59 °F (15 °C), Clear, Wind S 10–15 mph (16–24 km/h)
  • Referee: Terry Monk
  • TV announcers (ESPN): Jim Kelly and Kevin Kiley
Scoring summary
110:40SCMackie 40-yard field goalSC 3–0
18:33SCMackie 48-yard field goalSC 6–0
1MiamiIrvin 46-yard pass from Walsh (Cox kick)Miami 7–6
29:55SCSterling Sharpe 47-yard pass from Todd Ellis (Mackie kick)SC 13–7
28:06MiamiBratton 5-yard run (Cox kick)Miami 14–13
3MiamiBrian Blades 56-yard pass from Walsh (kick failed)Miami 20–13
413:51SCMackie 28-yard field goalMiami 20–16

Miami's final regular season game came at home against #8 South Carolina. South Carolina played a spirited game and gave the Hurricanes all they could handle. Eventually, Miami was able to walk away from the nail biter with a hard-fought 20–16 victory, capping an 11–0 regular season.

[17]

Vs. No. 1 Oklahoma (Orange Bowl) edit

Miami (FL) vs. Oklahoma
1 234Total
No. 2 Hurricanes 7 0103 20
No. 1 Sooners 0 707 14
  • Source: Box Score
Scoring summary
111:32MiamiBratton 30-yard pass from Walsh (Cox kick)Miami 7–0
20:09OUStafford 1-yard run (Lashar kick)Tied 7–7
38:52MiamiCox 56-yard FGMiami 10–7
32:37MiamiIrvin 23-yard pass from Walsh (Cox kick)Miami 17–7
43:41MiamiCox 48-yard FGMiami 20–7
42:05OUHutson 29-yard run (Lashar kick)Miami 20–14

[18]

The 1988 Orange Bowl featured "Game of the Century"-type billing[citation needed] as the undefeated and top-ranked Oklahoma Sooners faced off against undefeated and second-ranked Miami for the national championship.[19] Adding to the hype was the recent on-field history between the teams. Oklahoma was a dominant force in college football, winning the national championship in 1985 and losing just one game in each of the preceding two years. Miami, though, had proven to be the thorn in Oklahoma's side, as the Sooners' losses in '85 and '86 had both come at the hands of Miami. Now, with the national championship on the line, Miami sought to make it three-losses-in-three-years for Oklahoma, and also their first postseason bowl win under Jimmy Johnson after three straight bowl losses, two in which they struggled and lost their chances to win the national championships. Further fuel for the fire was provided by the growing personal animosity between former Arkansas player Johnson and Oklahoma head coach Barry Switzer, who was also a former Arkansas player.

Miami's vaunted defense set the tone early, forcing the Sooners to punt on their first five possessions. Meanwhile, Walsh settled into a nice rhythm, putting Miami on the board first with a 30-yard touchdown pass to fullback Melvin Bratton, who caught 9 passes for 102 yards for the game. Oklahoma got on the board with a second-quarter touchdown to tie things up, but Miami responded with 10 unanswered third quarter points, coming on an Orange Bowl record 56-yard field goal by kicker Greg Cox and a 23-yard touchdown pass from Walsh to Irvin. Oklahoma would add a fourth-quarter touchdown to trim the score to 20–14, but Miami held on for the win and the national championship. Johnson received a Gatorade bath, which messed his trademark impeccably coiffed hair, and was carried off the field, having finally won "the big one" at Miami.

The Hurricane defense held Oklahoma to just 255 yards of offense, while Walsh's efficient play (18 of 30, 209 yards, 2 touchdowns) paced the Hurricane offense. Middle linebacker Bernard "Tiger" Clark- a backup middle linebacker who was forced to start after starting MLB George Mira Jr. was suspended for failing a drug test- was named the MVP of the Orange Bowl after recording 14 tackles (12 unassisted).

With the win, Miami completed its first ever undefeated season. In winning their second national championship, the Canes once again had to go through the nation's top-ranked team at the Orange Bowl, just as they had done in 1983.

Awards and honors edit

Consensus All-Americans edit

  • Bennie Blades, FS
  • Daniel Stubbs, LE

Awards finalists edit

Bold indicates winners

Jack Harding University of Miami MVP Award edit

  • Steve Walsh, QB

1988 NFL Draft edit

A total of 12 Hurricanes were drafted by 10 different franchises in 1988, including three wide receivers in the first 52 picks.

