Thursday, December 5, 2019

One Impossible Season, One Unbelievable Game


Everything was there for the taking.  An undefeated football season, a second consecutive Big East Championship, an unprecedented season of Bearcat football, a probable trip to the Sugar Bowl…and oh yea, if Nebraska could somehow beat Texas a possible trip to the National Championship Game.  The stakes could not have been higher when the Bearcats went to Heinz field on December 5, 2009.  In so many ways, that in and of itself should have been impossible.  This was a program that had spent decades in what in the best of times was mediocrity.  Up until the Rick Minter era (the long, but stable Rick Minter era) the program had spent a prolonged period of time as an Independent.  After a decade in Conference USA, they were given a spot in the Big East conference largely on the strength of Bob Huggins building a top 10 basketball program and the vision of Bob Goin.  Many thought Minter was the best they could do.  Instead the Bearcats rose from the bottom of the Big East to Big East champions in a few years.  They had battled, winning close games in 2008 and then taking the conference by storm in 2009.  This impossible season, this impossible college football ascension had built to this one game with everything on the line.  The game was a microcosm of everything that came before and in the end the Bearcats rose doing the impossible and completing one of the great comebacks in college football history. 



#
                We spent the night before the game in Washington, PA.  The hotels were cheaper and from Washington, PA we could reach Heinz field in 30-40 minutes.  With the game starting at noon, the tailgate started early.  I remember the lots near Heinz field being $50.00.  We found one littered with Bearcat fans and set up shop.  By now we were pros at road tailgates.  This was my 5th road trip of the season (only missing Oregon State) and my 11th in the past two seasons.  We had the grill set up by 8:00 a.m. and were mingling with Bearcat fans all over the lot.  We were confident.  This was going to be our game.  This team had never let us down.  It was a bit cold and the snow was falling, but we barely noticed.  With so much on the line we were ready for the great day ahead.
#
                It was a noon kickoff, but we were sure to be in the stadium early.  The Bearcats got the ball first and were stopped immediately.  Pitt took over on a short field and dominated the clock for a TD drive that while only going 56 yards, took 12 plays and 6:29 seconds.  However, UC responded with a touchdown of their own and the quarter ended in a 7-7 tie.  The second quarter would see Pitt extend the lead to 14-7 almost immediately (on an incredible catch by Doug Baldwin) and UC respond with a field goal to make it 14-10.  Then the wheels came off. 
                The Bearcat defense gets maligned a lot in 2009, but for the first half of the season they really did play well.  However, as the season went on, some injuries occurred and the lack of depth on that side of the ball began to show.  Up 14-10 Bill Stull hit a 23 yard pass than threw a 40 yard TD to Jonathan Baldwin to go up 21 to 10 (it was a flea flicker, two Bearcats were right there but didn’t get their head around and Baldwin made the play).  After a Tony Pike interception, Pitt would add a field goal to go up 24 to 10.  The Bearcats would again do nothing on their next drive and Pitt would block the punt giving them the ball inside the UC 5.  They would get a touchdown and the Bearcats were suddenly down 21 points late in the first half. 
#
                The air had come out of the sail of the Bearcat fans at Heinz field that day and I have no doubt everywhere else Bearcat fans were watching the game.  My sister was texting me about the game.  I remember her texts being fairly resigned to UC losing.  My response to her down 31-10 was something to the effect of “they’ll find a way to win this game.”  Did I really believe it?  I don’t know.  I had faith in this team.  They could explode in a hurry.  Maybe I was trying to convince myself.  However, a few seconds later I would believe.  I would fully buy in.  Mardy Gilyard would make sure I did. 
                Mardy was a force of nature in his time at UC and always had huge plays on the biggest of stages.  He ran back a kickoff against Oklahoma.  He ran the opening kickoff back when UC won at WVU in 2008 setting up their championship run.  He ran back a kickoff the week before against Illinois.  However, this was the one everyone will always remember.  He takes the kick, sprints forward, makes a couple quick moves then darts to the left corner of the endzone, outrunning every Pitt defender trying to cut him off.   I was at the game, but in the many times I have seen it since McDonough’s call remains one of the great calls I have heard.  “Here comes Mardy Gilyard.  Free at last!”  I picked up my phone and sent another text to my sister barely a minute after my last one.  I remember exactly what it said “We’re fucking winning this game!”  This time, I know I believed.


