Florida State finally avoids a disaster by turning a QB sneak into a 42-yard gain

Florida State avoided its season of doom completely coming off the rails with this wild QB sneak.

Florida State fans likely breathed a sigh of relief after a seemingly routine quarterback sneak nearly unraveled in the worst way possible.

FSU’s season has been so bad that nothing is seemingly safe. Just last week, they executed what might have been the ugliest field goal I’ve ever seen. And this week, they nearly botched a quarterback sneak. I shouldn’t be surprised, but yet, somehow, I still am.

Early in the second quarter against Miami, FSU wanted to go for it on fourth-and-one. The exchange between the center and quarterback Luke Kromenhoek was bobbled, but somehow — football gods were seemingly showing mercy — Kromenhoek squeezed out of the pile of players and hit a 42-yard scamper. INCREDIBLE.

(Feature image courtesy of ESPN)

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Florida State QB Luke Kromenhoek turns sneak into 42-yard run

A Florida State quarterback sneak turned into a long gain

Not much has gone right for Florida State in 2024.

However, a quarterback sneak on Saturday against Miami turned into a huge game.

Check out quarterback Luke Kromenhoek and the offensive line somehow get him out of the quagmire and break lose for a 42-yard run.

Kromenhoek is a 6-foot-4, 208-pound freshman.

Not quite as great as the late Greg Landry’s 76-yard QB sneak for the Detroit Lions, but it works.

Duke football drops in the ESPN FPI rankings despite Florida State victory

Duke won on Friday night, defeating Florida State for the first time ever, but ESPN still dropped the Blue Devils in the FPI rankings.

The Duke Blue Devils picked up their sixth win of the season on Friday night, defeating the Florida State Seminoles for the first time in 23 meetings, but the ESPN Football Power Index remains pessimistic about the team in Durham.

ESPN Analytics updated their FPI rankings on Sunday, and Duke actually dropped one spot to 64th in the country.

Of the 25 FBS teams with at least six victories so far this season, only two (Navy and Louisiana) sit lower than the Blue Devils.

The Seminoles, now 1-6 for the season, also dropped one spot, but FSU only fell to 68th. In fact, the 1-6 Mississippi State Bulldogs rank four spots higher than Duke, making them one of 10 teams with a losing record higher than 64th.

The undefeated Miami Hurricanes, who moved up to fifth in the US LBM Coaches Poll after their 52-45 victory over the Louisville Cardinals remained 10th in the national FPI rankings. With the Clemson Tigers up to 13th after a sixth straight win, the top of the ACC is narrowing fast.

Duke receives a few votes in the US LBM Coaches Poll after Florida State win

With the Blue Devils secured in the college football bowl schedule, Duke received more than a half-dozen votes in the US LBM Coaches Poll.

For the second time in four weeks, the Duke Blue Devils made an appearance on the US LBM Coaches Poll.

USA TODAY Sports released the updated rankings on Sunday, and while head coach Manny Diaz and his team didn’t break into the top 25, the Blue Devils did receive seven votes after beating the Florida State Seminoles for the first time. The number unofficially puts Duke 29th in the rankings.

The Miami Hurricanes, one of two remaining undefeated teams in the ACC, defeated the Louisville Cardinals 52-45 for a seventh straight win. Head coach Mario Cristobal and his team now only trail the Oregon Ducks, Georgia Bulldogs, Penn State Nittany Lions, and Ohio State Buckeyes in the standings.

The Clemson Tigers (ninth) remain in position for an at-large bid in the College Football Playoff at the end of the season, and the Pittsburgh Panthers (20th) stayed undefeated with a week off. The SMU Mustangs (22nd) continue to impress in their first season as members of the ACC, beating Stanford 40-10 for a fourth straight conference victory.

Check out the complete Coaches Poll below.

Rank Team Record Points
1 Oregon 7-0 1,323 (51)
2 Georgia 6-1 1,238 (2)
3 Penn State 6-0 1,197
4 Ohio State 5-1 1,107
5 Miami (FL) 7-0 1,087
6 Texas 6-1 1,082
7 LSU 6-1 946
8 Tennessee 6-1 916
9 Clemson 6-1 907
10 Iowa State 7-0 829
11 Notre Dame 6-1 809
12 BYU 7-0 740
13 Indiana 7-0 651
14 Texas A&M 6-1 641
15 Alabama 5-2 554
16 Kansas State 6-1 488
17 Missouri 6-1 486
18 Ole Miss 5-2 444
19 Boise State 5-1 379
20 Pittsburgh 6-0 359
21 Illinois 6-1 347
22 SMU 6-1 249
23 Army 7-0 185
24 Navy 6-0 115
25 Vanderbilt 5-2 37

Dropped Out

No. 22 Michigan; No. 25 Nebraska

Receiving Votes

UNLV 28; Syracuse 27; Washington State 25; Duke 7; Memphis 6; Liberty 6; Wisconsin 3; Tulane 3; Cincinnati 2; Nebraska 1; Arizona State 1

Manny Diaz says the Duke football team ‘expected to win’ against Florida State

The Duke Blue Devils had never beaten Florida State before Friday night, but head coach Manny Diaz said his team expected this result.

The Duke football team had come up empty in each of its previous 22 games against Florida State, but the Blue Devils found a way to reverse history on Friday night with a 23-16 win at home.

While history wasn’t on his team’s side, first-year head coach [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag] said his locker room didn’t treat the result like it was something unprecedented.

“I really think they expected to win,” Diaz said after the game. “I don’t feel like there [were] a lot of surprised faces.”

The Seminoles, who didn’t lose a regular-season game en route to the conference title last season, lost five of their first six to start this year. FSU scored the first points of the game with an early field goal, but a pick-six from Chandler Rivers and back-to-back turnovers forced by linebacker Ozzie Nicholas kicked off a run of 17 unanswered points that gave the Blue Devils the lead for good.

“They’re very proud,” Diaz continued. “They’re very excited, but it had a very different feel. I really felt like they expected to win the game, and they went out and did it.”

Diaz rightly pointed out that, while Duke had lost each of its past 22 games against Florida State, that history didn’t include the 2024 roster.

“There are so many ways that we just tell ourselves stories that just limit what we think we can accomplish,” Diaz said. “Those guys down there, they don’t believe in any of that stuff. They don’t care about what happened, when it happened, whatever, they believe that they can do whatever.”

With Friday’s victory, Duke (6-1, 2-1) officially secured a bowl appearance for the third consecutive season.

Chandler Rivers says he likes this pick-six against Florida State more than last year’s

Chandler Rivers has returned an interception for a touchdown against FSU twice in two years, but he quickly said Friday’s was his favorite

The Florida State sideline must have felt the worst déjà vu when [autotag]Chandler Rivers[/autotag] got the ball in his hands on Friday night.

One season after Duke’s star cornerback snagged a tipped pass for a 13-yard touchdown in Tallahassee, Rivers undercut an out route for another interception and easily covered the remaining 36 yards to the end zone for another score in the first quarter.

“My mind just went, like, blank,” Rivers said about Friday’s encoure after the game. “I honestly don’t really remember a lot from that moment, but it was still a pretty cool moment.”

When asked if he had a preference between his two touchdowns against the Seminoles, Rivers didn’t need to deliberate over the answer.

“I like this one more,” Rivers said. “I love this one more because last year, it was a tip, and I just caught the tip. This year, I actually caught the pick, so I like this one more.”

Rivers didn’t need to mention this last part, but his Friday interception helped Duke beat Florida State for the first time in school history, so maybe that plays into the favoritism as well.

Duke football’s best photos from Friday’s historic victory over Florida State

Check out the best photos from Duke’s Friday night victory over the Florida State Seminoles.

Any Duke football fans who have attended the past two games at Wallace Wade Stadium have been treated to two of the most impactful Blue Devils victories in school history.

Three weeks ago, Duke fell behind the North Carolina Tar Heels by 20 points before scoring three late touchdowns for the second-largest comeback in school history. Then, on Friday night, the Blue Devils defeated the Florida State Seminoles for the first time ever for their sixth win of the season, securing their third straight trip to a bowl game.

The vaunted Duke defense finished the evening with six sacks and 11 tackles for loss, holding the Seminoles offense to 291 yards of total offense and 4.96 yards per pass attempt. Linebacker Ozzie Nicholas created two turnovers, forcing a fumble and intercepting a pass on consecutive defensive plays, and Chandler Rivers scored a touchdown on an interception of his own.

Here are the best photos from Duke’s statement win.

Duke football beats Florida State for the first time in school history

The Duke Blue Devils did something they’d never done before on Friday night: they beat the Florida State Seminoles.

When the clock hit triple zeros at Wallace Wade Stadium on Friday night, the Duke Blue Devils finally had their victory over the Florida State Seminoles.

After 22 previous matchups over the past 32 years, first-year head coach [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag] and his team forced four turnovers and stacked six sacks against a struggling FSU offense for a 23-16 victory.

Yes, the defending conference champions entered Friday’s game with one win in their first six games of the season, but 1-22 sure sounds a lot better than 0-22.

Linebacker Alex Howard notched two sacks of his own, linebacker Ozzie Nicholas forced a fumble and intercepted a pass, and star cornerback Chandler Rivers ran a pick of his own all the way back to the end zone for a touchdown.

The FSU offense only managed 291 yards of offense for the game with two conversions on 14 third-down attempts.

It looked like Duke might break the streak in Tallahassee last season, building a 17-7 lead early in the second quarter, but an injury to then-quarterback Riley Leonard and three fourth-quarter touchdowns from the Seminoles left the Blue Devils on the wrong side of a 38-20 final score.

The win, Duke’s sixth of the year, also ensured the Blue Devils would be eligible for a bowl game in the first year of the Diaz era.

Duke football turns four turnovers into a victory over Florida State

Duke’s defense stole the show during Friday night’s victory over Florida State with four turnovers and six sacks to power a 23-16 win.

The Blue Devils beat the Florida State Seminoles for the first time ever on Friday night in Durham, emerging with a 23-16 victory thanks to an epic defensive performance.

Florida State entered Friday’s game as the worst offense in the ACC, and the miscues continued for the Seminoles in Durham.

In the final minutes of the opening quarter, FSU quarterback Brock Glenn tried to hit wideout Jalen Brown on a third-down out route, but Duke cornerback [autotag]Chandler Rivers[/autotag] jumped in front of the route like he’d heard the play call in the huddle. The junior defensive back easily made the 36-yard journey to the end zone, putting the Blue Devils ahead.

On the very next play, Glenn tried to scramble to his left, but Duke linebacker Ozzie Nicholas punched the ball out for a fumble, giving the Blue Devils the ball at the FSU 36-yard line and setting up another touchdown drive.

On Florida State’s next offensive play (yes, these all happened in a row), Glenn inexplicably threw a short pass directly to Nicholas for an interception, setting Duke up at the FSU 11-yard line after a strong return. Three plays, three turnovers, and the ensuing field goal stretched the lead to 14 points.

Florida State coach Mike Norvell yanked Glenn for true freshman Luke Kromenhoek after that last turnover, but the gaffes looked contagious. Wide receiver Kentron Poitier dropped a perfect 44-yard pass from the first-year quarterback in the end zone, and Hykeem Williams let a throw that would have put his team in field goal range clank off his hands with seconds left in the half.

Readers might notice the Duke offense hadn’t been mentioned yet in this story, and that’s for good reason. After seven combined first-half points against North Carolina and Georgia Tech, a bye week of preparation brought hope for a new-look scheme.

Instead, the Blue Devils punted on their first four drives and only gained 62 yards in the opening half at an average of 1.9 yards per play. The turnovers weren’t just giving Duke an advantage, they were literally keeping the offense afloat. For all of the mistakes listed above, Duke only led by 11 points at the midway point.

Well, four points after FSU’s Samuel Singleton Jr. outraced the Blue Devils kickoff team for a 95-yard touchdown on the first play of the third quarter. Now, despite being in complete control all night, Duke was left to stare at a 17-13 lead on the scoreboard.

With Duke clinging to a seven-point lead midway through the fourth quarter after some field goals, however, the defense came through once and for all. The Blue Devils forced another fumble, this time from true freshman running back Kam Davis, and defensive tackle Preston Watson (a true freshman in his own right) fell on the ball to give Duke the chance to salt the game away.

The offense, which only finished with 185 total yards, could only drain a few minutes off the clock, however. Florida State got the ball back at its own 40-yard line with 2:43 left on the clock and a chance to tie the game.

Instead, once again, Duke’s defense planted a flag. VJ Anthony and Wesley Williams harassed Glenn for the entire final drive, forcing multiple sacks before destroying the final fourth-and-24 play before it ever developed.

The Blue Devils finished with 11 tackles for loss and six sacks for the game, allowing only 291 yards and no offensive touchdowns. Williams and linebacker Alex Howard combined for 3.5 sacks just between the two of them.

Duke, now firmly in the postseason, improves to 6-1 for the year and 2-1 in conference play.

Chandler Rivers turns an interception into a touchdown against Florida State

The Duke offense couldn’t find the end zone in the first quarter against FSU, but defensive back Chandler Rivers found a way to score.

The offense isn’t the only way a football team can score points.

In the first quarter against the Florida State Seminoles on Friday night, the Duke Blue Devils punted on each of their first four possessions to fall behind by three points. Star defensive back Chandler Rivers decided he’d take care of the problem himself.

On a third-and-9, Rivers shadowed FSU’s Jalen Brown and kept his eyes on quarterback Brock Glenn. The Seminoles tried for an out route on Rivers’ side of the field, and the Duke corner read it the entire way.

Rivers undercut Brown’s route, practically running the break for him, and jumped in front of the pass for an interception. All of a sudden, there was nothing but 36 yards of empty space between him and the end zone. The junior outran the FSU offense all the way to the painted grass, giving the Blue Devils a 7-3 advantage despite the slow offensive start.

The interception, Rivers’ first since last year’s game against the Seminoles, was Duke’s fifth of the season. The Blue Devils forced a fumble on the following possession, resulting in another touchdown to take a 14-3 lead.