Round Pick Player Position NFL Club
1 3 Bennie Blades S Detroit Lions
1 11 Michael Irvin WR Dallas Cowboys
2 33 Danny Stubbs OLB San Francisco 49ers
2 49 Brian Blades WR Seattle Seahawks
2 52 Brett Perriman WR New Orleans Saints
3 56 Dan Sileo DT Tampa Bay Buccaneers
3 63 Matt Patchan OT Philadelphia Eagles
5 124 Darrell Fullington S Minnesota Vikings
6 155 Warren Williams RB Pittsburgh Steelers
8 197 Alfredo Roberts TE Kansas City Chiefs
10 269 Derwin Jones DE Seattle Seahawks
12 331 George Mira Jr. LB San Francisco 49ers

References edit

  1. ^ "Miami crushes Gators". St. Lucie News Tribune. September 6, 1987. Retrieved November 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ "Hurricanes roll". The Miami Herald. November 1, 1987. Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "Miami Rings Florida's Bell and Trounces Gators, 31-4". Los Angeles Times. September 6, 1987. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  4. ^ "Miami Grand In Finale, 31-4 'Canes' Rush Weathers Bell As Series Ends". Orlando Sentinel. September 6, 1987. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  5. ^ "COLLEGE FOOTBALL: SOUTHEAST; Miami Trounces Arkansas 51-7". The New York Times. September 27, 1987. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  6. ^ . College Football News. August 18, 2011. Archived from the original on December 26, 2014. Retrieved December 25, 2014.
  7. ^ "Flashback: Miami-Florida State 1987". ABC Sports. October 9, 2001. Retrieved December 25, 2014.
  8. ^ "The 1987 Miami-FSU game: A true October Classic". Fox Sports. October 8, 2015. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  9. ^ "COLLEGE FOOTBALL: SOUTH; L.S.U. Surges Past Georgia; Miami 46, Maryland 16". The New York Times. October 11, 1987. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  10. ^ "Hurricanes Wipe Out Cincinnati". Orlando Sentinel. October 25, 1987. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  11. ^ "Blades detonates the "Bomb Squad"". The Palm Beach Post. November 1, 1987. p. 52. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  12. ^ "Hurricanes rout other Miami 54-3". The Palm Beach Post. November 8, 1987. p. 53. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  13. ^ "No. 3 Miami wins". The Pantagraph. November 15, 1987. p. 7. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  14. ^ Gainesville Sun. 1987 Nov 15. Retrieved 2019-Jan-06.
  15. ^ "No. 3 Miami Struggles for 24-14 Victory". Los Angeles Times. November 22, 1987. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  16. ^ "Miami Is Too Much for Irish: Hurricanes Put the Big Hit on Brown & Co., 24-0". Los Angeles Times. November 29, 1987. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  17. ^ "COLLEGE FOOTBALL; Miami Survives By 20-16". The New York Times. December 6, 1987. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  18. ^ "Orange Bowl; Hurricanes Overwhelm the Sooners to Claim No. 1". The New York Times. January 2, 1988. Retrieved December 25, 2014.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on April 28, 2006. Retrieved October 27, 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on April 2, 2016. Retrieved December 30, 2008.

1987, miami, hurricanes, football, team, represented, university, miami, during, 1987, ncaa, division, football, season, hurricanes, 62nd, season, football, hurricanes, were, fourth, year, head, coach, jimmy, johnson, played, their, home, games, orange, bowl, . The 1987 Miami Hurricanes football team represented the University of Miami during the 1987 NCAA Division I A football season It was the Hurricanes 62nd season of football The Hurricanes were led by fourth year head coach Jimmy Johnson and played their home games at the Orange Bowl They finished the season 12 0 overall They were invited to the Orange Bowl where they defeated Oklahoma 20 14 to win the school s second national championship 1987 Miami Hurricanes footballConsensus national championOrange Bowl championOrange Bowl W 20 14 vs OklahomaConferenceIndependentRankingCoachesNo 1APNo 1Record12 0Head coachJimmy Johnson 4th season Offensive coordinatorGary Stevens 5th season Offensive schemePro styleDefensive coordinatorDave Wannstedt 2nd season Base defense4 3Home stadiumMiami Orange BowlSeasons 19861988 1987 NCAA Division I A independents football records vte Conf OverallTeam W L T W L TNo 1 Miami FL 12 0 0No 4 Syracuse 11 0 1No 2 Florida State 11 1 0No 15 South Carolina 8 4 0Pittsburgh 8 4 0Penn State 8 4 0No 17 Notre Dame 8 4 0Southern Miss 6 5 0Rutgers 6 5 0Southwestern Louisiana 6 5 0Memphis State 5 5 1Northern Illinois 5 5 1West Virginia 6 6 0Tulane 6 6 0Army 5 6 0Boston College 5 6 0East Carolina 5 6 0Akron 4 7 0Cincinnati 4 7 0Louisville 3 7 1Temple 3 8 0Tulsa 3 8 0Virginia Tech 2 9 0Navy 2 9 0Rankings from AP Poll Contents 1 Preseason 2 Schedule 3 Personnel 3 1 Roster 3 2 Coaching staff 3 3 Support staff 4 Rankings 5 Game summaries 5 1 No 20 Florida 5 2 At No 10 Arkansas 5 3 At No 4 Florida State 5 4 Maryland 5 5 At Cincinnati 5 6 At East Carolina 5 7 Miami OH 5 8 Virginia Tech 5 9 Toledo 5 10 No 10 Notre Dame 5 11 No 8 South Carolina 5 12 Vs No 1 Oklahoma Orange Bowl 6 Awards and honors 6 1 Consensus All Americans 6 2 Awards finalists 6 3 Jack Harding University of Miami MVP Award 7 1988 NFL Draft 8 ReferencesPreseason editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 1987 Miami Hurricanes football team news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message After taking over as head coach in 1984 Jimmy Johnson had a winning record but some critics questioned whether he could gain a national championship citation needed In 1985 Miami finished the regular season 10 1 and had a chance to win the national title with Penn State s loss to Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl Needing a victory over Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl Miami jumped out to a 7 0 lead Tennessee then scored 35 unanswered to derail Miami s title hopes In 1986 Miami achieved a perfect 11 0 regular season record Led by Heisman Trophy winner Vinny Testaverde a record breaking offense and the 5th ranked defense in the country 1 Miami was a prohibitive favorite heading into its Fiesta Bowl matchup against 2 Penn State However Penn State was able to disrupt the Miami passing game and force the Hurricanes into seven turnovers Penn State won the national championship with a 14 10 victory over Miami that was sealed when a Testaverde pass from the Penn State 6 yard line was intercepted in the endzone by linebacker Pete Giftopoulos with 0 18 left in the game Despite losing three key players Testaverde Alonzo Highsmith and Jerome Brown from the 86 squad who were selected within the first nine picks of the 1987 NFL Draft 1987 was expected to be somewhat of a reloading year for Miami which began the season ranked 10th in the nation by the AP poll By year s end the Hurricanes had allowed a mere 125 points Miami took down six ranked opponents that fall including No 20 Florida No 4 FSU No 10 Notre Dame and No 1 Oklahoma The Canes earned victories by an average of 23 9 points scoring over 40 points on five different games Schedule editDateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendanceSourceSeptember 51 00 pmNo 20 FloridaNo 10Miami Orange BowlMiami FL rivalry TBSW 31 477 224 1 September 264 00 pmat No 10 ArkansasNo 5War Memorial StadiumLittle Rock ARESPNW 51 755 310October 32 30 pmat No 4 Florida StateNo 3Doak Campbell StadiumTallahassee FL rivalry CBSW 26 2562 561October 107 30 pmMarylandNo 3Miami Orange BowlMiami FLW 46 1643 020October 248 00 pmat CincinnatiNo 3Riverfront StadiumCincinnati OHWPLGW 48 1020 011October 3112 00 pmat East CarolinaNo 3Ficklen Memorial StadiumGreenville NCRaycomW 41 331 791 2 November 77 30 pmMiami OH No 3Miami Orange BowlMiami FLW 54 340 128November 147 30 pmVirginia Tech nbsp No 3Miami Orange BowlMiami FL rivalry W 27 1340 105November 217 30 pmToledoNo 3Miami Orange BowlMiami FLW 24 1437 010November 283 30 pmNo 10 Notre DameNo 2Miami Orange BowlMiami FL rivalry CBSW 24 076 640December 58 00 pmNo 8 South CarolinaNo 2Miami Orange BowlMiami FLESPNW 20 1663 317January 18 00 pmvs No 1 OklahomaNo 2Miami Orange BowlMiami FL Orange Bowl NBCW 20 1474 760 nbsp HomecomingRankings from AP Poll released prior to the gameAll times are in Eastern timePersonnel edit nbsp Jimmy Johnson and the 1987 Miami Hurricanes team present President Ronald Reagan with a University of Miami jersey at The White House after winning the 1987 national championship January 1988Roster edit 1987 Miami Hurricanes football team rosterPlayers CoachesOffense Pos Name ClassQB 4 Steve Walsh SoFB 5 Melvin Bratton nbsp SrQB 7 Craig Erickson nbsp FrQB 8 Greg Jones nbsp FrWR 9 Brian Blades SrWR 11 Dale Dawkins nbsp SoWR 13 Bret Velde nbsp FrRB 20 Shannon Crowell FrRB 21 Alex Johnson FrRB 24 Warren Williams SrRB 25 Hilton Mobley FrRB 28 Leonard Conley FrFB 30 Darius Frazier nbsp SoFB 31 Freddy Highsmith nbsp JrWR 33 Brett Perriman SrRB 43 Cleveland Gary JrWR 47 Michael Irvin JrOL 52 Darren Bruce JrC 64 Rod Holder SoOL 75 John O Neill JrG 79 Mike Sullivan FrWR 84 Rob Chudzinski FrTE 87 Alfredo Roberts Sr Defense Pos Name ClassDB 3 Randal Hill FrDB 6 Kenny Berry nbsp SoDB 15 Jason Hicks nbsp SoDB 17 Trevor Weeks FrDB 18 Tolbert Bain nbsp SrDB 19 Darrell Fullington SrLB 22 Randy Shannon nbsp JrCB 23 Robert Bailey FrDB 27 Michael Johnson nbsp FrDB 29 Donald Ellis nbsp JrRB 32 Alex Johnson nbsp SrDB 36 Bennie Blades SrLB 45 George Mira Jr SrDB 48 Bubba McDowell SoDE 54 Bill Hawkins JrDT 67 Russell Maryland FrDL 86 Derwin Jones SrLB 91 Rod Carter JrDT 96 Cortez Kennedy SoDT 94 Greg Mark SoDL 97 Earnest Parish JrDE 96 Danny Stubbs Sr Special teams Pos Name ClassK 1 Edgar Benes SoK 2 Sung Kim FrK 25 Greg Cox SoTE 82 Charles Henry SrP 38 Jeff Feagles Sr Head coachJimmy JohnsonCoordinators assistant coachesLegend C Team captain S Suspended I Ineligible nbsp Injured nbsp RedshirtRosterCoaching staff edit Name Position Seasons Alma materJimmy Johnson Head coach 4th Arkansas 1965 Gary Stevens Offensive coordinator quarterbacks 8th John Carroll 1965 Dave Wannstedt Defensive Coordinator Linebackers 2nd Pittsburgh 1974 Hubbard Alexander Wide receivers 9th Tennessee State 1962 Joe Brodsky Running backs 10th Florida 1956 Butch Davis Defensive line 4th Arkansas 1973 Art Kehoe Assistant offensive line 3rd Miami 1982 Don Soldinger Tight ends 4th Memphis 1967 Tony Wise Offensive line 3rd Ithaca 1972 Dave Campo Defensive backs 1st Central Connecticut State 1969 Support staff edit Name Position Seasons Alma materBill Foran Strength amp conditioning 3rd Central Michigan 1977 Steve Hoffman Graduate assistant 3rd Dickinson 1981 Ron Meeks Graduate assistant 2nd Arkansas State 1977 Tommy Tuberville Graduate assistant 2nd Southern Arkansas 1976 citation needed Rankings editFurther information 1987 NCAA Division I A football rankings Ranking movementsLegend Increase in ranking Decrease in ranking First place votes WeekPollPre1234567891011121314FinalAP107653 4 3 6 3 6 3 6 3 7 3 7 3 9 3 8 2 4 2 6 2 9 1 57 Coaches9767 1 3 1 3 4 3 5 3 2 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 2 2 2 5 2 8 1 47 Game summaries editNo 20 Florida edit See also 1987 Florida Gators football team and Florida Miami football rivalry Under the direction of sophomore quarterback Steve Walsh and a defense that returned nine starters Miami opened the regular season with a win over rival Florida 31 4 The game would prove to be the last in a series that had been played annually since 1944 The teams would not meet in the regular season again until the 2002 season 3 4 At No 10 Arkansas edit 1 234Total No 5 Hurricanes 14 24310 51No 10 Razorbacks 0 007 7Date September 26 1987Location War Memorial Stadium Arkansas Little Rock ArkansasGame start 4 00 PMGame attendance 55 310TV announcers ESPN Mike Patrick and Lee CorsoScoring summary1MiamiWilliams 2 yard run Cox kick Miami 7 0 11 14MiamiWilliams 49 yard run Cox kick Miami 14 0 2MiamiConley 16 yard run Cox kick Miami 21 0 210 10MiamiBratton 1 yard run Cox kick Miami 28 0 2MiamiIrvin 21 yard pass from Walsh Cox kick Miami 35 0 20 22MiamiCox 28 yard field goalMiami 38 0 3MiamiCox 44 yard field goalMiami 41 0 412 59MiamiCox 47 yard field goalMiami 44 0 46 46MiamiA Brown 4 yard pass from Erickson Cox kick Miami 51 0 43 02ArkansasRouse 7 yard run Trainor kick Miami 51 7See also 1987 Arkansas Razorbacks football team The victory over Florida was followed by a 51 7 victory over 10 Arkansas Razorbacks in Little Rock which would catapult Miami to a 3 ranking 5 At No 4 Florida State edit 1 234Total No 3 Hurricanes 3 0815 26No 4 Seminoles 0 1096 25Date October 3 1987Location Doak Campbell Stadium Tallahassee FloridaGame attendance 62 561Game weather 78 F 26 C Sunny Wind N 15 20 mph 24 32 km h TV announcers CBS Sports Brent Musburger Pat Haden and John DockeryScoring summary12 58MiamiGreg Cox 29 yard field goalMiami 3 0 2FSUD Williams 1 yard run Schmidt kick FSU 7 3 22 37FSUDerek Schmidt 36 yard field goalFSU 10 3 37 50FSUWilliams blocked punt return kick failed FSU 16 3 32 37FSUDerek Schmidt 25 yard field goalFSU 19 3 3MiamiBratton 49 yard pass from Walsh Brian Blades pass from Walsh FSU 19 11 4MiamiIrvin 26 yard pass from Walsh Williams pass from Walsh Tied 19 19 42 22MiamiIrvin 73 yard pass from Walsh Cox kick Miami 26 19 40 42FSULewis 18 yard pass from McManus pass failed Miami 26 25See also 1987 Florida State Seminoles football team and Florida State Miami football rivalry 6 7 8 Miami s rigorous early season schedule continued the next week with a showdown with 4 Florida State at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee The October 3 game featured not only high drama but also an astounding 56 players who would go on to play in the NFL Miami scored first with a second quarter field goal but Florida State fielding a team many consider to be the best in school history took control of the game after that A 67 yard run by Florida State running back Sammie Smith was followed by a 1 yard touchdown run from Dayne Williams giving FSU a 7 3 lead A 36 yard field goal from Derek Schmidt pushed the Seminoles lead to 10 3 at the half After Schmidt missed a third quarter field goal wide right Miami took over but went three and out and was forced to punt The ensuing punt by Jeff Feagles was blocked and returned by Florida State for a touchdown increasing the Florida State lead to 16 3 Schmidt missed the extra point Miami was forced to punt again and a big return by FSU s Deion Sanders put Florida State in position to add another Schmidt field goal to make the score 19 3 With Miami having been unable to mount any offense to that point the Hurricanes looked to be in dire straits late in the third quarter Spurred on by an impassioned speech from receiver Michael Irvin the Hurricanes were able to keep their focus and climbed back into the game when Walsh found a streaking Melvin Bratton for a 49 yard touchdown Miami went for two which they converted when Walsh was able to hook up with receiver Brian Blades trimming the FSU lead to 19 11 heading into the fourth quarter The final quarter was filled with back and forth drama Irvin started things off when he was on the receiving end of a 26 yard touchdown pass from Walsh With the score now at 19 17 