#
                The defense came out and played really well for much of the second half, but the Bearcats couldn’t seem to close the gap on Pitt.  Finally it was Mardy Gilyard who caught a pass between three defenders down the field and then darted off for a touchdown cutting the lead to 7.  However, UC couldn’t get it closer and after punting from deep in their territory Pitt got the ball back at the UC 32 and scored 4 plays later to get the lead back out to 14 (at 38-24).  To that point in the game Pike had really struggled and offense had failed to move the ball.  The Bearcats were now down 14 points with only 12:26 left in the game.  The offense would have to figure it out quickly if UC was to win this one.
                Mardy Gilyard returned the kickoff 49 yards to the Pitt 23 giving UC a short field.  The offense finished the drive barely a minute later, but Jake Rogers missed the extra point, putting UC down 8.  After a quick three and out, Pike lead the offense down the field and UC finished off the drive on a 1 yard TD run by Isaiah Pead.  Down two, UC kept the offense on the field and Pike hit Gilyard on a slant to tie the game. 


#
                The defense had played a great second half, only giving up one TD on a short field, but with the game on the line Pitt marched down the field behind a heavy dose of Dion Lewis.  Lewis capped off the drive with a 5 yard TD run putting Pitt up 6 with just 1:36 to go in the game.  I remember at the time being somewhat relieved there was that much time on the clock.  Had Lewis just picked up the first down (on 2nd a 2) instead of running 5 yards for the TD, UC may have run out of time.  Pitt messed up the snap on the extra point, tried to run it and UC held.  Suddenly, a touchdown would be enough to win the game in regulation.   This was a huge play and we could feel it at the time. 
#
                Again Mardy Gilyard set up the offense.  Gilyard broke off a 26 yard return to the 39.  When you watch the replay he was so close to breaking it again.  UC took over with 1:30 left in the game.  Heinz field was rocking as UC took the field.  On the first play Pike faced pressure, stepped up and delivered it to Gilyard on the sideline.  It was short of the first down so the clock kept running.  UC got to the line quickly and Pike found DJ Woods over the middle.  UC got to the line quickly again and again Pike showed presence in the pocket, this time stepping up and rolling right to avoid pressure and throwing back across his body to Gilyard who broke back to the football.  UC called timeout with 39 seconds left at the Pitt 29. 
                Watching the replay of the next play it’s really impressive that Millan calls exactly what is about to happen.  UC has nobody in the back field with Binns alone on the short side of the field.  Pitt leaves Chappell in one on one coverage.  Millan points it out saying “Man to man down here with Binns again with Chappell.  It’s been something he’s liked all day. A whole lot of field to work with.”  Binns creates just enough separation and Pike delivers a perfect strike to the endzone.  I don’t think I’ve ever gone quite so nuts on a play.  Hugging and high fiving my friends and the other Bearcat fans all around me.  Anticipating the ensuing PAT that would put the Bearcats in the lead.   The huge contingent of UC fans that made the trip were heard throughout Heinz field. 


#
                Rogers drilled the PAT this time and UC had a lead with 33 seconds left in the game.  Pike hit 11 straight passes in the 4th quarter when they absolutely needed him.  Pitt ran out the kickoff taking over from their own 18 with 28 seconds left.  A field goal would be enough for Pitt, but the defense came up big one last time.  Stull threw three straight incomplete passes (his second and third down passes were almost intercepted, maybe should have been) setting up forth down with only 10 seconds left.  Wandstadt tried to fool UC with play action (seriously) and Curtis Young finished the game getting to Stull starting a sack that the rest of the line finished off.  After Pike took a knee we could all celebrate an unbeaten season and a second straight Big East Championship. 



#
                And celebrate we did.  I remember not wanting to leave Heinz Field, celebrating and cheering until the Bearcats finally left the field themselves.  The pregame tailgate turned into a postgame tailgate.  UC fans stayed in the lot while Pitt fans got the hell out of dodge.  One tailgate was against the street with a microphone singing as Pitt fans drove off.  Down the Drive rang throughout the lot and then at the bars that evening. 
#
                And then we missed a national championship game by 1 second.  I joined a boatload of UC fans at a Pittsburgh bar watching the Big 12 Championship.  Suh tried to singlehandedly win the game for Nebraska.  With a few seconds left on the clock and Texas in field goal range down 2, Colt McCoy took the snap rolled out and threw it away.  The clock hit triple zero and the bar I was at erupted.  We couldn’t believe it.  Texas was about to lose and UC would likely play for a national championship.  Sadly, it wasn’t to be as the refs gave Texas one second back.  Texas drilled the 46 yard field goal and UC ended up in the Sugar Bowl.  Not even that could take away from UC’s day and the incredible season, but it remains staggering just how close the Bearcats were to playing Bama for the national championship. 
                Ten years ago today.   A college football game I will never forget, a team that will stay with me forever and a season of unbelievable joy.  Bearcat football emerging on the college football scene was unbelievable and special for someone like me who grew up going to Nippert with my father, cheering hard for UC program that was mediocre even in Conference USA.  I loved UC football.  I was resigned to enjoy rooting for that type of program forever, but always hoped it would be something more.  I never imagined 2009.  It was impossible.  It was incredible.  It was a season I will never forget. 





No comments: