FOR THE MEMORIES
Part III: 1988 College Football Tournament
By Glenn Guzzo
For the love of board games, nostalgia, and a REAL college-football playoff … Here is the second round in the tournament using the 48 teams from Strat-O-Matic’s 1988 college football cards.
In the first round, all of the top eight seeds, including top-ranked Notre Dame, advanced. So did No. 12 Oklahoma State, No. 14 UCLA and No. 19 Michigan, thanks to the heroics of Barry Sanders (308 yards rushing), Troy Aikman (405 yards passing) and Leroy Hoard (4 TDs), respectively.
Seven upsets, none more startling than No. 38 Pittsburgh’s 13-10 shocker over No. 11 Oklahoma, raised the caution flag for all favorites. No. 33 Illinois (QB Jeff George) knocked out Brett Favre and
Emmitt Smith (
Remember (see Strat-O-Sphere for Parts I and II), this was played solitaire, mostly with basic-game rules. Remember, too, that the Strat-O-Matic college game differs from the pro version in several ways, including many more “Receiver” readings on quarterback cards and interception-return ratings for each team.
Here’s a recap of the first round:
1 Notre Dame (11-0) vs. 48
2
3
4
5 Auburn (10-1) vs 44 Navy (3-8) …
6
7 USC (10-1) vs 42 Penn State (5-6) … USC, 21-14
8
9
10
11
12
13 Clemson (9-2) vs 36
14 UCLA (9-2) vs 35 Wake
15
16
17 UTEP (10-2) vs 32
18 Army (9-2) vs 31
19
20
21
22
23
24 LSU (8-3) vs 25 S. Carolina (8-3) … LSU, 44-7
Teams were re-seeded for the second-round, with top seed vs. lowest seed and so on. The Round 3 results:
No. 1 Notre Dame 34 No. 40 Baylor 14
Baylor’s Cinderella dreams were rudely awakened in the first half, as Notre Dame built a 24-0 lead, due in large part to a pair of interceptions that required the Irish to march just 16 and 29 yards to TDs. The Bears turned the tables, scoring just before the end of the first half on a 28-yard drive following an interception. Then Baylor marched just 33 yards after a 25-yard punt for the only score of the third quarter to make it 24-14. But Notre Dame QB Tony Rice, who led all runners with 110 yards on 22 attempts, dove in from one yard with 10 minutes to play to end all doubt. The Irish rushed for 301 yards in all and held Baylor to -18 on the ground, thanks to eight sacks worth 56 yards in losses. Baylor QB Brad Goebel passed for 201 yards, but suffered three interceptions and the eight sacks.
No. 2
In its first-round victory against over-matched Ivy League foe
Suddenly,
Major Harris hit WR Reggie Rembert for a 26-yard score to end an 85-yard drive and Harris scrambled 20 yards to the end zone on a Pass Rush to finish a 55-yard drive.
Ahead 29-14, the Mountaineers surrendered just one more score, Justin’s 41-yard pass to SE Leland Adams two plays after a West Virginia fumble. But ASU’s upset hopes were dashed when Justin fired his third interception midway through the final quarter, leading to TB A.B. Brown’s 13-yard TD around end.
No. 3
Pitt’s tough defense set the stage for another upset. Instead,
Scoreless for 20 minutes, the game was settled on two strong
Pitt managed jut 204 yards and three turnovers.
No. 4 Miami 41 No. 36 Texas A&M 7
The Hurricane secondary devastated A&M, which neither ran nor passed well. Two interception-return TDs in the second quarter, and two short scoring drives following interceptions in the fourth quarter made this a one-sided game.
In all, A&M threw five interceptions (and lost two fumbles), while completing only 8 of 32 passes for 92 yards (not counting 29 yards in sacks). The running game didn’t work much better, with 111 yards on 42 carries. The seven turnovers gave
It didn’t matter, because
Miami PK Carlos Huerta had five PATs and two field goals.
No. 5 Auburn 21 No. 33
This one shaped up as a possible second upset for Illinois, because it could score faster if it needed to with the strong arm of Jeff George, while Auburn has a suspect offense. In fact,
On
George finished with 278 yards passing and
Meanwhile,
George drove
No. 6 Florida State 28 No. 27 North Carolina State 3
Deion Sanders returned two punts for touchdowns and also ran an interception back all the way in a prime-time performance. Sanders had 168 return yards on seven punts. His 49-yard dash opened the scoring and his 61-yard score in the third quarter gave FSU a 21-3 lead. Later in that quarter, he returned an interception 84 yards for the insurance TD.
The weak NC State running game (29 carries, 11 yards) could not exploit
No. 7 USC 47 No. 26 Hawaii 6
USC rebounded from its scary narrow victory in Round 1 with a ruthless assault on would-be Cinderella Hawai. Jerry Lockwood ran for 96 yards and 3 TDs and Rodney Peete passed for two scores and 270 yards – 215 to Eric Affolter, who had 9 catches and a TD.
No. 24 LSU 27 No. 8 Arkansas 24
Just when it looked like the favorites would run the table in this round, LSU put together a proud performance that overcame the adversity of five seemingly disastrous turnovers. With Arkansas overwhelming LSU’s running game (25 carries, 25 yards), LSU QB Tommy Hodson lit up the Arkansas stadium by hitting 31 of 50 passes for 372 yards and 3 touchdowns to overcome 3 interceptions. His favorite receiver, Tony Moss, had 10 catches for 150 yards. While Hodson was starring, the LSU run defense stuffed 28 of
LSU was deep in
But in the second quarter, LSU’s Vic Jones lost a fumble at the LSU 8 and Arkansas QB Quinton Grovey circled end for a 9-yard score three plays later. Then LSU fumbled the kickoff at its 34 and the Razorbacks scored three plays later to take the lead, 14-10. It was 17-13 at half. Then
However,
Next: As its reward, LSU will enter Round 3 as the lowest-seeded team and will be paired with No. 1 With Notre Dame.
No. 12
The second-guessers in
The surprisingly low score between two teams with strong offenses and weak defenses could not last. The second half was a wild back-and-forth affair featuring long drives and big plays. Sanders, who rushed for 224 yards in the second half alone (270 overall), scored on a 4-yard run as the Cowboys took the second-half kickoff and marched 80 yards.
A sub-plot at this point: All eight kickoffs had been touchbacks. Kasay (touchbacks on rolls 4, 7-10) and
No. 20
UCLA lost fumbles on fourth-quarter kickoff and punt returns, leading to the winning score, as UCLA blew a 13-0 first-half lead.
UCLA QB Troy Aikman, erratic after the first quarter (18-for-39 passing, 175 yards overall), tried to pull off final drive heroics for the second straight game. UCLA moved from its 27 to the
No. 19
This was no upset for under-seeded
Still,
But
No. 18 Army 34 No. 17 UTEP 23
Without upsets in the first round, UTEP would have been facing tough USC and Army would have had to contend with
The matchup was fascinating for another reason. Army, which almost never passes, was facing perhaps the worst run defense in the tournament. UTEP, which passes more than it runs, was facing perhaps the worst pass defense.
Results: Army ran 76 times, passed 0 and had 381 yards and 23 first downs. UTEP passed 53 times for 373 yards, ran 16 times for 1 yard (after deducting 18 yards on four sacks) and had 20 first downs, all by passing.
The game turned on a trio of fourth-quarter UTEP turnovers. The Miners, error-free until then, led 23-10 at half and 23-17 at the time of the first turnover – a fumble by QB Pat Hegarty as he scrambled to avoid a sack. Army capitalized by marching 54 yards in four plays – QB Bryan McWilliams sprinted for 24 yards, RHB Calvin Cass raced for 19 and LHB Mike Mayweather exploded the final 11. Keith Walker’s PAT put Army ahead for the first time, 24-23 with
On the next two possessions, Hegarty threw interceptions. After starting 22 of 38 passing, he finished 4 for 15 down the stretch. The first pickoff resulted in a 52-yard Army drive that ended when McWilliams scored his third TD of the game. He had 145 yards rushing on 25 carries. UTEP still trailed by only eight with
The pairings for the next round are set:
No. 1 Notre Dame vs. No. 24 LSU
Will Notre Dame’s inability to pass finally be a fatal flaw against decent teams?
No. 2
The Buffaloes have shut down better offenses than
No. 3 Nebraska vs. No. 19 Michigan
No. 4 Miami vs. No. 18 Army
Midnight for Cinderella?
No. 5
Does Barry Sanders have another all-world game in him against a tough
No. 6 Florida State vs. No. 7 USC
A classic ready to happen?
This has worked out very realistically. Eight of the final 12 were seeded in the top 12. And
Once the field is cut to six, the two top-seeded survivors will draw byes into the Final Four.