Miami again went for two which Miami again converted this time on a pass from Walsh to Warren Williams With the game now tied at 19 19 and its 16 point lead evaporated Florida State staged a drive of its own taking the ball down to the Miami 17 yard line before quarterback Danny McManus fumbled the snap which was recovered by Bennie Blades Miami wasted little time in capitalizing on the miscue as four plays later Walsh hooked up with Irvin for one of the most famous plays in University of Miami history citation needed Walsh walked to the line read the FSU defense and called an audible for Irvin who was appropriately nicknamed The Playmaker due to his penchant for making big plays Walsh took a quick three step drop and hung the ball up perfectly for Irvin on a fly route Irvin was in double coverage but was able to get behind the coverage catch the pass and take it 73 yards for a Miami touchdown With 2 22 left to play Miami led 26 19 Florida State would not go meekly though as the Seminoles valiantly fought back after taking possession on their own 25 yard line Before long the Seminoles were in the endzone when McManus hit Ronald Lewis on a perfect corner route for 18 yards With college football not having overtime at the time Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden was faced with a decision attempt the extra point and settle for a 26 26 tie or attempt a two point conversion and go for the win Complicating matters was the fact that Schmidt FSU s kicker had looked shaky on this day already missing on a field goal attempt and on an extra point attempt Nevertheless Bowden initially had decided to kick the extra point and settle for the tie as he had stated citation needed when asked before the game what he would do if he found himself in this exact predicament But after the FSU offense protested and urged their coach to go for the win Bowden changed his mind and decided to go for the two betting both FSU s and Miami s national championship hopes on the outcome FSU called a pass play McManus took the snap looked for a receiver and then threw into the right corner of the endzone The ball was underthrown and broken up by Miami defensive back Bubba McDowell before it could reach its intended target With Miami up 26 25 Florida State attempted an onside kick on the ensuing kickoff but Miami recovered the ball with 0 42 left and was able to run out the clock sealing the Hurricane victory Maryland edit See also 1987 Maryland Terrapins football team Having successfully negotiated its brutal early season schedule Miami won its next four games with ease beating Maryland 46 16 Cincinnati 48 10 East Carolina 41 3 and Miami Ohio 54 3 9 At Cincinnati edit See also Cincinnati Bearcats football 10 At East Carolina edit See also 1987 East Carolina Pirates football team 11 Miami OH edit See also 1987 Miami Redskins football team 12 Virginia Tech edit 1 234TotalHokies 0 1030 13 3 Hurricanes 3 7314 27Date November 14 1987Location Miami Orange Bowl MiamiGame start 7 30 PM ESTGame attendance 40 105See also 1987 Virginia Tech Hokies football team and Miami Virginia Tech football rivalry The Hurricanes a 38 point favorite broke a 13 13 tie with 4 51 remaining on a 1 yard TD run by Melvin Bratton Miami put the game out of reach by scoring the final touchdown with 34 seconds left to win 27 13 13 This was Frank Beamer s first year as head coach at Virginia Tech 14 Toledo edit See also 1987 Toledo Rockets football team 15 No 10 Notre Dame edit 1 234TotalNo 10 Fighting Irish 0 000 0 No 2 Hurricanes 0 1077 24Date November 28 1987Location Miami Orange Bowl MiamiGame start 3 30 PMGame attendance 76 640Game weather 83 F 28 C Sunny Wind NW 12 mph 19 km h TV announcers CBS Sports Brent Musburger Pat Haden and John DockeryScoring summary211 39MiamiBratton 2 yard run Cox kick Miami 7 0 23 09MiamiCox 30 yard field goalMiami 10 0 33 18MiamiBratton 1 yard run Cox kick Miami 17 0 45 04MiamiConley 6 yard run Cox kick Miami 24 0See also 1987 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team Next up for the now 2nd ranked Hurricanes was a date with 10 Notre Dame in Miami Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz brought an upset minded Irish squad to the Orange Bowl but they proved to be little match for Daniel Stubbs and a relentless Hurricane defense Miami continued its dominance over Notre Dame shutting out the Irish 24 0 and beating them for the fourth straight time It was also the first time Notre Dame had been shutout since 1983 when they were also shutout at the hands of the Hurricanes 16 No 8 South Carolina edit 1 234TotalNo 8 Gamecocks 6 703 16 No 2 Hurricanes 7 760 20Date December 5 1987Location Miami Orange Bowl MiamiGame start 8 00 PMGame attendance 76 640Game weather 59 F 15 C Clear Wind S 10 15 mph 16 24 km h Referee Terry MonkTV announcers ESPN Jim Kelly and Kevin KileyScoring summary110 40SCMackie 40 yard field goalSC 3 0 18 33SCMackie 48 yard field goalSC 6 0 1MiamiIrvin 46 yard pass from Walsh Cox kick Miami 7 6 29 55SCSterling Sharpe 47 yard pass from Todd Ellis Mackie kick SC 13 7 28 06MiamiBratton 5 yard run Cox kick Miami 14 13 3MiamiBrian Blades 56 yard pass from Walsh kick failed Miami 20 13 413 51SCMackie 28 yard field goalMiami 20 16See also 1987 South Carolina Gamecocks football team Miami s final regular season game came at home against 8 South Carolina South Carolina played a spirited game and gave the Hurricanes all they could handle Eventually Miami was able to walk away from the nail biter with a hard fought 20 16 victory capping an 11 0 regular season 17 Vs No 1 Oklahoma Orange Bowl edit Miami FL vs Oklahoma 1 234Total No 2 Hurricanes 7 0103 20No 1 Sooners 0 707 14Date January 1 1988Location Miami Orange Bowl Miami FloridaGame start 8 38 pm ESTElapsed time 3 29Game attendance 74 760Game weather 70 F 21 C Clear Wind E 9 mph 14 km h Referee Bill McDonaldTV announcers NBC Don Criqui Bob Trumpy and Tom HammondSource Box ScoreScoring summary111 32MiamiBratton 30 yard pass from Walsh Cox kick Miami 7 0 20 09OUStafford 1 yard run Lashar kick Tied 7 7 38 52MiamiCox 56 yard FGMiami 10 7 32 37MiamiIrvin 23 yard pass from Walsh Cox kick Miami 17 7 43 41MiamiCox 48 yard FGMiami 20 7 42 05OUHutson 29 yard run Lashar kick Miami 20 14Main article 1988 Orange Bowl See also 1987 Oklahoma Sooners football team 18 The 1988 Orange Bowl featured Game of the Century type billing citation needed as the undefeated and top ranked Oklahoma Sooners faced off against undefeated and second ranked Miami for the national championship 19 Adding to the hype was the recent on field history between the teams Oklahoma was a dominant force in college football winning the national championship in 1985 and losing just one game in each of the preceding two years Miami though had proven to be the thorn in Oklahoma s side as the Sooners losses in 85 and 86 had both come at the hands of Miami Now with the national championship on the line Miami sought to make it three losses in three years for Oklahoma and also their first postseason bowl win under Jimmy Johnson after three straight bowl losses two in which they struggled and lost their chances to win the national championships Further fuel for the fire was provided by the growing personal animosity between former Arkansas player Johnson and Oklahoma head coach Barry Switzer who was also a former Arkansas player Miami s vaunted defense set the tone early forcing the Sooners to punt on their first five possessions Meanwhile Walsh settled into a nice rhythm putting Miami on the board first with a 30 yard touchdown pass to fullback Melvin Bratton who caught 9 passes for 102 yards for the game Oklahoma got on the board with a second quarter touchdown to tie things up but Miami responded with 10 unanswered third quarter points coming on an Orange Bowl record 56 yard field goal by kicker Greg Cox and a 23 yard touchdown pass from Walsh to Irvin Oklahoma would add a fourth quarter touchdown to trim the score to 20 14 but Miami held on for the win and the national championship Johnson received a Gatorade bath which messed his trademark impeccably coiffed hair and was carried off the field having finally won the big one at Miami The Hurricane defense held Oklahoma to just 255 yards of offense while Walsh s efficient play 18 of 30 209 yards 2 touchdowns paced the Hurricane offense Middle linebacker Bernard Tiger Clark a backup middle linebacker who was forced to start after starting MLB George Mira Jr was suspended for failing a drug test was named the MVP of the Orange Bowl after recording 14 tackles 12 unassisted With the win Miami completed its first ever undefeated season In winning their second national championship the Canes once again had to go through the nation s top ranked team at the Orange Bowl just as they had done in 1983 Awards and honors editConsensus All Americans edit Bennie Blades FS Daniel Stubbs LEAwards finalists edit Bold indicates winners Bennie Blades FS Jim Thorpe Award 20 Daniel Stubbs LE Outland TrophyJack Harding University of Miami MVP Award edit Steve Walsh QB1988 NFL Draft editSee also 1988 NFL Draft A total of 12 Hurricanes were drafted by 10 different franchises in 1988 including three wide receivers in the first 52 picks Round Pick Player Position NFL Club1 3 Bennie Blades S Detroit Lions1 11 Michael Irvin WR Dallas Cowboys2 33 Danny Stubbs OLB San Francisco 49ers2 49 Brian Blades WR Seattle Seahawks2 52 Brett Perriman WR New Orleans Saints3 56 Dan Sileo DT Tampa Bay Buccaneers3 63 Matt Patchan OT Philadelphia Eagles5 124 Darrell Fullington S Minnesota Vikings6 155 Warren Williams RB Pittsburgh Steelers8 197 Alfredo Roberts TE Kansas City Chiefs10 269 Derwin Jones DE Seattle Seahawks12 331 George Mira Jr LB San Francisco 49ersReferences edit Miami crushes Gators St Lucie News Tribune September 6 1987 Retrieved November 11 2023 via Newspapers com Hurricanes roll The Miami Herald November 1 1987 Retrieved March 5 2021 via Newspapers com Miami Rings Florida s Bell and Trounces Gators 31 4 Los Angeles Times September 6 1987 Retrieved October 11 2017 Miami Grand In Finale 31 4 Canes Rush Weathers Bell As Series Ends Orlando Sentinel September 6 1987 Retrieved October 11 2017 COLLEGE FOOTBALL SOUTHEAST Miami Trounces Arkansas 51 7 The New York Times September 27 1987 Retrieved October 11 2017 Greatest Games Miami Florida State 1987 College Football News August 18 2011 Archived from the original on December 26 2014 Retrieved December 25 2014 Flashback Miami Florida State 1987 ABC Sports October 9 2001 Retrieved December 25 2014 The 1987 Miami FSU game A true October Classic Fox Sports October 8 2015 Retrieved October 11 2017 COLLEGE FOOTBALL SOUTH L S U Surges Past Georgia Miami 46 Maryland 16 The New York Times October 11 1987 Retrieved October 12 2017 Hurricanes Wipe Out Cincinnati Orlando Sentinel October 25 1987 Retrieved October 12 2017 Blades detonates the Bomb Squad The Palm Beach Post November 1 1987 p 52 Retrieved October 12 2017 Hurricanes rout other Miami 54 3 The Palm Beach Post November 8 1987 p 53 Retrieved October 12 2017 No 3 Miami wins The Pantagraph November 15 1987 p 7 Retrieved October 12 2017 Gainesville Sun 1987 Nov 15 Retrieved 2019 Jan 06 No 3 Miami Struggles for 24 14 Victory Los Angeles Times November 22 1987 Retrieved October 12 2017 Miami Is Too Much for Irish Hurricanes Put the Big Hit on Brown amp Co 24 0 Los Angeles Times November 29 1987 Retrieved October 11 2017 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Miami Survives By 20 16 The New York Times December 6 1987 Retrieved October 11 2017 Orange Bowl Hurricanes Overwhelm the Sooners to Claim No 1 The New York Times January 2 1988 Retrieved December 25 2014 Archived copy Archived from the original on April 28 2006 Retrieved October 27 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Do You Know Which Team Has the Most College Football Championships Archived from the original on April 2 2016 Retrieved December 30 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1987 Miami Hurricanes football team amp 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